View allAll Photos Tagged spaceprogram
Space Shuttle Enterprise (OV-101) arrives in New York, NY at John F. Kennedy International Airport atop the modified NASA Boeing 747-100. The Enterprise will become the cornerstone exhibit at the USS Intrepid Air, Sea, and Space Museum on the Hudson River in Manhattan.
A photograph of the exhibit of the Kennedy Space Center in Titusville, Florida. Best viewed in larger sizes !!!!!
Youcan read all about it here www.nasa.gov/centers/kennedy/home/index.html
My two entries for the RWS comp are over but I can't seem to stop building these realistic starfighters. So much fun!
Here I was thinking a little bit of a blimp concept, except with the gondola in the centerline of the engine's thrust rather than slung underneath. And all the hardpoints are balanced by the landing gear.
“A horizontal version of lunar modular living and working quarters for use in the ‘Man on the Moon’ program. Conceived by scientists and engineers of the Lockheed Missiles & Space Company, Sunnyvale, California, each module is eighteen feet in diameter. Each is fully equipped and self-sufficient except for electrical power which is supplied from a remote nuclear power source. Solar flare protection chambers are provided at the base of the modules.” [From the accompanying description]
The S-II was built by North American Aviation at Seal Beach, California. Using liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, it had five Rocketdyne J-2 engines in a similar arrangement to the S-IC, and also used the four outer engines for control. The S-II was 81.6 feet (24.87 m) tall with a diameter of 33 feet (10 m), identical to the S-IC,[61][62] and thus was the largest cryogenic stage until the launch of the Space Shuttle in 1981. The S-II had a dry mass of about 80,000 pounds (36,000 kg); when fully fueled, it weighed 1,060,000 pounds (480,000 kg). The second stage accelerated the Saturn V through the upper atmosphere with 1,100,000 pounds-force (4,900 kN) of thrust in a vacuum.[35]
When loaded with fuel, more than 90 percent of the mass of the stage was propellant; however, the ultra-lightweight design had led to two failures in structural testing. Instead of having an intertank structure to separate the two fuel tanks as was done in the S-IC, the S-II used a common bulkhead that was constructed from both the top of the LOX tank and bottom of the LH2 tank. It consisted of two aluminum sheets separated by a honeycomb structure made of phenolic resin.[62][35] This bulkhead had to be able to insulate against the 126 °F (70 °C) temperature difference between the two tanks. The use of a common bulkhead saved 7,900 pounds (3.6 t) by both eliminating one bulkhead and reducing the stage's length.[35] Like the S-IC, the S-II was transported from its manufacturing plant to Cape Kennedy by sea
Text on the back:
APOLLO 11 MOON LANDING – July 20, 1969
Pacific Recovery Area. Navy Pararescueman and one of the three Apollo 11 astronauts close spacecraft hatch while the other two space pilots watch from life raft after splashdown on July 24, 1969. The pararescueman helped the astronauts from the spacecraft and disinfected them after they donned biological isolation garments.
"...It touches your human blood..." — Vulcan Kolinahr Master, Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979), played by Edna Glover (1925–2020)
Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum, McMinnville, Oregon
Also see: IMG_7975 We're all living with Rammstein
Buzz Aldrin took his Pickett N600-ES slide rule to the Moon...just in case.
Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum, McMinnville, Oregon
Media:
* Apollo 11 - Apollo Flight Journal: Apollo 11: The Complete Descent
Exploring the space progams at the Kennedy Space Center. A veritable gateway to the coolest of all history...
Before I began my Alabama and Mississippi seminar swing, I got to Huntsville, Alabama early and visited the US Space and Rocket Center. I mean, they had a Saturn V rocket! You can't beat that. ghb624 met me at the museum and gave me some genuine NASA inside dirt. Thanks, Jerry!
January 2009
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Charcoal and Siberian chalk. After an official NASA photograph. If someone knows the name of the photographer I'd be happy to credit them.
