Episodes Tagged with "Msc"
Posted on April 9, 2015
Shea uses models to demonstrate how the lunar module would dock with the command module
Rocket Comparison
Lunar orbit insertion
Posted on April 16, 2015
REF: 2-903-6 SA-2 LAUNCH AT CAPE. IGNITION OF ROCKET (SATURN 1 VEHICLE)
SA-2 erected on launch pedestal
Wernher_von_Braun_confers_with_Brainerd_Holmes_and_Nicholas_Golovin
Posted on April 23, 2015
The impact facility at North American was used to drop-test the CM
Selection of Little Joe II completed the Apollo family of launch vehicles.
Scott Carpenter, John Glenn, and Walter Schirra in 1963 inspect a full-scale mock up of the Apollo CM
North American Aviation Stormy,
Interior of a partial full-scale mockup of the Apollo command module
major parts of the command module structure
Posted on April 30, 2015
Posted on May 7, 2015
General Electric employees monitor activities of a spacecraft test in the automatic-checkout-equipment spacecraft control room in 1965
comparison of spacecraft and launch vehicle configuration
Apollo tracking network in 1966. Radar stations with large antennas for continuous tracking and communications were at Goldstone, California; Madrid, Spain; and Canberra, Australia
Posted on May 14, 2015
Full-scale model of the command module, above- the strake aerodynamic devices may be seen at either side of the spacecraft just above the aft heatshield
Removing LM from S=IVB stage
On 16 November 1963 in Cape Canaveral’s Blockhouse 37, NASA’s new manned space flight chief George Mueller
Communications with the moon as the earth turned. Astronauts on the moon’s surface also could talk to one another
Posted on May 21, 2015
download
The cabin section (or primary structure) of the CM is assembled at North American in 1965
The CM probe would slip into the LM’s dish-shaped drogue, and 12 latches on the docking ring would engage, to lock the spacecraft together, airtight
Full-scale model of the service module, resting on a mockup of a spacecraft-lunar module adapter, with panels off to reveal part of the internal arrangement
Jettison of the launch escape system (right) after successful launch, also pulls away the boost protective cover that protects the windows from flame and soot
On the drawing of the launch escape system at upper right, the canard aerodynamic devices are near the top of the escape tower
Posted on May 28, 2015
VonBraunMuellerReesSA6
SA5_launch
sa-6-spacecraft
sa-6-dem
SA-6 spacecraft and launch vehicle ready to go
SA-6 on pad
SA-5Section cuts
SA-5
SA-5 S-IV stage
SA-5 on pad
SA-5 Demensions
apollo_sa7_launch
apollo_sa4
Posted on June 4, 2015
a-002
A-001_launch_1964_05_13
Pad_abort_test_1-237×300
Little Joe II- On Pad, Complex 36 (December 7, 1964)
BP12
Apollo_LJ_II_flight_profile
a-001 bp-12
A pad abort test at White Sands, left, helped determine that the launch escape system could propel the Apollo command module away from danger if a Saturn launch vehicle explosion should threaten
A desert area at White Sands Test Facility, New Mexico, was used for testing the spacecraft propulsion system module
Posted on June 11, 2015
6-NASA engineers in 1964 decided that astronauts could stand in the lunar module cabin during the trip to the lunar surface. Note triangular windows
7-Proposed sleeping positions for astronauts on the moon
