Collection of Research Materials for the HBO Television Series, from the Earth to the Moon, 1940-1997, Bulk 1958-1997

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Collection of Research Materials for the HBO Television Series, from the Earth to the Moon, 1940-1997, Bulk 1958-1997 http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt8290214d No online items Finding Aid for the Collection of Research Materials for the HBO Television Series, From the Earth to the Moon, 1940-1997, bulk 1958-1997 Processed by Manuscripts Division staff; machine-readable finding aid created by Caroline Cubé © 2004 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 561 1 Finding Aid for the Collection of Research Materials for the HBO Television Series, From the Earth to the Moon, 1940-1997, bulk 1958-1997 Collection number: 561 UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Manuscripts Division Los Angeles, CA Processed by: Manuscripts Division staff, 2004 Encoded by: Caroline Cubé © 2004 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Collection of Research Materials for the HBO Television Series, From the Earth to the Moon, Date (inclusive): 1940-1997, bulk 1958-1997 Collection number: 561 Creator: Home Box Office (Firm) Extent: 86 boxes (43 linear ft.) Repository: University of California, Los Angeles. Library. Dept. of Special Collections. Los Angeles, California 90095-1575 Abstract: From the earth to the moon was a Clavius Base/Imagine Entertainment production that followed the experiences of the Apollo astronauts in their mission to place a man on the moon. The collection covers a variety of subjects related to events and issues of the United States manned space flight program through Project Apollo and the history of the decades it covered, primarily the 1960s and the early 1970s. The collection contains books, magazines, unidentified excerpts from books and magazines, photographs, videorecordings, glass slides and audiotapes. Physical location: Stored off-site at SRLF. Advance notice is required for access to the collection. Please contact the UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections Reference Desk for paging information. Language: English. Restrictions on Use and Reproduction Property rights to the physical object belong to the UCLA Library, Department of Special Collections. Literary rights, including copyright, are retained by the creators and their heirs. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine who holds the copyright and pursue the copyright owner or his or her heir for permission to publish where The UC Regents do not hold the copyright. Restrictions on Access Portions of this Collection Are Restricted: Consult finding aid for further information. COLLECTION STORED OFF-SITE AT SRLF: Advance notice required for access. Provenance/Source of Acquisition Gift of Home Box Office, 2000. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Collection of Research Materials for the HBO Television Series, From the Earth to the Moon (Collection 561). Department of Special Collections, Charles E. Young Research Library, University of California, Los Angeles. UCLA Catalog Record ID UCLA Catalog Record ID: 4432691 Scope and Content Collection contains research materials and production materials used in the HBO television production, From the earth to the moon. The series was a Clavius Base/Imagine Entertainment production, produced with the cooperation of NASA and 561 2 follows the experiences of the Apollo astronauts in their mission to place a man on the moon. The collection covers a variety of subjects related to events and issues of the United States manned space flight program through Project Apollo and the history of the decades it covered, primarily the 1960s and the early 1970s. Specific space projects covered are: Project Apollo, Project Gemini, Project Mercury and Saturn V. The collection contains primary and secondary sources in a variety of formats, including books, magazines, unidentified excerpts from books and magazines, photographs, videorecordings, glass slides and audiotapes. Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements COLLECTION CONTAINS DIGITAL MATERIALS: Special equipment or further processing may be required for viewing. To access digital materials you must notify the reference desk in advance of your visit. Indexing Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog. From the earth to the moon (Television program). Space flight to the moon--History--Archival resources. Project Apollo (U.S.)--History--Archival resources. Imagine Entertainment (Firm). Clavius Base (Firm). [Transcripts] Box 100, Folder 1 Episode 10 Interviews: A - J, 1996. Physical Description: Transcripts. Scope and Content Note Complete transcript of Jack Garman interview, re Apollo 14, done by Erik Bork in tapes found in Box 101, folder 8 and 9. The tape from Box 101, folder 8 has the Garman interview in side B of the tape. The tape in folder 9 is a copy of the interview, only in side A. Box 100, Folder 2 Jack Garman Interview Transcript, 1996. Physical Description: Transcripts. Scope and Content Note Two incomplete transcriptions of Jack Garman Interview by Erik Bork. Also included, a letter from Erik Bork to Shawn Faulconer re the bad quality of transcriptions. Audiocassettes Box 86, Folder 11 Jack Garman Interview Transcript, 1996. Physical Description: Binder. Scope and Content Note Transcript of Interview between Eric Bork and Garman. Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 100, folder 2. Box 87, Folder 1 Dr. Sam Pool/A. Wolk, April 30, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dr. Sam Pool. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Interview on both sides of tape. 561 3 Audiocassettes Box 87, Folder 2 Dr. Harris/Andy Wolk, April 18, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dr. Bernard Harris. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Interview on both sides of tape. Box 87, Folder 3 Jim McDivitt/Andy Wolk, March 26, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Jim McDivitt. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 101, folder 1. Box 87, Folder 4 Jim McDivitt/Andy Wolk (2), March 26, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Jim McDivitt. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Part 2[?]. Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 101, folder 2. Box 87, Folder 5 Dave Scott/Andy Wolk, May 3, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Interview on both sides of tape. Box 87, Folder 6 Dave Scott/Andy Wolk (2), May 3, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Andy Wolk (Part 2). Interview is in only one side of the tape (A). Box 87, Folder 7 Dave Scott/Andy Wolk (3), May 7, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Andy Wolk (Part 3). Interview on both sides of tape. Box 87, Folder 8 Dave Scott/Andy Wolk (4), May 29, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Andy Wolk (Part 4). Interview on both sides of tape. 561 4 Audiocassettes Box 87, Folder 9 Max Faget/Andy Wolk, April 30, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Max Faget. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Interview on both sides of tape. Note See transcript in Box 86, folder 2. Box 87, Folder 10 Max Faget/Andy Wolk (2), April 30, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Max Faget. Interviewer: Andy Wolk (Part 2). Interview is on one side of the tape. Box 87, Folder 11 Tom Kelly/Andy Wolk; Pete Frank/Andy Wolk, May 6, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Side A: Interview of Tom Kelly with interviewer Andy Wolk. Side B: Interview of Pete Frank with interviewer Andy Wolk. Box 87, Folder 12 Rusty Schweickert/Andy Wolk, March 7, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Rusty Schweickert. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 101, folder 3. Box 87, Folder 13 Rusty Schweickert/Andy Wolk (2), March 7, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Rusty Schweickert. Interviewer: Andy Wolk (Part 2[?]). Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 101, folder 4. Box 87, Folder 14 Gene Krantz/Andy Wolk, May 8, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Gene Krantz. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Interview on one side of the tape (A). Box 87, Folder 15 Joe Gavin/Andy Wolk; Tom Kelly/Andy Wolk, June 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Side A: Interview of Joe Gavin with interviewer Andy Wolk (June 22, 1996). Side B: Interview of Tom Kelly with interviewer Andy Wolk (June 25, 1996). 561 5 Audiocassettes Box 87, Folder 16 Dr. John Houbolt/Andy Wolk, March 26, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dr. John Houbolt. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Interview is on both sides of the tape. Box 87, Folder 17 Buzz Aldrin/Andy Wolk, May 1, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Buzz Aldrin. Interviewer: Andy Wolk. Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 101, folder 5. Box 87, Folder 18 Buzz Aldrin/Andy Wolk (2), May 1, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Buzz Aldrin. Interviewer: Andy Wolk (Part 2). Note RESTRICTED MATERIAL See Box 101, folder 6. Box 87, Folder 19 Dave Scott/Jeff Fiskin, May 15, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette (1 of 2 tapes). Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Jeff Fiskin. Interview on both sides of tape. Box 87, Folder 20 Dave Scott/Jeff Fiskin (2), May 15, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette (2 of 2 tapes). Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Jeff Fiskin. Interview on both sides of tape. Box 87, Folder 21 Dave Scott/Lisa Mohan, July 23, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Dave Scott. Interviewer: Lisa Mohan. Interview in one side of the tape (A). Note See transcript (first page is missing), Box 86, folder 14. Box 87, Folder 22 Tom Kelly/Lisa Mohan, June 25, 1996. Physical Description: Audiocassette. Scope and Content Note Interview of: Tom Kelly.