Text on the back:
Apollo 11 Moon Landing – July 20, 1969
The Apollo 11 Lunar Module ascent stage is photographed from the Command and Service Module by Michael Collins, CSM Pilot, during rendezvous in lunar orbit. The LM, with Astronauts Neil A. Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr. aboard, returning from the lunar surface, was making its docking approach to the CSM. Astronaut Michael Collins remained with the CSM while the other two Apollo crewmen explored the moon. The LM descent stage, used as a launch base, was left on the lunar surface. The large, dark-colored area in the background is Smyth’s Sea, centered at 85 degrees east longitude and 2 degrees south latitude on the lunar nearside. This view is looking west. The Earth rises above the lunar horizon.
Local call number: PT11495
Title: Nighttime Space Shuttle Launch: Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral, Florida
Date: 2000
Photographer: Don S. Browning
Physical descrip: 1 digital image - col.
Series Title: Political Collection
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/23695
PictionID:54497256 - Catalog:1977 Atlas 5507A - Title:1977 Atlas 5507A - Filename:19770523 5507A_0460.JPG - - ---- Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
“May 5, 1961 – the day Commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr. rode into history as America’s first Man Into Space.”
[Note: Alan Shepard reached an altitude of 115 miles on that first flight. By comparison, Richard Branson's jaunt into space in 2021 reached an altitude of 52 miles, and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin crew that same year reached an altitude of 66 miles.]
Vintage light-up lapel pin ... see the space man in the outer space satellite! A Micro-Lite novelty made by Putnam Products
Get set up for your attack run!" — Red Leader Garven Dreis (Drewe Henley), Star Wars (1977)
Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum, McMinnville, Oregon
Media:
* YouTube: 4K Star Wars 1977 Original / 'Despecialized' - Battle of Yavin - Full Battle
* Wikipedia: Drewe Henley
Text on the back:
Apollo 11 Moon Landing – July 20, 1969
The huge 363-foot-tall Apollo 11 (Spacecraft 107/Lunar Module 5/Saturn 506) space vehicle is launched from Kennedy Space Center, at 9:32 a.m. (EDT), July 16, 1969. Aboard the Apollo 11 spacecraft were Astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, Commander; Michael Collins, Command Module Pilot; and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., Lunar Module Pilot. Apollo 11 is the United States’ first lunar landing mission.
Discovery was retired after completing its final mission, STS-133 on March 9, 2011. The spacecraft is now on display in Virginia at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center, an annex of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum.
PictionID:54497286 - Catalog:Atlas Centaur AC-39 - Title:Atlas Centaur AC-39 - Filename:19770526 AC39 01 0466.JPG - - ---- Images from the Convair/General Dynamics Astronautics Atlas Negative Collection. The processing, cataloging and digitization of these images has been made possible by a generous National Historical Publications and Records grant from the National Archives and Records Administration---Please Tag these images so that the information can be permanently stored with the digital file.---Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum
English translation: Let's pave the way to distant worlds and penetrate into the secrets of the Universe!
American translation: Does my Red Moon cape make me look fat, comrade?
British translation: Wensleydale?
Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum, McMinnville, Oregon
See also: IMG_7992 "The event that forever changed our world."
The S-IC was powered by five Rocketdyne F-1 engines arrayed in a quincunx. The center engine was held in a fixed position, while the four outer engines could be hydraulically turned with gimbals to steer the rocket.
“The Apollo Suit, as it has evolved, is really an integrated series of garments, several separate layers in all. The first layer is a liquid-cooled undergarment circulating cool water through small tubes in direct contact with the skin. The second layer is the pressure garment, or the actual suit assembly. Because the soft pressure garment tends to take a spherical shape when pressurized, a variety of over-sized joints are built to provide mobility. Covering the pressure suit is a micrometeoroid-protection garment composed of lightweight materials arranged to provide as much protection as a thin sheet of aluminum. Finally, there is a thermal over-garment composed of many thin layers of super-insulation with a white synthetic fabric as an outer layer.
