View allAll Photos Tagged Apollo11

“Apollo 11 climbs toward orbit after liftoff from Kennedy Space Center. In 2 1/2 minutes of powered flight the S-IC booster lifts Apollo 11 to an altitude of about 38 miles, and 55 miles downrange. This photograph was taken with a 70mm telescopic camera mounted in an Air Force EC-135N aircraft, modified to accept the Airborne Light-weight Optical Tracking Systems (ALOTS). The aircraft flies at an altitude of between 35,000 and 40,000 feet. The ALOTS camera has an automatic tracking ability and can photograph a rocket at distances exceeding 200 miles.”

The Apollo 11 command module as seen during the exhibition, Destination Moon: The Apollo 11 Mission, at The Museum of Flight.

Edited Apollo 11 image taken of its Saturn V soon after launch.

 

Original caption: A 70mm Airborne Lightweight Optical Tracking System (ALOTS) camera, mounted in a pod on a cargo door of a U.S. Air Force EC-135N aircraft, photographed this event in the early moments of the Apollo 11 launch. The mated Apollo spacecraft and Saturn V second (S-II) and third (S-IVB) stages pull away from the expended first (S-1C) stage. Separation occurred at an altitude of about 38 miles, some 55 miles downrange from Cape Kennedy. The aircraft's pod is 20 feet long and 5 feet in diameter. The crew of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission were astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr.

 

Image #: s69_ 39958

Date: July 16, 1969

Photo version from: OMEGA Speedmaster Professional Apollo 11 « 45e Anniversaire »

Édition Limitée WEBSITE: www.omegawatches.com/fr/collection/speedmaster/moonwatch/....

 

NASA PHOTO: AS11-40-5948.

NASA INFO: ( 20 July 1969) -Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot, is photographed during the Apollo 11 extravehicular activity (EVA) on the moon. He has just deployed the Early Apollo Scientific Experiments Package (EASEP). This is a good view of the deployed equipment. In the foreground is the Passive Seismic Experiment Package (PSEP); beyond it is the Laser Ranging Retro-Reflector (LR-3); in the center background is the United States flag; in the left background is the black and white lunar surface television camera; in the far right background is the Lunar Module (LM). Astronaut Neil A. Armstrong, commander, took this picture with a 70mm lunar surface camera. While astronauts Armstrong and Aldrin descended in the Lunar Module (LM) "Eagle" to explore the Sea of Tranquility region of the moon, astronaut Michael Collins, command module pilot, remained with the Command and Service Modules (CSM) "Columbia" in lunar orbit.

 

Apollo 11 "ALL RARE PHOTOS": www.flickr.com/photos/mrdanbeaumont/sets/72157630355089982/

 

Apollo 11 "ALL NEWSPAPERS / MAGAZINES": www.flickr.com/photos/mrdanbeaumont/sets/72157637533255196/

 

Apollo 11 "ALL VIDEOS": www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-HsE-FedVRirgWXw_-ik1n6fs...

 

Out of this world public domain images from NASA. All original images and many more can be found from the NASA Image Library

 

Curated higher resolutions with digital enhancement without attribution required can be downloaded: www.rawpixel.com/board/418580/nasa

 

This is a free download under CC Attribution ( CC BY 4.0) Please credit NASA and rawpixel.com.

 

Removable stages which can be placed horizontally on stands for display and the lunar module can be detached from its launching pad.

 

Ironically, the piece count is '1969' which was the year of the first manned lunar landing.

 

I'll be building a launch tower for that too! ;-)

Kubrick's films have been examined exhaustively, especially since "2001," to find any "hidden meanings" in the way a set looks, or a painting on a wall in the background, or the choice of a costume, such as this one. There has been an interpretation going around that this sweater signifies Kubrick's "atonement" for having "faked" the Apollo 11 lunar landing. In other words, there is someone who has gone on-line saying that Kubrick was hired by NASA to film a fake moon landing in July of 1969, and this sweater in "The Shining" is some "secret message" to the audience that is an apology for having done so. If anyone has seen the "documentary" (I put it in quotation marks because I don't think much of its professionalism as a documentary) "Room 237" they will see this bit of information in there.

Apollo11, Mockup Cockpit, Lunar Module, in a new case in the “Destination Moon” gallery at the Smithsonian Air and at Space Museum in Washington, DC, March 1, 2022. (Smithsonian photo by Jim Preston) [NASM2022-01526]

  

This photo is subject to Smithsonian Terms of Use: si.edu/termsofuse.

Window installation

Mixed media 2010

from my first solo exhibition

The unit shown, used during the Apollo 14 mission, is an exact model of that used to quarantine the Apollo 11 astronauts upon their return to earth. The original Apollo 11 quarantine trailer is actually housed in the Smithsonian in Washington. The foot prints painted on the floor symbolize the first steps back to earth taken by Armstrong, Aldrin, and Collins.