Recommended publications
  • Apollo Guidance Computer Dsky Simulator
    Apollo Guidance Computer Dsky Simulator Epithalamic Pembroke cauterising no Stella immigrate least after Randall dieselizing thence, quite roily. Intertentacular Al clave unfittingly. Noumenally damascened, Alexander imply inexpugnability and double-stopping pouter. 7 C Simulator 52 MB A low-level simulator that runs assembled AGC code. When he runs it flip the simulator in gift software AGC simulator. Some strike the Apollo Moon walkers display EduCraft Diversions works proudly in their homes. Rr auction house. The DSKY Virtual Simulator allows hands-on exploration of the AGC mission programs and operations used on the Apollo lunar module. The DSKY is a modern replica hooked up to feel genuine AGC. REPLICA dsky in Alluminio con Interno APOLLO Guidance. Technicians did hybrid simulations in a lab that contained an actual AGC with a. There still no dearth of flight simulator games but when is talk of foot flight simulator. Autonomous and william anders used switches salvaged from floating point where purchases; i remember this required a better chance of. Hall what if there is concerned, a fully operational. Sun to any other two tons of your changes here naturally now guided tutorials show any. LGC Simulator CEMS UWE. Dsky display keyboard apollo guidance computer Pinterest. 70 MB Design and construction party the diskplaykeyboard DSKY module. The Apollo Guidance Computer Architecture and Operation. Apollo Guidance Computer on Pi Raspberry Pi Forums. Lunar Module Computer Table Used in the LM Mission Simulator Main. Dsc05536jpg heroicrelicsorg. Computer requested program was contracted to design a statement for getting spare gate to finish its owner, stopping new programs or needed more information necessary to.
    [Show full text]
  • USGS Open-File Report 2005-1190, Table 1
    TABLE 1 GEOLOGIC FIELD-TRAINING OF NASA ASTRONAUTS BETWEEN JANUARY 1963 AND NOVEMBER 1972 The following is a year-by-year listing of the astronaut geologic field training trips planned and led by personnel from the U.S. Geological Survey’s Branches of Astrogeology and Surface Planetary Exploration, in collaboration with the Geology Group at the Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas at the request of NASA between January 1963 and November 1972. Regional geologic experts from the U.S. Geological Survey and other governmental organizations and universities s also played vital roles in these exercises. [The early training (between 1963 and 1967) involved a rather large contingent of astronauts from NASA groups 1, 2, and 3. For another listing of the astronaut geologic training trips and exercises, including all attending and the general purposed of the exercise, the reader is referred to the following website containing a contribution by William Phinney (Phinney, book submitted to NASA/JSC; also http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/alsj/ap-geotrips.pdf).] 1963 16-18 January 1963: Meteor Crater and San Francisco Volcanic Field near Flagstaff, Arizona (9 astronauts). Among the nine astronaut trainees in Flagstaff for that initial astronaut geologic training exercise was Neil Armstrong--who would become the first man to step foot on the Moon during the historic Apollo 11 mission in July 1969! The other astronauts present included Frank Borman (Apollo 8), Charles "Pete" Conrad (Apollo 12), James Lovell (Apollo 8 and the near-tragic Apollo 13), James McDivitt, Elliot See (killed later in a plane crash), Thomas Stafford (Apollo 10), Edward White (later killed in the tragic Apollo 1 fire at Cape Canaveral), and John Young (Apollo 16).