“The Apollo Suit weights almost fifty pounds. The backpack, with its radio, medical-sensing devices, oxygen supply and ventilation, weighs another sixty-five pounds. You end up with a well-protected – and overloaded – space explorer.” [From the text]
Text on the back:
Apollo 11 Moon Landing – July 20, 1969
Astronaut portrait: Left to right, Neil A. Armstrong, Commander; Michael Collins, Command Module Pilot; Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., Lunar Module Pilot. On July 24, 1969, at 12:50 PM (EDT) Apollo 11 bearing the three astronauts zoomed out of the sky into the blue Pacific. They had conquered the moon on a 750,000-mile journey of 8 days, 3 hours and 18 minutes.
Armstrong and Aldrin etched their names alongside history’s great explorers when they landed on the moon and were the first men to walk on the lunar surface. To complete this historic space triumph, Armstrong & Aldrin blasted the LM, Eagle off the moon and rejoined Collins orbiting in the Command ship, Columbia.
Destination Moon is a limited, traveling exhibit from the Smithsonian Museum in Washington DC, allowing some of us in Flyover Country to see important artifacts from our crewed lunar missions.
This is Columbia, the command module from Apollo 11. It’s been charred from it’s reentry into the atmosphere from the Moon, and had minimal exterior restoration. Its well-preserved otherwise and seemed larger than I expected to see it up close.
It was a real pleasure to be able to see and photograph it, though hauling in my RB67 would have been impractical, if not prohibited.
"Edwin Aldrin's visor reflects his photographer Neil Armstrong, the Apollo 11 Lunar Module, and scientific equipment. It is impossible to see the astronaut's face. Instead he reflects symbols of the ingenuity and teamwork that allowed man to stand upon a planet beyond the Earth. Tranquility Base, the Moon, July 20, 1969." [Text on the back of the postcard]
Local call number: PR10284
Title: Apollo 11 Liftoff
Date: July 16, 1969
Physical descrip: 1 photograph - col. - 5 x 7 in.
Photographer: James L. Long
Series Title: Print Collections
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: www.floridamemory.com/items/show/8727
4 1/2 x 6 color postcard signed in black felt tip ink by Jugderdemidiin Gurragchaa, the first Mongolian astronaut.
Jugderdemidiin Gurragcha (born Dec. 5, 1947, Gurvan-Bulak, Mong.) was the first Mongolian and second Asian to go into space. Gurragcha studied aerospace engineering at the Zhukovsky Military Engineering Academy in Ulan Bator (now Ulaanbaatar), graduating in 1977. He joined the Mongolian Air Force as an aeronautical engineer and rose to the rank of major general. In March 1978 he was selected to participate in the Soviet Union’s eighth international Intercosmos mission. His first and only space mission was as a researcher on the Soyuz 39 mission. On March 22, 1981, he and Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Dzhanibekov were launched into space from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. He spent nearly eight days in space, carrying out scientific experiments on the Soviet space station Salyut 6. Gurragcha left the space program on March 30, 1981, and was awarded the title Hero of the Soviet Union. He later became chief of staff of air defense for the Mongolian Armed Forces. From 2000 to 2004 he served as minister of defense.
Jügderdemidiin Gürragchaa is an astronaut from Mongolia affiliated with the government agency Russian Federal Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS), embarked on 1 space flights and engaging in 0 spacewalk(s) during his/her career as an astronaut.
Jügderdemidiin Gürragchaa, born 5 December 1947) was the first Mongolian in space.
He was selected as part of the eighth Intercosmos program on 1 March 1978, at time he was in the rank of Major General. His backup was Maidarjavyn Ganzorig. Gürragchaa, along with Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Dzhanibekov, departed from Baikonur Cosmodrome on 22 March 1981. They docked with Salyut 6.
