Albert R. Hibbs Papers: Finding Aid
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Mission to Jupiter
This book attempts to convey the creativity, Project A History of the Galileo Jupiter: To Mission The Galileo mission to Jupiter explored leadership, and vision that were necessary for the an exciting new frontier, had a major impact mission’s success. It is a book about dedicated people on planetary science, and provided invaluable and their scientific and engineering achievements. lessons for the design of spacecraft. This The Galileo mission faced many significant problems. mission amassed so many scientific firsts and Some of the most brilliant accomplishments and key discoveries that it can truly be called one of “work-arounds” of the Galileo staff occurred the most impressive feats of exploration of the precisely when these challenges arose. Throughout 20th century. In the words of John Casani, the the mission, engineers and scientists found ways to original project manager of the mission, “Galileo keep the spacecraft operational from a distance of was a way of demonstrating . just what U.S. nearly half a billion miles, enabling one of the most technology was capable of doing.” An engineer impressive voyages of scientific discovery. on the Galileo team expressed more personal * * * * * sentiments when she said, “I had never been a Michael Meltzer is an environmental part of something with such great scope . To scientist who has been writing about science know that the whole world was watching and and technology for nearly 30 years. His books hoping with us that this would work. We were and articles have investigated topics that include doing something for all mankind.” designing solar houses, preventing pollution in When Galileo lifted off from Kennedy electroplating shops, catching salmon with sonar and Space Center on 18 October 1989, it began an radar, and developing a sensor for examining Space interplanetary voyage that took it to Venus, to Michael Meltzer Michael Shuttle engines. -
Interview with David C. Elliot
DAVID C. ELLIOT (1917 – 2007) INTERVIEWED BY CAROL BUGÉ April – May, 1986 Photo taken in 1967 ARCHIVES CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Pasadena, California Subject area History Abstract Interview conducted in five sessions, April and May 1986, by Carol Bugé with David Clephan Elliot, professor of history, emeritus, who arrived at Caltech in 1950 as an assistant professor, was appointed full professor by 1960, and served as the humanities and social sciences division’s executive officer from 1967 to 1971, as well as the secretary of the faculty from 1973-1985. Born and raised in Scotland, he received his MA in 1939 from the University of St. Andrews. In 1940 the British government sent Elliot to India, where he spent six years in the Punjab region working for the Indian Civil Service. In 1947, Elliot entered Harvard University, where he received an AM in 1948 and a PhD in 1951; later, in 1956, he also received an MA from Oxford University, where he studied international organizational law. The interview begins with Elliot discussing his early years in Scotland, the outbreak of World War II, meeting his future wife Nancy, and his experiences in India. He then goes on to discuss his decision to settle in the U.S., and more http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Elliot_D specifically his arrival in California in 1950. His recollections of the 1950s and 1960s at Caltech include descriptions of the makeup and character of the campus and the students; the humanities division under the chairmanship of Hallett Smith; and later, with the addition of the social sciences to the division, the gradual shift in emphasis from teaching and survey courses to research and specialization, which took place under the helm of Robert Huttenback. -
Surveyor 1 Space- Craft on June 2, 1966 As Seen by the Narrow Angle Camera of the Lunar Re- Connaissance Orbiter Taken on July 17, 2009 (Also See Fig
i “Project Surveyor, in particular, removed any doubt that it was possible for Americans to land on the Moon and explore its surface.” — Harrison H. Schmitt, Apollo 17 Scientist-Astronaut ii Frontispiece: Landing site of the Surveyor 1 space- craft on June 2, 1966 as seen by the narrow angle camera of the Lunar Re- connaissance Orbiter taken on July 17, 2009 (also see Fig. 13). The white square in the upper photo outlines the area of the enlarged view below. The spacecraft is ca. 3.3 m tall and is casting a 15 m shadow to the East. (NASA/LROC/ ASU/GSFC photos) iii iv Surveyor I: America’s First Moon Landing by William F. Mellberg v © 2014, 2015 William F. Mellberg vi About the author: William Mellberg was a marketing and public relations representative with Fokker Aircraft. He is also an aerospace historian, having published many articles on both the development of airplanes and space vehicles in various magazines. He is the author of Famous Airliners and Moon Missions. He also serves as co-Editor of Harrison H. Schmitt’s website: http://americasuncommonsense.com Acknowledgments: The support and recollections of Frank Mellberg, Harrison Schmitt, Justin Rennilson, Alexander Gurshstein, Paul Spudis, Ronald Wells, Colin Mackellar and Dwight Steven- Boniecki is gratefully acknowledged. vii Surveyor I: America’s First Moon Landing by William F. Mellberg A Journey of 250,000 Miles . December 14, 2013. China’s Chang’e 3 spacecraft successfully touched down on the Moon at 1311 GMT (2111 Beijing Time). The landing site was in Mare Imbrium, the Sea of Rains, about 25 miles (40 km) south of the small crater, Laplace F, and roughly 100 miles (160 km) east of its original target in Sinus Iridum, the Bay of Rainbows. -
Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of Mariner 2 Videohistory Collection, 1987
Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of Mariner 2 Videohistory Collection, 1987 Finding aid prepared by Smithsonian Institution Archives Smithsonian Institution Archives Washington, D.C. Contact us at [email protected] Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Historical Note.................................................................................................................. 1 Introduction....................................................................................................................... 2 Descriptive Entry.............................................................................................................. 2 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 3 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 4 Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of Mariner 2 Videohistory Collection https://siarchives.si.edu/collections/siris_arc_217703 Collection Overview Repository: Smithsonian Institution Archives, Washington, D.C., [email protected] Title: Twenty-Fifth Anniversary of Mariner 2 Videohistory Collection Identifier: Record Unit 9535 Date: 1987 Extent: 2 videotapes (Reference copies). 8 digital .wmv files and .rm files (Reference copies). Creator:: Language: -
ADAM KUCHARSKI Is an Assistant Professor in Mathematical Modelling at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and A
ADAM KUCHARSKI is an assistant professor in mathematical modelling at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and an award-winning science writer. Born in 1986, he studied at the University of Warwick before completing a PhD in mathematics at the University of Cambridge. He has published papers on topics ranging from statistics to social behaviour, and has worked on outbreak analysis of avian influenza and Ebola. Winner of the 2012 ellcomeW Trust Science Writing Prize, he has contributed popular science articles to Nautilus, BBC Focus and Scientific American magazines. He lives in London. ‘Great stories of how smart people have used maths, statistics and science to try and beat the odds—legally’ David Spiegelhalter, Winton Professor for the Public Understanding of Risk, University of Cambridge ‘A wild ride through the history, psychology, mathematics, and technology of gaming—a remarkable look behind the curtain of what most people think is intuitive, but isn’t’ Paul Offit, author of Bad Faith ‘With an entertaining writing style, Adam Kucharski guides us through the history and state of the art of “The Perfect Bet”, showing us how mathematics and computers are used to come up with optimal ways to gamble, play games, bluff, and invest our money. Extremely well-written and carefully researched. I highly recommend it.’ Arthur Benjamin, author of The Magic of Maths ‘A lucid yet sophisticated look at the mathematics of probability as it’s played out on gaming tables, arenas, and fields … Gamblers and maths buffs alike will enjoy it -
L5 News, August 1976
NUMBER 12 A NEWSLETTER FROM THE L-5 SOCIETY AUGUST, 1976 Study group Jobs in Space NASA TO RECRUIT SPACE SHUTTLE ASTRONAUTS slashes L5 cost est. NASA has issued a call for Space Shuttle astronaut candidates. Applications will be accepted until June A team of 12 researchers at NASA The previous summer, 28 researchers 30, 1977 and all applicants will be Ames Research Center this summer has at Ames had bracketed the cost estimate informed of selection by December, concluded that the L-5 solar energy between 100 and 200 billion for a more 1977. proposal will cost between 30-60 billion elaborate program with less emphasis on dollars and that, given an Apollo-style space manufacturing facilities. At least 15 pilot candidates and 15 mission specialist candidates will be effort, the first solar power satellite The 12 researchers called for the selected to report to the Lyndon B. could be beaming energy to Earth in establishment of a habitat (the “Crystal Johnson Space Center, Houston, Tex., 1992. A more cautious scenario, where Palace”) containing 6,000 people. They on July 1, 1978, for two years of development of each project phase would live in a “hatbox” in contrast to training and evaluation. Final selection would be delayed until each previous the “bicycle tire” (also known as the as an astronaut will depend on phase was fully tested, would see power Stanford Torus) of the previous summer’s satisfactory completion of the evaluation satellites in operation by 1999. design. (cont’d. on p. 2, col. 2) period. NASA is committed to an affirmative action program with a goal of having qualified minorities and women among the newly selected astronaut candidates. -
ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: TELEVISING the SPACE AGE: a DESCRIPTIVE CHRONOLOGY of CBS NEWS SPECIAL COVERAGE of SPACE EXPLORATION
ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: TELEVISING THE SPACE AGE: A DESCRIPTIVE CHRONOLOGY OF CBS NEWS SPECIAL COVERAGE OF SPACE EXPLORATION FROM 1957 TO 2003 Alfred Robert Hogan, Master of Arts, 2005 Thesis directed by: Professor Douglas Gomery College of Journalism University of Maryland, College Park From the liftoff of the Space Age with the Earth-orbital beeps of Sputnik 1 on 4 October 1957, through the videotaped tragedy of space shuttle Columbia’s reentry disintegration on 1 February 2003 and its aftermath, critically acclaimed CBS News televised well more than 500 hours of special events, documentary, and public affairs broadcasts dealing with human and robotic space exploration. Much of that was memorably anchored by Walter Cronkite and produced by Robert J. Wussler. This research synthesizes widely scattered data, much of it internal and/or unpublished, to partially document the fluctuating patterns, quantities, participants, sponsors, and other key details of that historic, innovative, riveting coverage. TELEVISING THE SPACE AGE: A DESCRIPTIVE CHRONOLOGY OF CBS NEWS SPECIAL COVERAGE OF SPACE EXPLORATION FROM 1957 TO 2003 by Alfred Robert Hogan Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2005 Advisory Committee: Professor Douglas Gomery, Chair Mr. Stephen Crane, Director, Capital News Service Washington Bureau Professor Lee Thornton. © Copyright by Alfred Robert Hogan 2005 ii Dedication To all the smart, energetic, talented people who made the historic start of the Space Age an unforgettable reality as it unfolded on television; to my ever-supportive chief adviser Professor Douglas Gomery and the many others who kindly took time, effort, and pains to aid my research quest; and to my special personal circle, especially Mother and Father, Cindy S. -
