In celebration of the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11, we’ll be sharing answers to some frequently asked questions about the first time humans voyaged to the Moon. Answers have been compiled from archivists in the NASA History Office.
At the height of Apollo in 1965, about 409,900 people worked on some aspect of the program, but that number doesn’t capture it all.
It doesn’t represent the people who worked on mission concepts or spacecraft design, such as the engineers who did the wind tunnel testing of the Apollo Command Module and then moved on to other projects. The number also doesn’t represent the NASA astronauts, mission controllers, remote communications personnel, etc. who would have transferred to the Apollo program only after the end of Gemini program (1966-1967). There were still others who worked on the program only part-time or served on temporary committees. In the image above are three technicians studying an Apollo 14 Moon rock in the Lunar Receiving Laboratory at Johnson Space Center. From left to right, they are Linda Tyler, Nancy Trent and Sandra Richards.
This artwork portrait done by spaceflight historian Ed Hengeveld depicts the 12 people who have walked on the Moon so far. In all, 24 people have flown to the Moon and three of them, John Young, Jim Lovell and Gene Cernan, have made the journey twice.
But these numbers will increase.
Every successful Apollo lunar landing mission left a flag on the Moon but we don’t know yet whether all are still standing. Some flags were set up very close to the Lunar Module and were in the blast radius of its ascent engine, so it’s possible that some of them could have been knocked down. Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin both reported that the flag had been knocked down following their ascent.
Our Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter took photographs of all the Apollo lunar landing sites. In the case of the Apollo 17 site, you can see the shadow of the upright flag.
The flags appear to “wave” or “flap” but actually they’re swinging. Swinging motions on Earth are dampened due to gravity and air resistance, but on the Moon any swinging motion can continue for much longer. Once the flags settled (and were clear of the ascent stage exhaust), they remained still. And how is the flag hanging? Before launching, workers on the ground had attached a horizontal rod to the top of each flag for support, allowing it to be visible in pictures and television broadcasts to the American public. Armstrong and Aldrin did not fully extend the rod once they were on the Moon, giving the flag a ripple effect. The other astronauts liked the ripple effect so much that they also did not completely extend the rod.
Have you ever taken a photo of the night sky with your phone or camera? You likely won’t see any stars because your camera’s settings are likely set to short exposure time which only lets it quickly take in the light off the bright objects closest to you. It’s the same reason you generally don’t see stars in spacewalk pictures from the International Space Station. There’s no use for longer exposure times to get an image like this one of Bruce McCandless in 1984 as seen from Space Shuttle Challenger (STS-41B).
The Hasselblad cameras that Apollo astronauts flew with were almost always set to short exposure times. And why didn’t the astronauts photograph the stars? Well, they were busy exploring the Moon!
The first giant leap was only the beginning. Work is under way to send the first woman and the next man to the Moon in five years. As we prepare to launch the next era of exploration, the new Artemis program is the first step in humanity’s presence on the Moon and beyond.
Keep checking back for more answers to Apollo FAQs.
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God be with you
Janganlah takut, sebab Aku menyertai engkau; janganlah bimbang, sebab Aku ini Allahmu. (Yesaya 41:10)
Jesus loves you!
God be with you. Amen! 😇
In space, invisible, fast-moving particles from the Sun and other sources in deep space zip around, their behavior shaped by dynamic electric and magnetic fields. There are so few of these particles that space is considered a vacuum, but what’s there packs a punch. Together, we call all of this invisible activity space weather — and it affects our technology both in space and here on Earth.
This month, two new missions are launching to explore two different kinds of space weather.
Many of our communications and navigation systems — like GPS and radio — rely on satellites to transmit their signals. When signals are sent from satellites down to Earth, they pass through a dynamic zone on the upper edge of Earth’s atmosphere called the ionosphere.
Gases in the ionosphere have been cooked into a sea of positive- and negative-charged particles by solar radiation. These electrically charged particles are also mixed in with neutral gases, like the air we breathe. The charged particles respond to electric and magnetic fields, meaning they react to space weather. Regular weather can also affect this part of the atmosphere.
Influenced by this complicated web of factors, structured bubbles of charged gas sometimes form in this part of the atmosphere, particularly near the equator. When signals pass through these bubbles, they can get distorted, causing failed communications or inaccurate GPS fixes.
Right now, it’s hard to predict just when these bubbles will form or how they’ll mess with signals. The two tiny satellites of the E-TBEx mission will try to shed some light on this question.