While in orbit, Dzhanibekov and Gürragchaa carried out experiments on earth science. After 124 orbits and 7 days, 20 hours and 42 minutes in space, Gürragchaa and Dzhanibekov landed 170 km southeast of Dzhezkasgan.
Date of Birth: 12/05/1947
Status: Retired
First Flight: 03/22/1981
Last Flight: 03/22/1981
In Space: No
Launches
Soyuz-U | Soyuz 39 LINK - www.spacelaunchschedule.com/astronaut/jugderdemidiin-gurr...
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Vladimir Dzhanibekov is an astronaut from Russia affiliated with the government agency Russian Federal Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS), embarked on 5 space flights and engaging in 2 spacewalk(s) during his/her career as an astronaut.
Vladimir Aleksandrovich Dzhanibekov (Russian: Владимир Александрович Джанибеков, born 13 May 1942) is a former cosmonaut who made five flights.
Dzhanibekov made five flights: Soyuz 27, Soyuz 39, Soyuz T-6, Soyuz T-12 and Soyuz T-13. In all he had spent 145 days, 15 hours and 56 minutes in space over these five missions. He had also performed two EVAs with a total time of 8 hours and 35 minutes. In 1985 he noted the effects of the tennis racket theorem, subsequently also called the Dzhanibekov effect, by showing that an object's second principal axis is unstable while in free-fall rotation.
Date of Birth: 05/13/1942
Status: Retired
First Flight: 01/10/1978
Last Flight: 06/06/1985
In Space: No
Launches
Soyuz-U | Soyuz T-6
Soyuz-U2 | Soyuz T-12
Soyuz-U | Soyuz 27
Soyuz-U | Soyuz 39
Soyuz-U2 | Soyuz T-13
Spacewalks
VE-4 EVA
The spacewalk began at 07/25/1984 14:55 UTC and ended at 07/25/1984 18:29 UTC on the Salyut 7 for a total of 3 hours and 34 minutes.
PE-4 EVA
The spacewalk began at 08/02/1985 07:15 UTC and ended at 08/02/1985 12:15 UTC on the Salyut 7 for a total of 5 hours.
LINK to video - This day marks 36th anniversary of Mongolia's space travel - www.youtube.com/watch?v=vnxSiwkVmnI
LINK to video - March 22nd marks the 43rd anniversary of the first space flight by a Mongolian cosmonaut - www.youtube.com/watch?v=JY4CmJGzsj4
In 1964 my late father, Beaudry Glen Pautz, accepted a job as Press Officer for the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) in Pretoria, South Africa. It was the start of the Cold War "space race", the CSIR collaborated with the Americans and Beau received a lot of space programme material and press kits from NASA. I still have most of those historic documents in my collection. Here's a selection of them.
I captured this particular image in low light, using a phone camera, so please excuse the quality!
Also see this great piece on Time Magazine's special issue entitled "To the Moon and Back" published two weeks after the Apollo 11 landing. Back in 1969 I created a great scrapbook of the landing that I still treasure to this day.
#apollo #nasa #presskit #nasapresskit #apollopresskit #space #spaceprogram #spaceprogramme #moon #lunarlandings #1969 #news #press #document #projectplan #missionplan #lunarlanding #pretoria #transvaal #southafrica #csir #moonmission #spacerace #coldwar #factsheets #2016
Local call number: RC08589
Title: XLR-115 hydrogen fueled rocket engine developed by Pratt and Whitney Aircraft
Date: July 1959
General note: In the late 1950s, the U.S. government created a fictitious town named Apix (Air Products Incorportated, Experimental) to build and test rocket engines powered by liquid hydrogen in order to keep pace with the Soviet Union. Highly classified and requiring a large degree of secrecy, the project was given the code name "Suntan." Land near the testing ground was platted for houses to conceal the true nature of the site and Apix was even given a bogus population to add to its cover as a small fertilizer-producing community. By June 1959, the use of liquid hydrogen was determined to be too costly, the project was abandoned, and Apix dismantled.
