a_v_c_o_AKP (original 1967 Aerojet-General Corp. PR photo, C 167 071 eq)
“Aerojet-General Corporation artist’s concept shows how the Apollo spacecraft’s Service Module engine will look firing during night flight. Coloration of the Service Propulsion System thrust chamber and skirt shows temperature ranging from 5000°F. at the chamber throat to 1200°F. at the skirt extension after a few seconds of engine operation. Glass filament is used in the thrust chamber area. The engine skirt is formed of titanium and columbium. Aerojet’s SPS develops in excess of 20,000 pounds of thrust, making it America’s largest and most powerful spacecraft rocket engine. The Service Propulsion System, produced for NASA’s Apollo spacecraft under contract to North American Rockwell Space Division, is capable of providing more than 35 separate firings of varying duration.”
~7.5” x ~9.25”. Photo has been trimmed by some well-intentioned buffoon in the past.
Compare/contrast. Note that the respective glowing (hotter?) areas of the two engine nozzles are inverted. I would’ve expected them to be somewhat similar. Interesting:
mobile.twitter.com/SpaceX/status/1076838618692493313/photo/1
Credit: SpaceX
Check this one out. No idea what the engine is and obviously not in flight, yet another totally different appearance:
qph.c7.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-099ffe22085d444e4d61a6c61a9...
Credit: Quora website
The artist appears to have used the Impasto painting technique for the overall scene, with the CSM & SPS plume painted “normally”.
I think this is the work of George Mathis.
a_v_c_o_AKP (original 1967 Aerojet-General Corp. PR photo, C 167 071 eq)
“Aerojet-General Corporation artist’s concept shows how the Apollo spacecraft’s Service Module engine will look firing during night flight. Coloration of the Service Propulsion System thrust chamber and skirt shows temperature ranging from 5000°F. at the chamber throat to 1200°F. at the skirt extension after a few seconds of engine operation. Glass filament is used in the thrust chamber area. The engine skirt is formed of titanium and columbium. Aerojet’s SPS develops in excess of 20,000 pounds of thrust, making it America’s largest and most powerful spacecraft rocket engine. The Service Propulsion System, produced for NASA’s Apollo spacecraft under contract to North American Rockwell Space Division, is capable of providing more than 35 separate firings of varying duration.”
~7.5” x ~9.25”. Photo has been trimmed by some well-intentioned buffoon in the past.
Compare/contrast. Note that the respective glowing (hotter?) areas of the two engine nozzles are inverted. I would’ve expected them to be somewhat similar. Interesting:
mobile.twitter.com/SpaceX/status/1076838618692493313/photo/1
Credit: SpaceX
Check this one out. No idea what the engine is and obviously not in flight, yet another totally different appearance:
qph.c7.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-099ffe22085d444e4d61a6c61a9...
Credit: Quora website
The artist appears to have used the Impasto painting technique for the overall scene, with the CSM & SPS plume painted “normally”.
I think this is the work of George Mathis.