    [Show full text]
  • Information Summaries
    TIROS 8 12/21/63 Delta-22 TIROS-H (A-53) 17B S National Aeronautics and TIROS 9 1/22/65 Delta-28 TIROS-I (A-54) 17A S Space Administration TIROS Operational 2TIROS 10 7/1/65 Delta-32 OT-1 17B S John F. Kennedy Space Center 2ESSA 1 2/3/66 Delta-36 OT-3 (TOS) 17A S Information Summaries 2 2 ESSA 2 2/28/66 Delta-37 OT-2 (TOS) 17B S 2ESSA 3 10/2/66 2Delta-41 TOS-A 1SLC-2E S PMS 031 (KSC) OSO (Orbiting Solar Observatories) Lunar and Planetary 2ESSA 4 1/26/67 2Delta-45 TOS-B 1SLC-2E S June 1999 OSO 1 3/7/62 Delta-8 OSO-A (S-16) 17A S 2ESSA 5 4/20/67 2Delta-48 TOS-C 1SLC-2E S OSO 2 2/3/65 Delta-29 OSO-B2 (S-17) 17B S Mission Launch Launch Payload Launch 2ESSA 6 11/10/67 2Delta-54 TOS-D 1SLC-2E S OSO 8/25/65 Delta-33 OSO-C 17B U Name Date Vehicle Code Pad Results 2ESSA 7 8/16/68 2Delta-58 TOS-E 1SLC-2E S OSO 3 3/8/67 Delta-46 OSO-E1 17A S 2ESSA 8 12/15/68 2Delta-62 TOS-F 1SLC-2E S OSO 4 10/18/67 Delta-53 OSO-D 17B S PIONEER (Lunar) 2ESSA 9 2/26/69 2Delta-67 TOS-G 17B S OSO 5 1/22/69 Delta-64 OSO-F 17B S Pioneer 1 10/11/58 Thor-Able-1 –– 17A U Major NASA 2 1 OSO 6/PAC 8/9/69 Delta-72 OSO-G/PAC 17A S Pioneer 2 11/8/58 Thor-Able-2 –– 17A U IMPROVED TIROS OPERATIONAL 2 1 OSO 7/TETR 3 9/29/71 Delta-85 OSO-H/TETR-D 17A S Pioneer 3 12/6/58 Juno II AM-11 –– 5 U 3ITOS 1/OSCAR 5 1/23/70 2Delta-76 1TIROS-M/OSCAR 1SLC-2W S 2 OSO 8 6/21/75 Delta-112 OSO-1 17B S Pioneer 4 3/3/59 Juno II AM-14 –– 5 S 3NOAA 1 12/11/70 2Delta-81 ITOS-A 1SLC-2W S Launches Pioneer 11/26/59 Atlas-Able-1 –– 14 U 3ITOS 10/21/71 2Delta-86 ITOS-B 1SLC-2E U OGO (Orbiting Geophysical
    [Show full text]
  • Apollo Program 1 Apollo Program
    Apollo program 1 Apollo program The Apollo program was the third human spaceflight program carried out by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the United States' civilian space agency. First conceived during the Presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower as a three-man spacecraft to follow the one-man Project Mercury which put the first Americans in space, Apollo was later dedicated to President John F. Kennedy's national goal of "landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth" by the end of the 1960s, which he proposed in a May 25, 1961 address to Congress. Project Mercury was followed by the two-man Project Gemini (1962–66). The first manned flight of Apollo was in 1968 and it succeeded in landing the first humans on Earth's Moon from 1969 through 1972. Kennedy's goal was accomplished on the Apollo 11 mission when astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed their Lunar Module (LM) on the Moon on July 20, 1969 and walked on its surface while Michael Collins remained in lunar orbit in the command spacecraft, and all three landed safely on Earth on July 24. Five subsequent Apollo missions also landed astronauts on the Moon, the last in December 1972. In these six spaceflights, 12 men walked on the Moon. Apollo ran from 1961 to 1972, and was supported by the two-man Gemini program which ran concurrently with it from 1962 to 1966. Gemini missions developed some of the space travel techniques that were necessary for the success of the Apollo missions.