5-Mockup of lunar module cabin with seats
4-The drawing of the stage indicates positions of components
3-underside of the lunar module descent stage shows fuel tank installation
2-Administrator James Webb examines models of the lunar and command modules in docked position
1-Lunar module generations from 1962 (above left; the vehicle originally proposed by Grumman) to 1969
Posted on June 17, 2015
3-improved lunar module features – ladder, porch, hatch, and rendezvous window
2-he addition of a ladder on a landing gear leg made the task much easier
1- Astronauts found a knotted rope from the lunar module difficult to climb down (or up)
Posted on July 2, 2015
5-Removing the LEM
4-ApolloSpacecraftLMAdapterDiagram
3-Apollo_Spacecraft_diagram
2-Tm-1 mockup of the Lunar Module
1-lm-6-rendezvous-radar-antenna-assy-sm
Posted on July 9, 2015
4-SIV-SIVB
3-Saturn 1b-V
2-Cutaways
1- SIV_rocket_stage
Posted on July 16, 2015
4- Saturn_SA10_launch
Saturn_SA8_launch
2- The SA-9
8- Pegasus_Deployment_sequence
7- Cutaway views show the interior of the command module (for clarity, the center couch is not shown)
6- Pegasus Deployed
5- Pegasus Stowed
4- Saturn_SA10_launch
Posted on July 23, 2015
3- 1230_Lunar_module_LTA-2_R
2-Disher_John_
1-Lunar_Module_diagram
Posted on August 20, 2015
AS-203_launch
AS-202_launch
AS-201_launch
Apollo-Saturn 201 mission – launch, recovery
Posted on August 27, 2015
3-Christopher_Kraft,_flight_director_during_Project_Mercury,_works_at_his_console_inside_the_Flight_Control_area_at_Mercury_Mission_Control
2-Wally Schirra (right) consults the flight plan for his Mercury-Atlas-8 (MA-8) mission with Flight Director Chris Kraft
1-Chris Kraft and Rober Gilruth
Posted on September 3, 2015
3-Robert F. Thompson (center) and Christopher C. Kraft Jr. (right) brief Rear Admiral W.C. Abhau
2-Kraft with his new flight directors before the Gemini 4 mission Clockwise from lower right Kraft, Gene Kranz, Glynn Lunney and John Hodge
1-Kraft Kranz Gemini Fuel Cell problem
Posted on September 10, 2015
3-Kranz and his teacher Kraft
2-Kranz at his console on May 30, 1965, in the Mission Operations Control Room, Mission Control Center, Houston
1-Kranz-F86 Sabre Cat
Posted on September 17, 2015
3-Astronauts Grissom, Chaffee, and White check the communications headgear in preparation for what was to have been the first manned Apollo flight – Apollo-Saturn 204, scheduled for 21 February 1967
2-CM-012 – Apollo One- arrives at Kennedy Space Center, 26 August 1966
1-Command module 012 and service module 012 in workstands at the North American Aviation plant, Downey, in 1965
Posted on October 1, 2015
Chaffee, White, and Grissom
apollo1-sketch-jg
the-Apollo-1-launch-pad-fire-that-killed-astronauts-Gus-Grissom-Roger-Chaffee-and-Ed-White-celebrities-who-died-young-31704639-1372-740
Posted on October 8, 2015
3-Apollo_1_patch
2-apollo1chaffee
1-Chaffee at the consoles in Mission Control during the Gemini 3 mission
Posted on October 15, 2015
1-1024px-AS-204_-_hatch
3-PrimeandBackupCrews
2-PrimeCrewAltitudeChamberTest
Posted on October 22, 2015
3-apollo
2-c216a
1-Apollo_1’s_Command_Module_-_GPN-2003-00057
Posted on October 29, 2015
CM parts were studied and catalogued in the Pyrotechnics Installation Building at Kennedy Space Center.
The CM wiring harness goes through x-ray inspection.