Physical descrip: 1 photoprint - col. - 10 x 8 in.
Series Title: Reference Collection
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: www.floridamemory.com/items/show/31540
Text on the back:
Apollo 11 Moon Landing – July 20, 1969
Recovery Area in the Pacific Ocean, 900 miles southwest of Hawaii. The Apollo 11 astronauts prepare to be hoisted aboard recovery helicopter following their splashdown on July 24, 1969. After their successful lunar landing mission, the space pilots entered the Mobile Quarantine Facility aboard the USS Hornet.
“Enroute to the Moon, the Apollo 11 astronauts snapped this remarkable picture of the Earth at a distance of 180,000 km (112,000 miles). The bleak orange Sahara Desert, the Mediterranean Sea, Africa, Southern Europe, Asia Minor, and the Red Sea show clearly. The Congo, at the Earth’s equator, is buried under clouds.”
[Text on the back of the postcard.]
The Command Module of U.S. spacecraft Apollo 6, on permanent display, at ...
DeKalb County (Westchester Hills), Georgia, USA.
9 November 2018.
▶ That's the actual capsule but with a mural of the moon and Earth painted on the wall behind it. Other side: here.
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▶ "Apollo 6 was the last unmanned Apollo mission and was launched April 4, 1968. The purpose of the mission was to test for a second time, the Saturn V rocket.
At the time of the launch (one second past 7 a.m. EST), all five engines operated normally; then a series of sharp vibrations shook the rocket (known as Pogo at NASA). Minutes later, two of the five rocket engines shut down. For the next 80 seconds, the Saturn V behaved like a drunken driver, lurching back and forth, as NASA flight controllers decided whether to abort the mission or not.
After two earth orbits, it was time to re-light a smaller rocket, CS-IVB, to simulate injecting the rocket into a path toward the moon; but the rocket failed. Using a series of smaller rockets (service propulsion system) on the Service Module, NASA scientists completed most of the planned maneuvers. The spacecraft was returned safely to Earth.
Later the same day, Martin Luther King was shot and killed in Memphis, Tennessee."
— Fernbank Science Center placard.
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▶ Camera: Olympus Pen E-PL1.
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Commander David Scott's Space Suit.
Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.
Thanks to all that pass by.
Justin
“. . . the blastoff of the Redstone-Mercury rocket that carried Commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr. into space – and into history, as the first American to travel off our planet. “Man Into Space” is Commander Shepard’s story – and the story of our space program, from its beginnings to tomorrow’s headlines!”
Local call number: V-128 DA065; S.1239
Title: [Apollo and Gemini]
Date of film: 1960s.
Physical descrip: Color; silent; Original film length: 30:00.
Series creator: WFSU-TV (Television station : Tallahassee, Fla.)
General note: Excerpt of original. This film shows actual space footage, Cape Kennedy footage, and spacecraft construction footage. It shows a launch and a spacewalk. Produced by WFSU-TV.
To see full-length versions of this and other videos from the State Archives of Florida, visit www.floridamemory.com/video/.
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850-245-6700. Archives@dos.state.fl.us
Persistent URL: www.floridamemory.com/items/show/252882
The S-IVB stage was built by the Douglas Aircraft Company at Huntington Beach, California. It had one Rocketdyne J-2 engine and used the same fuel as the S-II. The S-IVB used a common bulkhead to separate the two tanks. It was 58.6 feet (17.86 m) tall with a diameter of 21.7 feet (6.604 m) and was also designed with high mass efficiency, though not quite as aggressively as the S-II. The S-IVB had a dry mass of about 23,000 pounds (10,000 kg) and, when fully fueled, weighed about 262,000 pounds (119,000 kg).
The S-IVB was the only rocket stage of the Saturn V small enough to be transported by the cargo plane Aero Spacelines Pregnant Guppy, a highly modified B-377 Stratocruiser.