Mars Exploration Rover Mission Complete Assembly and Testing for the Twin Robotic Geologists
February 14, 2003 Inside Volume 33 Number 4 News Briefs . 2 14 and Counting . 3 Special Events Calendar . 2 Flight Hardware Facility Opens . 3 Caltech Women Tour Lab . 2 Letters, Passings, Classifieds . 4 Jet Propulsion Laboratory ars Exploration Rovers spend final days Next, in Spacecraft Assembly Facility stop, M Florida, Photos by Bob Brown / JPL Photolab Photos by Bob Brown Engineers for JPL’s Mars Exploration Rover mission complete assembly and testing for the twin robotic geologists. This week the twin rovers shared floor space in JPL's Spacecraft Assembly Facility for the last time before they are shipped to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Note the size difference from the Sojourner rover on 1997’s Pathfinder mission, in foreground. The cruise stage, aeroshell and lander for one of the rovers arrived at the Kennedy Space Center on Jan. 27, and the identical flight hardware for the second rover will arrive in mid-February. The first of the two rovers will arrive at Kennedy in late February or early March. The rovers will be launched separately in May and June. Two days ago we all woke up to the tragic all of us here. In many cases, event of the loss of Columbia and its crew. lives were lost — but not in There are no words that can properly express vain. The world is a better our grief and sadness for the loss of these place because of these heroes seven heroes. Our hearts and prayers go out and explorers. In memory to their families and friends, both in our Space exploration will go on country and in the state of Israel. -
The Quickening Pace I9S7-I9 6I
f) 0 o () I) CI • 2 • The Quickening Pace I9S7-I9 6I FIRST REACTIONS (OCTOBER 1957 - DECEMBER 1958) The famous beep-beep telemetry of Sputnik immediately immersed the United States in a yearlong debate about how to respond. The U.S. space program was under way when Sputnik went up, but there was no sense of urgency until 4 October 1957.1 The now-famous JPL in Pasadena, California, was well positioned to respond to Sputnik.' JPL was born in 1936 as the Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory of Caltech, and in 1940 began contract work for the U.S. Army Air Corps to develop jet-assisted takeoff(]ATo) for propeller-driven airplanes, at which time it moved its rocket-shooting activities to its present site next to the Arroyo Seco (Dry Wash) and the then-unobscured San Gabriel Mountains. It acquired its present name when it began work on tactical ballistic missiles for the army in 1944, and was still an army establishment in 1957, though administered by Caltech then and now. Only three weeks after the Sputnik launch, JPL'S director, William Pickering, proposed to leap beyond the Sputniks with a project called Red Socks which could send a spacecraft to the Moon as early as 1958. Red Socks would be based on the Explorer spacecraft that JPL was already building. Red Socks fizzled, however, for lack of interest on the part of the Department of Defense, which by default was overseeing the space program in 1957. So it was up to a Navy project called Vanguard to respond first to the Soviets. -
William H. Pickering • America's Deep Space Pioneer
About the Author Douglas Mudgway came to the United States in 1962 to work at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, following a 15-year career in the field of guided missile research and testing in Australia. At JPL, he was involved in the development and opera- tion of the Deep Space Network from its infancy in the early 1960s until its maturity in the early 1990s. He On the first day of February 1958, three men held aloft retired from JPL in 1991. a model of Explorer 1, America’s first Earth satellite, for His previous books include Uplink-Downlink: A History the press photographers. That image of William Pickering, Wernher von Braun, and James Van Allen became an icon for of the Deep Space Network, 1957–1997 (NASA SP-2001- America’s response to the Sputnik challenge. 4227) and Big Dish: Building America’s Deep Space Von Braun and Van Allen were well known, but who Connection to the Planets (University Press of Florida: 2005). was Pickering? From humble beginnings in a remote country A mathematics and physics graduate of the University town in New Zealand, Pickering came to California in of New Zealand, Mr. Mudgway writes and enjoys life in 1928 and quickly established himself as an outstanding the wine country of Northern California. student at the then-new California Institute of Technology “More than any other individual, Bill Pickering (Caltech). was responsible for America’s success in exploring At Caltech, Pickering worked under the famous physicist About the Back Cover the planets—an endeavor that demanded vision, Robert Millikan on cosmic-ray experiments, at that time a courage, dedication, expertise, and the ability to relatively new field of physics.