apollo-1-disassembly
Posted on November 5, 2015
Deputy Administrator Seamans, Administrator Webb, Manned Space Flight Administrator George E. Mueller, and Apollo Program Director Phillips testify before a Senate hearing on the Apollo accident
2-Apollo1Langley
1-Apollo1 Inve
Posted on November 12, 2015
LC34_memorial_benches
LC34plaque2 (1)
KSC_Launch_Complex_34
Apollo1plaque
Apollo_1_Silver-Colored_Fliteline_Medallion_(Flown_on_Apollo_9)
Posted on February 6, 2014
The general arrangement of liquid rocket systems (OAMS and RCS) in the Gemini spacecraft
Gemini landing gear part of the land landing system along with the paraglider
fig41The B. F. Goodrich partial-wear full-pressure suit being developed for the Gemini program
fig33Figure 33. The emergency parachute recovery system for the half-scale paraglider flight test vehicle for Phase II-A of the development program – Copy
fig27Gemini spacecraft nomenclature – Copy
Agena B
Posted on February 12, 2014
fig58 Astronauts after a training session in desert near Stead Air Force Base, Nevada
Goal
fig54 Instrumented mannequin being lowered into a boilerplate Gemini spacecraft in preparation for a dynamic sled test of the Gemini ejection system
fig52 Gemini launch vehicle 1 undergoing tests in the vertical test facility at Martin’s Baltimore plant
fig51 POGO suppression equipment proved out in the Titan II development program
fig48 Proposed deployment sequence for the ballute stabilization device
fig47 Titan II flight N-15 was launched from Cape Canaveral on January 10, 1963
Posted on March 6, 2014
Retro Adapter
Mercury and Gemini
Ejection
Retro Adapter
GT2_S-64-40154
Figure 74. Special instrumentation pallets to be installed in Gemini spacecraft No. 2 in the same positions that astronauts would occupy in later flights
Figure 75. The first stage of Gemini launch vehicle 2 being unloaded from an Air Force C-133 at Cape Kennedy
Posted on April 24, 2014
James_McDivitt_-_Gemini_4
Gemini 4
Gemini 4 Astronauts
Ed White
Gemini 4 astronauts
Posted on May 1, 2014
Spacewalk
Manned Maneuvering Unit
Gt4Patch
gemini-4
gemini-4_landing
Gemini_4_Outside_National_Air_and_Space_Museum
Gemini 4 recovery
Gemini 4 launch
Gemini 4 inside national air and space
Gemini -24 scale model
Ed white
G4 button
Space Rocket History #62 – Gemini IV with James McDivitt and Edward White – The Duration – Part 3
Posted on May 8, 2014
Food packages of beef and gravy fully reconstituted and ready to eat. The water gun is used to reconstitute dehydrated food and the scissors are used to open the packages to eat
This package of spacefood, like the ones carried aboard Gemini missions, contains a complete meal combination, which consists of entree, vegetables and dessert. Additionally, it has a package of drink crystals
This meal includes a beef sandwich, strawberry cereal cubes, peaches, and beef and gravy. Astronauts used a water gun to reconstitute the food and scissors to open the package
Space Rocket History #63 – Gemini V with Gordon Cooper and Pete Conrad – 8 Days or Bust -Part 1
Posted on May 15, 2014
gordo recovery
Gemini5insignia
gemini5-surrounded-by-mcdonnell-works-during-checkout-240×310
Gemini5-splashdown
Gemini5-cockpit-pre-launch
gemini-v-crew
gemini-5-cape-kennedy-240×242
gemini-5-baja-california
Gemini-5_Gordon_Cooper_recovery
Gemini_5_Radar_Evaluation_Pod
Gemini_5_on_the_pad_19
Gemini_5_Fuel Cell
Dave Hint
Space Rocket History #64 – Gemini V with Gordon Cooper and Pete Conrad – 8 Days or Bust -Part 2
Posted on May 22, 2014
Posted on May 29, 2014
G6Patch
Gemini-Agena
gemini-agena
Gemini_6_prime_crew
Atlas-Agena_6_Launch
gemini_atv_6
Posted on June 5, 2014
GT7 Launch
gemini7patch
Lovell before the launch, in the special G5C space suit, which had a zippered hood with a visor instead of a solid helmet
Gemini_7_Crew_(Lovell_und_Borman)
Moon and clouds over the Western Pacific as seen from Gemini 7
Borman and lovell boarding
Posted on June 12, 2014
Gemini_VI_Launch_-_GPN-2000-000612
Gemini_7_in_orbit_-_GPN-2006-000035
Gemini_6_Views_Gemini_7
Gemini 6 harmonica
1200px-Gemini_6_launch_abort
Hint for G6
Gemini_VI_Stafford_capsule
Gemini 7 as seen by Gemini 6
Posted on June 18, 2014
G7 crew
GT on Wasp
Gemini 7 spacecraft on display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center
Recovery of G7
Hellicopter over G6
GT7 on Wasp
G6&7 on Wasp
G7 Before Splashdown
G7 Arrive on Wasp
Posted on July 17, 2014
gemini_atv_8
Gemini Augmented Target Docking Adapter during pre-flight checkout
gemagena
agenhgre
800px-S66-25781_PR
facebook hint
Posted on July 24, 2014
Niel and David
Neil_Armstrong_in_Gemini_G-2C_training_suit
neil_armstrong_david_scott
Neil_Armstrong_1956_portrait
gemini8 at air and space museum Wapkoneta ohio
Gemini-VIII-flight-crew-SCOTT-David-R.-and-ARMSTRONG-Neil-A.