Meredith Vieira speaks during the "National Symphony Orchestra Pops, Apollo 11: A 50th Anniversary, One Small Step, One Giant Leap" a program including musical acts, speakers, and images and video related to space, on Saturday, July 20, 2019 at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington. NASA and the country are recognizing the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11, in which astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin crewed the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon. Photo Credit: (NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)

Credit: NASA/JPL - Processing: Elisabetta Bonora & Marco Faccin / aliveuniverse.today

During the Apollo 11 mission, Magazine U was used in the command module by Michael Collins for black and white photography of the lunar surface during the July 1969 mission. Hasselblad cameras and magazines, selected for their reliability and high quality, were used on all lunar missions.

 

For more photography highlights, check out the Air and Space Photo: airandspace.si.edu/albums/air-and-space-photo

 

This photo is subject to Smithsonian Terms of Use: si.edu/termsofuse

 

A small rover is driven over some visitors at the Apollo 11 50th Anniversary celebration on the National Mall, Friday, July 19, 2019 in Washington. Apollo 11 was the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon and launched on July 16, 1969 with astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin. Photo Credit: (NASA/Aubrey Gemignani)

This boomerang, an example of the "first aerodynamic shape conceived by man," was presented in 1969 to NASA astronaut Michael Collins by the Australian Television Network Channel 7 in celebration of the success of the Apollo 11 Moon landing that July.

 

For more photography highlights, check out the Air and Space Photo project airandspace.si.edu/albums/air-and-space-photo

 

This photo is subject to Smithsonian Terms of Usehttp://si.edu/termsofuse

 

Collodion WetPlate 8x10 ambrotype

Toyo Field

Symmar-S 360

NewGuy recipe

Neil has moved to the MESA. No other Apollo photograph has been reproduced as often as this portrait of Buzz. Neil is, of course, visible in reflection on Buzz's visor. Buzz has his left arm raised and is probably reading the checklist sewn on the wrist cover of his glove. He is moving his right foot forward, as can be seen by the mound of dirt building up in front of the toe of that boot. Note the dirt adhering to Buzz's boots and knees. Otherwise, he is remarkably clean. The "Red Apple", which he would grab and pull to open his purge valve in the event of a suit leak or a PLSS failure, is located roughly over his navel. From our perspective, the purge valve is installed in the connector to the left of the "Red Apple".

 

www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a11/AS11-40-5903HR.jpg

All above credit the ALSJ.

 

And/or:

 

Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot, walks on the surface of the moon near the leg of the Lunar Module (LM) "Eagle" during the Apollo 11 extravehicular activity (EVA). Astronaut Neil A. Armstrong, commander, took this photograph with a 70mm lunar surface camera. While astronauts Armstrong and Aldrin descended in the Lunar Module (LM) "Eagle" to explore the Sea of Tranquility region of the moon, astronaut Michael Collins, command module pilot, remained with the Command and Service Modules (CSM) "Columbia" in lunar orbit.

 

spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/images/apollo/apollo11/html/...

 

In addition to Armstrong, what is likely the earth, is visible as a tiny 'pale blue dot' near the very top of the reflection from Aldrin's visor. Excellent discussion & analysis is available at the superb Apollo Lunar Surface Journal site.

A view of the Apollo 11 50th Anniversary celebration on the National Mall, Thursday, July 18, 2019 in Washington. Apollo 11 was the first mission to land astronauts on the Moon and launched on July 16, 1969 with astronauts Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin. Photo Credit: (NASA/Connie Moore)

Lego Lunar Landers - Apollo 11

 

The last LEM is the set 10266 in minifig scale. With the famous Lego footprints on the moon surface.

 

This is an actual piece of an F-1 engine, flown on Apollo 11, and recovered from the Atlantic Ocean in 2013. Like much of the Apollo missions, how they managed to get this piece is beyond me...

 

This piece of hardware is the single most important element of those lunar landing missions: if it hadn’t been perfected, we could not have gone to the Moon—at least by President Kennedy’s timetable.

 

For the technically-minded, the larger the rocket engine, the more the combustion of liquid oxygen and fuel becomes less uniform. In the massive F-1 engine required to lift the Saturn V, this problem, known as combustion instability, is fatal to the engine. Quite a few blew up between 1959 and 1966, before the engineers at Rocketdyne fixed the problem with this version of the injector plate. It sat on the top of a barrel where the oxidizer and fuel were pumped in at very high pressure and flow rate though the little holes in the plate, then burned in the barrel, known as the combustion chamber. Initially, the plate didn’t have the baffles on them, just the holes. That made for a somewhat more powerful engine—that always blew up! By adding the baffles the design stopped blowing up, even when they put small explosive charges into the engine to try to force instability to occur.

 

The plate here was the result of seven years’ hard work to create an engine that would self-dampen combustion instability. Without it, no Saturn V could have successfully flown.

NASA Johnson Space Center

Houston, Texas

 

HDR 3XP

Apollo 17 astronaut Gene Cernan, the last man to walk on the moon, speaks during a memorial service celebrating the life of Neil Armstrong at the Washington National Cathedral, Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012. Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon during the 1969 Apollo 11 mission, died Saturday, Aug. 25. He was 82. Photo Credit: (NASA/Paul E. Alers)

Everyone's Gone to the Moon - Jonathan King

 

A technological achievement not yet equaled in my humble opinion.

