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Search Results: All Fields similar to 'Skylab' and What equal to 'TV Camera'
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View of the Skylab 1 space s
Title |
View of the Skylab 1 space station cluster from the Skylab 2 Command Module |
Description |
A close-up view of the Skylab 1 space station cluster can be seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab 2 Command Module during its "fly around" inspection of the cluster. Numbers across the top of the picture indicate the Skylab 1 ground elapsed time. Note the missing portion of the micrometeoroid shield on the Orbital Workshop. The shield area was reported to be solid gold by the Skylab 2 crewmen. A cable appears to be wrapped around the damaged OWS solar array system wing. The crewmen reported that the other OWS solar panel was completely gone, with only tubes and wiring sticking out. The Multiple Docking Adapter is in the lower left corner of the picture. A portion of a solar panel on the Apollo Telescope Mount is visible at the bottom and at the left edge. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-25 |
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White Light Coronagraph - Sk
Name of Image |
White Light Coronagraph - Skylab Experiment S052 |
Date of Image |
1970-01-01 |
Full Description |
This 1970 photograph shows the flight unit for Skylab's White Light Coronagraph, an Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM) facility that photographed the solar corona in the visible light spectrum. A TV camera in the instrument provided real-time pictures of the occulted Sun to the astronauts at the control console and also transmitted the images to the ground. The Marshall Space Flight Center had program management responsibility for the development of Skylab hardware and experiments. |
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Interior view of Orbital Wor
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Interior view of Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 space station cluster |
Description |
An interior view of the Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 space station cluster in Earth orbit can be seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, is floating up through the hatch. Food lockers are in the foreground. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-26 |
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Skylab 2 Astronaut during EV
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Skylab 2 Astronaut during EVA at Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster |
Description |
Slylab 2 Astronaut performs extravehicular activity (EVA) at the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the station. Kerwin is just outside the Airlock Module. |
Date Taken |
1973-06-11 |
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Astronaut Jack Lousma looks
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Astronaut Jack Lousma looks at map of Earth in ward room of Skylab cluster |
Description |
Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, looks at a map of Earth at the food table in the ward room of the Orbital Workshop (OWS). In this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-01 |
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Astronaut Jack Lousma seen o
Title |
Astronaut Jack Lousma seen outside Skylab space station during EVA |
Description |
Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, is seen outside the Skylab space station in Earth orbit during the August 5, 1973 Skylab 3 extravehicular activity (EVA) in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the space station. Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, Skylab 3 science pilot, participated in the EVA with Lousma. During the EVA the two crewmen deployed the twin pole solar shield to help shade the Orbital Workshop. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-06 |
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Skylab 3 crewmen during pres
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Skylab 3 crewmen during press conference while in Earth's orbit |
Description |
Astronaut Alan L. Bean, right, Skylab 3 commander, answers a question during the September 21, 1973 press conference from the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. This is a black and white reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab space station. Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, center, science pilot, and Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, left, pilot, await questions from newsmen on the ground to be sent up by Scientist-Astronaut Story Musgrave, CAPCOM for this shift of Skylab 3. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-21 |
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Astronaut Joseph Kerwin duri
Title |
Astronaut Joseph Kerwin during EVA at Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, Skylab 2 science pilot, performs extravehicular activity (EVA) at the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the station. Kerwin is just outside the Airlock Module. Kerwin assisted Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, during the successful EVA attempt to free the stuck solar array system wing on the Orbital Workshop. |
Date |
06.07.1973 |
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Skylab 2 astronauts seen in
Title |
Skylab 2 astronauts seen in wardroom of crew quarters of Skylab 1 station |
Description |
Two of the three Skylab 2 astronauts are seen in the wardroom of the crew quarters of the Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 space station cluster in Earth orbit in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. They are preparing to eat a meal. Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander, is in the right foreground. In the background is scientist-astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-30 |
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View of the Skylab 1 space s
Title |
View of the Skylab 1 space station cluster from the Skylab 2 Command Module |
Description |
A close-up view of the Skylab 1 space station cluster can be seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab 2 Command Module during its "fly around" inspection of the cluster. This view has been enhanced. At left center the damaged solar array system wing on the Orbital Workshop (OWS) appears to be partly folded. In their preliminary inspection the crewmen noted that portions of the micrometeoroid shield had slid back underneath the OWS solar wing. Solar panels on the Apollo Telescope Mount extend out at the top center. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-25 |
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Skylab 2 astronauts seen in
Title |
Skylab 2 astronauts seen in wardroom of crew quarters of Skylab 1 station |
Description |
Two of the three Skylab 2 astronauts are seen in the wardroom of the crew quarters of the Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 space station cluster in Earth orbit in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. They are preparing a meal. Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander, is in the right foreground. In the background is scientist-astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-26 |
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Astronaut Joseph Kerwin duri
Title |
Astronaut Joseph Kerwin during EVA at Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, Skylab 2 science pilot, performs extravehicular activity (EVA) at the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the station. Kerwin is just outside the Airlock Module. Kerwin assisted Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, during the successful EVA attempt to free the stuck solar array system wing on the Orbital Workshop. |
