Search wiki using Sphinx

From The Space Library

Jump to: navigation, search

Displaying 21—30 of 1000 matches for query "The_NASA_Mission_Reports" retrieved in 0.021 sec with these stats:

  • "the" found 506431 times in 20587 documents
  • "nasa" found 75678 times in 12605 documents
  • "mission" found 32560 times in 9616 documents
  • "report" found 12867 times in 6162 documents



... 's success, the Gemini program is often forgotten. Without the ten successful manned Gemini missions NASA could not have accomplished Kennedy's seemingly impossible goal of landing a man on the moon in the 1960's ... mission was already scheduled for launch and so the crew of Gemini 6 were told that NASA would attempt a double manned mission and rendezvous. This was undoubtedly a risky proposition which would stretch the NASA ...
... the official files of NASA, this book gives the complete account of the first American spacewalk, which took place on June 3, 1965. Filled with information on the mission's crew, engineers, and equipment, the guide explores the ... that would hold up in the dangerous vacuum of space. For space fans and engineers, a companion DVD is included that features spectacular photographs and documents from the NASA archives.
... Captain John Young. The landing site selected for the crew of Apollo 16 was in the lunar highland area of Descartes. NASA chose to send John Young to command the fifth lunar landing mission. Young had as much or more flight experience than any other member of the astronaut corps. He had circumnavigated the moon ...
On December 4, 1965, NASA launched the Gemini 7 spacecraft, on a Titan II booster, putting Frank Borman and James A. Lovell , Jr. into Earth orbit. This mission set what was then a ... ). During this 14 day period, the Gemini 7 mission achieved some remarkable "firsts" - manned "station-keeping" (formation flying) and "proximity operations" (relative maneuvering in orbit) with the Gemini 6 spacecraft, and performed more ...
... most eccentric mission I have attempted to accumulate some of the highlights on the accompanying DVD-Video disc. Some artistic liberties were taken, such as during the landing sequence the data reports the range to the proposed landing site, which was in fact 500 feet from the actual landing site, so during the last few seconds the figures are "fudged ...
Most of the rest of what we know of our outer solar system has been learned in the last 30 years, beginning with the Pioneer and Voyager missions of the 1970s to Jupiter and beyond ... again in the face of hard data returned by the scientific instruments of solar system exploration missions years in length. In the summer of 1989, Voyager 2 did a flyby of Neptune, the first spacecraft ...
... Module Pilot/Geologist Harrison Schmitt. Their destination was a steep sided lunar valley on the edge of the Sea of Serenity , known as Taurus-Littrow . What this crew hoped to do was ... precision. This book contains many of the internal NASA documents from this extraordinary voyage made commercially available for the first time. Bonus CDROM includes: The complete Television downlink from the lunar surface, over 11 hours ...
... to perform almost everything that Apollo was designed for, with the exception of the ability of landing on the moon. The last Gemini flight would be flown by veteran Commander James Lovell and a ... experience gained on Gemini 6 would prove the perfect foundation on which the newcomer Aldrin would be able to build a near-perfect science mission. The task of space-walking had proven arduous and ...
... by the Hughes Aircraft Corporation, and named Surveyor. This short, but critically important program consumed $426 million of NASA's budget in just two years but it not only proved the worthiness of new hardware, such as the hydrogen-propelled Centaur booster stage, but also that of the robust and ...
Special Report October 1968 File:68-10_NASA_Special_Report_-48.mp4 Category:Audio

Additional database time was 0.059 sec.


Result page: 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  Next 
 
Search in namespaces:

















Powered by Sphinx
Views