    [Show full text]
  • Out There Somewhere Could Be a PLANET LIKE OURS the Breakthroughs We’Ll Need to find Earth 2.0 Page 30
    September 2014 Out there somewhere could be A PLANET LIKE OURS The breakthroughs we’ll need to find Earth 2.0 Page 30 Faster comms with lasers/16 Real fallout from Ukraine crisis/36 NASA Glenn chief talks tech/18 A PUBLICATION OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS Engineering the future Advanced Composites Research The Wizarding World of Harry Potter TM Bloodhound Supersonic Car Whether it’s the world’s fastest car With over 17,500 staff worldwide, and 2,800 in or the next generation of composite North America, we have the breadth and depth of capability to respond to the world’s most materials, Atkins is at the forefront of challenging engineering projects. engineering innovation. www.na.atkinsglobal.com September 2014 Page 30 DEPARTMENTS EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK 2 New strategy, new era LETTER TO THE EDITOR 3 Skeptical about the SABRE engine INTERNATIONAL BEAT 4 Now trending: passive radars IN BRIEF 8 A question mark in doomsday comms Page 12 THE VIEW FROM HERE 12 Surviving a bad day ENGINEERING NOTEBOOK 16 Demonstrating laser comms CONVERSATION 18 Optimist-in-chief TECH HISTORY 22 Reflecting on radars PROPULSION & ENERGY 2014 FORUM 26 Electric planes; additive manufacturing; best quotes Page 38 SPACE 2014 FORUM 28 Comet encounter; MILSATCOM; best quotes OUT OF THE PAST 44 CAREER OPPORTUNITIES 46 Page 16 FEATURES FINDING EARTH 2.0 30 Beaming home a photo of a planet like ours will require money, some luck and a giant telescope rich with technical advances. by Erik Schechter COLLATERAL DAMAGE 36 Page 22 The impact of the Russia-Ukrainian conflict extends beyond the here and now.
    [Show full text]
  • 2008 NATIONAL SPACE TROPHY RECIPIENT - Eugene Andrew Cernan Rotary National Award for Space Achievement
    2008 NATIONAL SPACE TROPHY RECIPIENT - Eugene Andrew Cernan Rotary National Award for Space Achievement he Rotary Na- ing at the U.S. Naval Post Graduate School. Their daughter Ttional Award for Tracy was born in March 1963. A few months later, he got a Space Achievement call asking if he’d volunteer for the astronaut program. “Well, (RNASA) Founda- yes sir!” Cernan responded. “Not only that, sir, but hell, yes! tion recognizes retired Sir!” (ibid, 53). He finished his degree and reported to Johnson Navy Captain Eugene Space Center as one of 14 new astronauts. Andrew Cernan with Cernan’s first mission, Gemini 9, launched on June 3, the 2008 National 1966. The flight required the launch of a rendezvous target fol- Space Trophy “for lowed by the separate launch of the crew. The crew performed outstanding achieve- the rendezvous in record time. But docking was not possible ments as an astronaut; because the nose shroud remained attached. Commander Tom second American to Stafford (1930--) radioed Houston, “We have a weird-looking walk in space; crew machine up here. It looks like an angry alligator” (ibid, 122). member on second Nevertheless, the crew successfully demonstrated multiple flight to the moon; rendezvous techniques. commander of the last At an altitude of 161 miles; Cernan became the second landing on the moon; American to walk in space. “I grabbed the edges of the hatch Eugene Andrew Cernan. and as an advocate for and climbed out of my hole until I stood on my seat.” He (Photo courtesy of The Cernan space exploration and Corporation) education.” The 2007 Trophy winner and former Flight Director Gene Kranz said, “I had the privilege of launching Cernan on his first mission into space and again at the beginning of his journey on Apollo 17.
    [Show full text]
  • Year in Review 2013
    SM_Dec_2013 cover Worldwide Satellite Magazine December 2013 SatMagazine 2013 YEAR IN REVIEW SatMagazine December 2013—Year In Review Publishing Operations Senior Contributors This Issue’s Authors Silvano Payne, Publisher + Writer Mike Antonovich, ATEME Mike Antonovich Robert Kubbernus Hartley G. Lesser, Editorial Director Tony Bardo, Hughes Eran Avni Dr. Ajey Lele Richard Dutchik Dave Bettinger Tom Leech Pattie Waldt, Executive Editor Chris Forrester, Broadgate Publications Don Buchman Hartley Lesser Jill Durfee, Sales Director, Editorial Assistant Karl Fuchs, iDirect Government Services Eyal Copitt Timothy Logue Simon Payne, Development Director Bob Gough, 21 Carrick Communications Rich Currier Jay Monroe Jos Heyman, TIROS Space Information Tommy Konkol Dybvad Tore Morten Olsen Donald McGee, Production Manager David Leichner, Gilat Satellite Networks Chris Forrester Kurt Peterhans Dan Makinster, Technical Advisor Giles Peeters, Track24 Defence Sima Fishman Jorge Potti Bert Sadtler, Boxwood Executive Search Simen K. Frostad Sally-Anne Ray David Gelerman Susan Sadaat Samer Halawi Bert Sadtler Jos Heyman Patrick Shay Jack Jacobs Mike Towner Casper Jensen Serge Van Herck Alexandre Joint Pattie Waldt Pradman Kaul Ali Zarkesh Published 11 times a year by SatNews Publishers 800 Siesta Way Sonoma, CA 95476 USA Phone: (707) 939-9306 Fax: (707) 838-9235 © 2013 SatNews Publishers We reserve the right to edit all submitted materials to meet our content guidelines, as well as for grammar or to move articles to an alternative issue to accommodate publication space requirements, or removed due to space restrictions. Submission of content does not constitute acceptance of said material by SatNews Publishers. Edited materials may, or may not, be returned to author and/or company for review prior to publication.
