aap/sl_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1968, unnumbered poss. press photo)
Delightfully “huh?”.
If the stamped date is correct/close, this looks to be an Apollo Applications Program (AAP) S-IVB “wet” workshop, sort of confirmed by the presence of the Rocketdyne J-2 engine.
If correctly identified, it really makes this a “huh”. If something other, like being one end of a larger rotating complex, that could conceivably account for the obvious presence of artificial gravity.
And, neither here nor there, but it looks like the work of John Gorsuch to me.
aap/sl_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1968, unnumbered poss. press photo)
Delightfully “huh?”.
If the stamped date is correct/close, this looks to be an Apollo Applications Program (AAP) S-IVB “wet” workshop, sort of confirmed by the presence of the Rocketdyne J-2 engine.
If correctly identified, it really makes this a “huh”. If something other, like being one end of a larger rotating complex, that could conceivably account for the obvious presence of artificial gravity.
And, neither here nor there, but it looks like the work of John Gorsuch to me.