For lunar missions it was fired twice: first for Earth orbit insertion after second stage cutoff, and a second time for translunar injection
Teammates in mankind's greatest adventure
A shared dream of reaching the moon united the Apollo astronauts in a team effort without human parallel. To symbolize that teamwork, artist Pierre Mion here reunites them at a moonlike training site on earth. Space suits and sophisticated equipment, accurate in every detail, represent the contributions of tens of thousands of NASA scientists and engineers, contractors and workmen who shared in the project's success. Apollo 17 Commander Eugene A. Cernan holds the United States flag, under which the astronauts served, though they flew in the name of all humanity. Behind the flag stand three men whose tragic deaths in a preflight fire triggered intensive studies to eliminate spacecraft flaws. Near them are men who tested the craft in earth orbit.
Trailblazers who orbited the moon join, at left, the crew of Apollo 13, whose disabled ship swung around the moon but was unable to land. The twelve astronauts who walked on the moon -- led by Neil A. Armstrong (far right), first man to set foot on another celestial body -- gather around or on the lunar module and Rover, as Apollo 17's Harrison H. Schmitt, first professional geologist on the lunar surface, practices for the moment when he will pick up a moon rock. Gingerly at first, then with enthusiastic leaps, these dozen men explored the craters and rilles, the mountains and valleys of a radiant but relentlessly hostile world.
Each of those who dared to step beyond the cocoon of his home planet won a rare privilege and reward -- a vision from afar of our "small and blue and beautiful" earth aglow in the blackness of space.
At Cape Canaveral Air Force Station is a monument to America's greatest adventure. Standing tall among the Florida palms is a Mercury Redstone rocket...like the one which carried America's first astronaut - Alan Shepard - into the edge of space. This view is through a doorway in an abandoned launch facility at the Air Force Space & Rocket Museum at Cape Canaveral.6
Unfinished, not sure what to do with this one. It's a bit too minimal for a starfighter but if I add much more to it it will look silly. I think a fatter, shorter radial design would be better.
Local call number: PR10287
Title: Base of the Apollo 11 Rocket: John F. Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral, Florida
Date: 1969
Physical descrip: 1 photograph - col. - 5 x 7 in.
Series Title: Print Collections
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/8730
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NASA's $3.2 Billion Space Shuttle ATLANTIS, launched on 8th July 2011, sits near the runway after returning from its mission.
This launch was the last Space Shuttle launch and it officially ended the current American manned space program.
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Space Shuttle ATLANTIS
NASA John F. Kennedy Space Center
Kennedy Space Center
Florida
USA.
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ALL MY IMAGES OF SPACE SHUTTLE
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“STS-79 was the fourth in a series of NASA docking missions to the Russian Mir Space Station, leading up to the construction and operation of the International Space Station (ISS). As the first flight of the Spacehab Double Module, STS-79 encompassed research, test and evaluation of ISS, as well as logistics resupply for the Mir Space Station.” – NASA
[Note: STS-79 was the 17th flight of Space Shuttle Atlantis, and the 79th mission of the Space Shuttle program.]
Local call number: PR10219
Title: Apollo 17 crew members
Date: 1972
General Note: Left to right: Harrison Schmitt, lunar module pilot; Ron Evans, command module pilot; and Gene Cernan, commander. The Apollo 17 mission launched December 7 and returned December 19, 1972.
Physical descrip: 1 photograph - col. - 8 x 10 in.
Series Title: Print Collections
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/8665
Local call number: COM02309
Title: Space Shuttle launch at Kennedy Space Center
Date: ca. 1985
Physical descrip: 1 slide - col.
Series Title: Department of Commerce Collection
Repository: State Library and Archives of Florida, 500 S. Bronough St., Tallahassee, FL 32399-0250 USA. Contact: 850.245.6700. Archives@dos.myflorida.com
Persistent URL: floridamemory.com/items/show/93121