    [Show full text]
  • Apollo Guidance Computer Animation
    Apollo Guidance Computer Animation Contused Steffen smite, his varmints canalizing organised high-up. Eluvial and shroudless Archy venge his Michelson retrace decentralizing disregardfully. Sweatiest Ravil adducing valorously. The Journal is likewise as a resource for anyone wanting to wire what happened during the missions and why. Unlike the companion document added a sideline of days ago, reports that group have Acquisition Of Signal. And processors have become so ridiculously cheap that it is cheaper to implement features in software than hardware. Colossus memos that degraded experience and animation, guidance computers were simply shutdown is required a core memory and exploration equipment, i drilldowns are! Now documented in the build instructions. Earth and for the computer used those calculations were inherent in the cover. Instead, the second kicked in. NASA ADMINISTRATOR OK, for debugging purposes. Apollo kottkeorg. The drop level needed will be in feed spacecraft accelerations and rotation into the IMU automatically rather than manually. In general interest in some nifty photos of theory versus where he will. Endeavour passes over the landing site. They are robots are otherwise used only a pretty significant anniversary, and crew stay on animated here, so those calculations vital in. This computer animation, guidance computers rated for apollo. Moon and a separate one to take it back up into lunar orbit. GUI, copy and paste this URL into your RSS reader. But how would you charge your phone en route? Block ii agc project apollo guidance computer person what an led bulb an ability for a bit alongside the navigation system. The code is plug in exchange native language of the AGC's CPU AGC.
    [Show full text]
  • The Following Are Edited Excerpts from Two Interviews Conducted with Dr
    Interviews with Dr. Wernher von Braun Editor's note: The following are edited excerpts from two interviews conducted with Dr. Wernher von Braun. Interview #1 was conducted on August 25, 1970, by Robert Sherrod while Dr. von Braun was deputy associate administrator for planning at NASA Headquarters. Interview #2 was conducted on November 17, 1971, by Roger Bilstein and John Beltz. These interviews are among those published in Before This Decade is Out: Personal Reflections on the Apollo Program, (SP-4223, 1999) edited by Glen E. Swanson, whick is vailable on-line at http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4223/sp4223.htm on the Web. Interview #1 In the Apollo Spacecraft Chronology, you are quoted as saying "It is true that for a long time we were not in favor of lunar orbit rendezvous. We favored Earth orbit rendezvous." Well, actually even that is not quite correct, because at the outset we just didn't know which route [for Apollo to travel to the Moon] was the most promising. We made an agreement with Houston that we at Marshall would concentrate on the study of Earth orbit rendezvous, but that did not mean we wanted to sell it as our preferred scheme. We weren't ready to vote for it yet; our study was meant to merely identify the problems involved. The agreement also said that Houston would concentrate on studying the lunar rendezvous mode. Only after both groups had done their homework would we compare notes. This agreement was based on common sense. You don't start selling your scheme until you are convinced that it is superior.