GEMINI-TITAN-8_-_PRELAUNCH_ACTIVITY
gemini_atv_8
gemini_8
Gemini 8 water egress test
F9F-2_Panthers_VF-51_over_Korea_1951 with Armstrong piloting
David Scott
Gemini-VIII-flight-crew-SCOTT-David-R.-and-ARMSTRONG-Neil-A.
Posted on July 30, 2014
gatv_diagram_labelled
Agena view from G8
640px-Gemini_8_during_rescue
Gemini_8_launch
Gemini_8_docking with agena
Gemini_8_Atlas-Agena_launch
Posted on August 7, 2014
G8 Ohio A&
gemini8 at air and space museum Wapkoneta ohio
G8
Posted on August 28, 2014
Gemini_9Acrew
g9patch
AtlasAgenaG9a
Posted on August 21, 2014
Elliot_See
gemini9
Charles_Bassett
Elliot_McKay_See
Posted on September 4, 2014
AugmentTargetDockingAdapter
tom Stafford in orbit
hint for facebook
Posted on September 11, 2014
Gemini 9 splashes down at 9-00 A.M., June 6, 1966. The day of the EVA was also their last in space
gemini9_crew_a
Gem9down-S66-34118
eugene_cernan
cernan_gt9_eva
Posted on September 18, 2014
KSC-66P-0323
KSC-66P-0317
gemini-10-astronaunt-michael-collins-pilot-for-nasa
Gemini 9 astronauts Gene Cernan and Tom Stafford brief Gemini 10 astronauts John Young and Mike Collins. And….how about that nice ATDA model in full gator
640px-Gemini10crew
Space Rocket History #81 – Gemini X with John Young and Mike Collins – Part 2 – Riding the Agena
Posted on September 25, 2014
John Young in Gemini 10
Gemini_10_launch_time_exposure_-_GPN-2006-000036
Gemini 10 Agena
Ge10Patch_orig
Collins shortly after launch
Agena_Firing_-_GPN-2000-001355
Posted on October 2, 2014
gemini-10_recovery
gemini_11_splashdown_recovery_print-r5a59c8d7c6244f54af0dc3eba26b9a72_wa3_8byvr_512
G10RecoveryCertificate
DaveG10
Posted on October 9, 2014
scan0704
RichardFGordon
320px-Gemini_11_patch
agena 11
Gemini_11_prime_crew_(Gordon_and_Conrad)
Gemini_11_Gordon_suits_up for G11
Posted on October 16, 2014
Gordon Astride Agena
agena 11
1024px-Gemini_Profiles
Posted on October 23, 2014
Recovery of G11
mySuperLamePic_4b6522ec730b0c0a85b7ed20f7c4f00f
G11 parachute
Agena Tether Experiment
Posted on October 30, 2014
p3-AldrinLovell
p2-Aldrin Lovell Cernan Cooper
p-1G12Patch
gemini-12_2
Agena12
Posted on November 6, 2014
Agena12tether
buzzViewHatchOpen
Gemini_XII_Mission_Image_-_Solar_Eclipse
G12 tether
buzzadrinview
Posted on November 13, 2014
p-1G12Patch
LovelAldrinRecovery
Gemini12Into Sun
gemini_xii_mission