As these CubeSats fly around Earth, they’ll send radio signals to receiving stations on the ground. Scientists will examine the signals received in order to see whether — and if so, how much — they were jumbled as they traveled through the upper atmosphere and down to Earth.
All together, this information will give scientists a better idea of how these bubbles form and change and how much they disrupt signals — information that could help develop strategies for mitigating these bubbles’ disruptive effects.
The high-energy, fast-moving particles that fill space are called radiation. Every single spacecraft — from scientific satellites sprinkled throughout the solar system to the communications satellites responsible for relaying the GPS signals we use every day — must weather the harsh radiation of space.
Strikes from tiny, charged particles can spark memory damage or computer upsets on spacecraft, and over time, degrade hardware. The effects are wide-ranging, but ultimately, radiation can impact important scientific data, or prevent people from getting the proper navigation signals they need.
Space Environment Testbeds — or SET, for short — is our mission to study how to better protect satellites from space radiation.
SET aims its sights on a particular neighborhood of near-Earth space called the slot region: the gap between two of Earth’s vast, doughnut-shaped radiation belts, also known as the Van Allen Belts. The slot region is thought to be calmer than the belts, but known to vary during extreme space weather storms driven by the Sun. How much it changes exactly, and how quickly, remains uncertain.
The slot region is an attractive one for satellites — especially commercial navigation and communications satellites that we use every day — because from about 12,000 miles up, it offers not only a relatively friendly radiation environment, but also a wide view of Earth. During intense magnetic storms, however, energetic particles from the outer belt can surge into the slot region.
SET will survey the slot region, providing some of the first day-to-day weather measurements of this particular neighborhood in near-Earth space. The mission also studies the fine details of how radiation damages instruments and tests different methods to protect them, helping engineers build parts better suited for spaceflight. Ultimately, SET will help other missions improve their design, engineering and operations to avoid future problems, keeping our space technology running smoothly as possible.
For more on our space weather research, follow @NASASun on Twitter and NASA Sun Science on Facebook.
Meet the other NASA missions launching on the Department of Defense’s STP-2 mission and get the latest updates at nasa.gov/spacex.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
Bobale Island - North Halmahera - Indonesia 😍😍❤❤
Dia kalo lagi ngambek ya gini..😁😘 "𝑩𝒆 𝒚𝒆 𝒂𝒏𝒈𝒓𝒚, 𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝒔𝒊𝒏 𝒏𝒐𝒕: 𝒍𝒆𝒕 𝒏𝒐𝒕 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒔𝒖𝒏 𝒈𝒐 𝒅𝒐𝒘𝒏 𝒖𝒑𝒐𝒏 𝒚𝒐𝒖𝒓 𝒘𝒓𝒂𝒕𝒉: 𝑵𝒆𝒊𝒕𝒉𝒆𝒓 𝒈𝒊𝒗𝒆 𝒑𝒍𝒂𝒄𝒆 𝒕𝒐 𝒕𝒉𝒆 𝒅𝒆𝒗𝒊𝒍."
Ephesians 4:26-27 (KJV)
Love is composed of a single soul inhabiting two bodies ❤
Bangga lihat adik-adik pemuda yg punya semangat dan antusias menyambut Natal tahun ini. Berdoa utk generasi muda saat ini supaya menjadi generasi yg mencintai Tuhan. Amen! 😊😇👍👍👍
GSI El-Syadday Bintaro
Mengenal Kaum Quaker atau Perkumpulan Para Sahabat
gerejasahabat.id bergambar seorang lelaki berpakaian dan bertopi hitam. Topi dan pakaiannya tampak kuno. Pada umumnya orang memang mengenal Quaker terbatas pada apa yang digambarkan di kaleng havermout itu. Mereka adalah dianggap orang-orang yang berpakaian dan bertutur kata dengan gaya kuno. Mereka dianggap juga sebagai sekelompok yang sangat cinta damai, tertutup terhadap dunia luar dan hidup…
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Happy 2nd Anniversary ❤❤ The Lovely darling, I am so grateful that God give you for me. Thank you that you always listening and share everything with me. 😘
Solid - smart work - bigger - faster - stronger
Pride cacti!!!! I originally just made the ace (cactace) and aro ones, but…..then I got carried away…. They’re all gonna be stickers eventually, and the older (slightly less detailed) versions of the ace and aro ones are available already, here!
edit: they’re on society6! and the stickers are available here!!