 

A moment when many young person's imagination ran wild, I know mine did.

Along with a few other things just prior to my preteen years. :0)

 

Among the reasons I chose the career I did & the wonderful hobby of amateur radio.

 

This was said to be among the moon genre songs brought with the crew to play on cassette on the mission.

The Columbia showing wear and tear of moon flight!

NASA and contractor employees who were working at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida during the Apollo 11 launch gathered for a group photo on the observation deck of Operations and Support Building II on July 11, 2019. From left, along with their titles from 50 years ago, are Richard Sharum, NASA civil servant; Edward Wilson, security officer for Wackenhut Corporation; Sue Gross, secretary to the deputy procurement officer; Emery Lamar, NASA Kennedy co-op student in Apollo Spacecraft Electrical Division; James Scotti, material clerk with Bendix Corporation; Suzanne Stuckey, secretary for telemetry; Andrew Pritchard, contractor with McGregor-Warner; Ken Poimboeuf, Design Engineering Directorate; and Grady McCorquodale, Launch Control Center engineer with Boeing. Not pictured are Richard Cota, civil servant in the Engineering Directorate; and Victor Kurjack, data courier. Photo credit: NASA/Ben Smegelsky

NASA image use policy.

 

Ghosts — they've everywhere around me.

 

Not specifically here, but nearby in this region there is verifiable evidence of a human presence as long as 25,000 years ago. Extrapolation of this to rewrite "presence" as "occupation" or that the current claimants are unequivocally descendents of those humans is not verifiable. This is not to denigrate that presence. Quite the opposite. We can reasonably argue that, continuous or not, human presence and its ghost is a thing to acknowledge, a thing of wonder and a treasury of hope for all of us to cherish.

 

"Orroral" doesn't have a resonance with any European language. There's an inference in a notation on the first European-made map of this place that its etymology comes from an Aboriginal word, "urongal", and said to translate as "tomorrow". It would be fitting recognition if this interpretation is true and accurate. Today's name — a ghost of yesterdays in the tomorrows no one could have imagined.

 

Enter the search term: orroral lunar laser ranger history in your favourite search engine and you'll find a thing or two about where I'm heading. From 1974 to 1998 a science facility on this ridge was using the precise timekeeping of caesium atomic clocks and lasers bounced off retro-reflectors to do all sorts of clever things. The principles grew out experiments using relectors placed on the Moon in the Apollo 11 mission — hence "lunar laser ranger". In time this application expanded and this became the Orroral Geodetic Observatory. Today, it's just a ghost of those days.

 

Look here — that shadow — is a ghost of another kind. It's easy for us to put humanity and technology above Nature. That shadow, as I'm about to step off the old service road and around this fire scorched granodiorite boulder, is of the skeleton of yet another once living thing robbed of life by the reckless actions of self-centred Man.

  

A rock brought back from the Moon by an Apollo mission. NASA, Houston, TX, Feb. 2020

Museum of Flight, May 11, 2019. Destination Moon Exhibit.

The scene on the National Mall as the countdown goes to zero, during the Apollo 50: Go for the Moon show on the National Mall, July 20, 2019. (Smithsonian Photo By Benjamin G. Sullivan)

 

This photo is subject to Smithsonian Terms of Use: si.edu/termsofuse.

Maria Isilda Ribeiro, a 23-year-old Portuguese woman emigrated in the United States in New Jersey, embroidered and finished the North American flag that was on the Moon to mark the human presence.

 

Maria Isilda Ribeiro, portuguesa, de 23 anos, emigrada nos Estados Unidos, em New Jersey, bordou e fez os acabamentos na bandeira norte americana que ficou, na Lua, a assinalar a presença humana.

 

in:

Flama, N.º 1117, 1 de Agosto de 1969.

 

dossier link:

hemerotecadigital.cm-lisboa.pt/efemerides/apollo11/apollo...

 

page link:

hemerotecadigital.cm-lisboa.pt/efemerides/apollo11/Flama/...

On the 25th Anniversary of the Apollo 11 (the first moon landing mission) launch, Marshall Space Flight Center celebrated with a test firing of the Space Shuttle Main Engine (SSME) at the Technology Test Bed (TTB). This drew a large crowd who stood in the fields around the test site and watched as plumes of white smoke verified ignition.

 

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

 

Credit: NASA

Image Number: MSFC-9408571

Date: July 20, 1994

One of the first footsteps taken on the moon: this is a photograph of Buzz Aldrin's bootprint, made during the Apollo 11 mission. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the Moon on 20 July 1969.

 

Credit: NASA, [HQ] Image #S11-40-5877 [source].

Apollo 11 Astronaut Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin in the Lunar Module Eagle doing checkout while docked to the Command Module Columbia on the way to the moon prior to landing.

Front page of a UK newspaper from 50 years ago about the successful Apollo 11 moon landing. (At the time of printing the astronauts had not yet walked on the surface).

1 2 ••• 19 20 22 24 25 ••• 79 80