Stunning Hi-res pics of Gemeni missions...

Stunning Hi-res pics of Gemeni missions...

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Discussion

TheHeretic

Original Poster:

73,668 posts

263 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/01/gemini-s...

Some crackers in there.

(So mods, where will you dump this? Photography, or boats, planes and trains?)

nellyleelephant

2,708 posts

242 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
TheHeretic said:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/01/gemini-s...

Some crackers in there.

(So mods, where will you dump this? Photography, or boats, planes and trains?)
Or, the new Science area we were given today!

TheHeretic

Original Poster:

73,668 posts

263 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
Today? Ooh... (runs off to find it)

TheHeretic

Original Poster:

73,668 posts

263 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
Thanks mod type people.

Hooli

32,278 posts

208 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
quotequote all
What an annoying site to view them on, great pics though smile

philis

415 posts

225 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
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Whats a cock camera doing in space, hardly appropriate

Zad

12,763 posts

244 months

Tuesday 10th January 2012
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Squillions more Apollo programme photos here: http://www.apolloarchive.com/apollo_gallery.html

Eric Mc

122,878 posts

273 months

Wednesday 11th January 2012
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Seen most - but not all - of these pictures before. Thanks for finding them.

Gemini was a truly epic programme. What is amazing is that it was in effect a rush programme as NASA realised that the transition between Mercury and Gemini was too great a leap and an interim programme would be required to bridge the technology and capability gap. It was devised in 1962 and made its first manned flight in 1965. Imagine that pace of development today.

Gemini achieved an amazing number of firsts in space -

first use of fuel cells
first spacecraft capable of changing its orbital altitude
first spacecraft capable of changing its orbital plane
first US spacewalks
first US spacecraft to stay in space more than a day
longest manned spaceflight before the advent of the various space station programmes
first spacecraft to carry a programmable computer
first rendesvous with another spacecraft
first docking with another spacecraft
first genuine space emergency (Gemini 8)

There is some great CBS TV footage of the various launches and rendesvous on youtube. I spent a large part of the summer trawling through this old footage.

jingars

1,128 posts

248 months

Wednesday 11th January 2012
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Eric Mc said:
first US spacecraft to stay in space more than a day
That honour goes to Gordo Cooper on Mercury 9; 1 day, 10 hours, 20 minutes.

CmdrBond

709 posts

207 months

Thursday 12th January 2012
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Eric Mc said:
first genuine space emergency (Gemini 8)
Two future moonwalkers - Dave Scott (Cmdr Apollo 15) and Neil Armstrong (Cmdr Apollo 11)



Eric Mc

122,878 posts

273 months

Thursday 12th January 2012
quotequote all
jingars said:
Eric Mc said:
first US spacecraft to stay in space more than a day
That honour goes to Gordo Cooper on Mercury 9; 1 day, 10 hours, 20 minutes.
I suppose - I was thinking multi-day missions.

The Mercury cpasule was falling apart for the last few hours of Cooper's mission so stretching a flight to 34 hours was really pushing it beyond its limits.

jingars

1,128 posts

248 months

Thursday 12th January 2012
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You suppose?

What a gracious response to a clarification.

AshVX220

5,933 posts

198 months

Thursday 12th January 2012
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Those guys had some real Cahones! bow

Awsome picture, just imagine being the first person to open the hatch and stand up to look down at the earth hundreds of miles away!

Eric Mc

122,878 posts

273 months

Thursday 12th January 2012
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I think you'll find that was Alexei Leonov in Voshkod 2 - and it nearly killed him.

I take my hat off to the crew of Gemini 7, who spent 14 days couped up in the extremely cramped Gemini capsule. Jim Lovell still maintains it was the toughest thing he has ever done - and that says a lot considering he flew around the moon in Apollo 8 and was Commander of Apollo 13.

BigS

867 posts

181 months

Thursday 12th January 2012
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Eric Mc said:
I take my hat off to the crew of Gemini 7, who spent 14 days couped up in the extremely cramped Gemini capsule. Jim Lovell still maintains it was the toughest thing he has ever done - and that says a lot considering he flew around the moon in Apollo 8 and was Commander of Apollo 13.
yes having seen a Gemini capsule up close it amazes me that they spent that long in one!
I think he may have also lost his toothbrush on that mission too.

rxtx

6,016 posts

218 months

Friday 13th January 2012
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Hooli said:
What an annoying site to view them on, great pics though smile
Utterly dreadful, so much so I didn't even bother looking at half of them frown