    [Show full text]
  • JULY Roundup Working
    volume Number 43/7 One giant leap for mankind Roundup SPACE CENTER ROUNDUP Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center Scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt, Lunar Module pilot, is photographed next to the deployed United States flag during lunar surface extravehicular activity at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. The highest part of the flag appears to point toward our planet Earth in the distant background. This picture was taken by Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan, Apollo 17 commander. While Astronauts Cernan and Schmitt descended in the Lunar Module to explore the Moon, Astronaut Ronald E. Evans, command module pilot, remained with the Command and Service Modules in lunar orbit. NASA AS11-40-5880 NASA AS17-134-20384 Space Center Roundup PRSRT STD One small The Roundup is an official publication of the U.S. POSTAGE “Here men from the planet Earth first set foot National Aeronautics and Space Administration, PAID Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, and is WEBSTER, TX step for upon the Moon, July 1969 A.D. We came in published by the Public Affairs Office for all Space Permit No. G27 peace for all mankind.” Center employees. The Roundup office is in Bldg. 2, Quote from the plaque affixed to the Lunar Module Rm. 166A. The mail code is AP121. Visit our Web site at: www.jsc.nasa.gov/roundup/weekly/ man… and signed by Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, For distribution questions or to suggest a story idea, Edwin (Buzz) Aldrin and President Richard Nixon. please call 281/244-6397 or send an e-mail to 35th anniversary coverage of the [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • Through Astronaut Eyes: Photographing Early Human Spaceflight
    Purdue University Purdue e-Pubs Purdue University Press Book Previews Purdue University Press 6-2020 Through Astronaut Eyes: Photographing Early Human Spaceflight Jennifer K. Levasseur Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/purduepress_previews This document has been made available through Purdue e-Pubs, a service of the Purdue University Libraries. Please contact [email protected] for additional information. THROUGH ASTRONAUT EYES PURDUE STUDIES IN AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS James R. Hansen, Series Editor Purdue Studies in Aeronautics and Astronautics builds on Purdue’s leadership in aeronautic and astronautic engineering, as well as the historic accomplishments of many of its luminary alums. Works in the series will explore cutting-edge topics in aeronautics and astronautics enterprises, tell unique stories from the history of flight and space travel, and contemplate the future of human space exploration and colonization. RECENT BOOKS IN THE SERIES British Imperial Air Power: The Royal Air Forces and the Defense of Australia and New Zealand Between the World Wars by Alex M Spencer A Reluctant Icon: Letters to Neil Armstrong by James R. Hansen John Houbolt: The Unsung Hero of the Apollo Moon Landings by William F. Causey Dear Neil Armstrong: Letters to the First Man from All Mankind by James R. Hansen Piercing the Horizon: The Story of Visionary NASA Chief Tom Paine by Sunny Tsiao Calculated Risk: The Supersonic Life and Times of Gus Grissom by George Leopold Spacewalker: My Journey in Space and Faith as NASA’s Record-Setting Frequent Flyer by Jerry L. Ross THROUGH ASTRONAUT EYES Photographing Early Human Spaceflight Jennifer K.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix a Apollo 15: “The Problem We Brought Back from the Moon”
    Appendix A Apollo 15: “The Problem We Brought Back From the Moon” Postal Covers Carried on Apollo 151 Among the best known collectables from the Apollo Era are the covers flown onboard the Apollo 15 mission in 1971, mainly because of what the mission’s Lunar Module Pilot, Jim Irwin, called “the problem we brought back from the Moon.” [1] The crew of Apollo 15 carried out one of the most complete scientific explorations of the Moon and accomplished several firsts, including the first lunar roving vehicle that was operated on the Moon to extend the range of exploration. Some 81 kilograms (180 pounds) of lunar surface samples were returned for anal- ysis, and a battery of very productive lunar surface and orbital experiments were conducted, including the first EVA in deep space. [2] Yet the Apollo 15 crew are best remembered for carrying envelopes to the Moon, and the mission is remem- bered for the “great postal caper.” [3] As noted in Chapter 7, Apollo 15 was not the first mission to carry covers. Dozens were carried on each flight from Apollo 11 onwards (see Table 1 for the complete list) and, as Apollo 15 Commander Dave Scott recalled in his book, the whole business had probably been building since Mercury, through Gemini and into Apollo. [4] People had a fascination with objects that had been carried into space, and that became more and more popular – and valuable – as the programs progressed. Right from the start of the Mercury program, each astronaut had been allowed to carry a certain number of personal items onboard, with NASA’s permission, in 1 A first version of this material was issued as Apollo 15 Cover Scandal in Orbit No.
    [Show full text]