Date Taken |
1973-06-07 |
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Astronaut Jack Lousma seen o
Title |
Astronaut Jack Lousma seen outside Skylab space station during EVA |
Description |
Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, is seen outside the Skylab space station in Earth orbit during the August 5, 1973 Skylab 3 extravehicular activity (EVA) in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the space station. Lousma is at the Apollo Telescope Mount EVA work station assembling one of the two 55-foot long sectionalized poles for the twin pole solar shield which was deployed to help cool the Orbital Workshop. Part of the Airlock Module's thermal/meteoroid curtain is in the left foreground. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-06 |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad sea
Title |
Astronaut Charles Conrad seated at Apollo Telescope Mount control console |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, is seated at the Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM) Control and Display console in this reproduction taken from a color television tranmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab 1 and 2 space station in Earth orbit. The ATM console is located in the Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA). The ATM and MDA are two of the five major components of the Skylab space station. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-31 |
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Astronaut Joseph Kerwin take
Title |
Astronaut Joseph Kerwin takes blood sample from Astronaut Charles Conrad |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin (right), Skylab 2 science pilot and a doctor of medicine, takes a blood sample from Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Sylab 2 commander, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit. The blood sampling was part of the Skylab Hematology and Immunology Experiment M110 series. |
Date Taken |
1973-06-06 |
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Skylab 2 crewmen give demons
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Skylab 2 crewmen give demonstration on effects of weightlessness |
Description |
The three Skylab 2 crewmen give a demonstration on the effects of weightlessness in the Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. Astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz are crouched in a fast-start stance to race around the dome area of the OWS forward compartment. The astronauts had ease of motion and good maneuverability in the zero-gravity of space. |
Date Taken |
1973-06-01 |
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Skylab beverage container fi
Title |
Skylab beverage container filled with orange juice held by Astronaut Conrad |
Description |
An accordian-style beverage dispenser filled with orange juice is held by Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, in this close-up view which is a reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit. Conrad (head and face not in view) is seated at the wardroom table in the crew quarters of the Orbital Workshop. The dispenser contained beverage crystals, and Conrad has just added the prescribed amount of water to make the orange drink. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-30 |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad as
Title |
Astronaut Charles Conrad as test subject for Lower Body Negative Pressure |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, serves as test subject for the Lower Body Negative Pressure (LBNP) (M092) Experiment, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by at TV camera aboard the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit. Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, Skylab 2 science pilot, assists Conrad into the LBNP device. Kerwin served as monitor for the experiment. |
Date Taken |
1973-06-09 |
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Skylab 3 crewmen shown eatin
Title |
Skylab 3 crewmen shown eating in Orbital Workshop wardroom |
Description |
The three Skylab 3 crewmen are shown eating in the Orbital Workshop (OWS) wardroom of the Skylab space station in Earth orbit, in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the OWS. Astronaut Alan L. Bean (right), commander, illustrates eating under zero gravity conditions upsidedown. The two other crewmen are Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott (left), science pilot, and Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-01 |
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Astronaut Owen Garriott as t
Title |
Astronaut Owen Garriott as test subject for Human Vestibular Function exp. |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, Skylab 3 science pilot, serves as test subject for the Skylab Human Vestibular Function M131 Experiment, as seen in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. Dr. Garriott is seated in the experiment's litter chair which can rotate the test subject at predetermined rotational velocity or programmed ecceleration/decelerational profile. The objectives of the M131 experiment are to obtain data pertinent to establishing the validity of measurements of specific behavioral/physiological responses influenced by vestibular activity under one-G and zero-G conditions, to determine man's adaptability to unusual vestibular conditions and predict habitability of future spacecraft conditions involving reduced gravity and Coriollis forces, and to measure the accuracy and variability in man's judgement of spatial coordinates based on atypical gravity receptor cues an |
Date Taken |
1973-08-09 |
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Astronaut Owen Garriott as t
Title |
Astronaut Owen Garriott as test subject for Human Vestibular Function exp. |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, Skylab 3 science pilot, serves as test subject for the Skylab Human Vestibular Function M131 Experiment, as seen in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The objectives of the M131 experiment are to obtain data pertinent to establishing the validity of measurements of specific behavioral/physiological responses influenced by vestibular activity under one-G and zero-G conditions, to determine man's adaptability to unusual vestibular conditions and predict habitability of future spacecraft conditions involving reduced gravity and Coriollis forces, and to measure the accuracy and variability in man's judgement of spatial coordinates based on atypical gravity receptor cues and inadequate visual cues. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-09 |
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Solar sphere viewed through
Title |
Solar sphere viewed through the Skylab solar physics experiment |
Description |
The solar sphere viewed through the Skylab solar physics experiment (S082) Extreme Ultraviolet Spectroheliographis seen in this photographic reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The solar chromosphere and lower corona are much hotter than the surface of the Sun characterized by the white light emissions. This image was recorded during the huge solar prominence which occurred on August 21, 1973. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-21 |
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Skylab 4 crew confer via tel
Title |
Skylab 4 crew confer via television communication with Dr. Kohoutek |
Description |
The three members of the Skylab 4 crew confer via television communication with Dr. Lubos Kohoutek, discoverer of the Comet Kohoutek. This picture of the three astronauts was reproduced from a TV transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station in Earth orbit. They are, left to right, Gerald P. Carr, commander, Edward G. Gibson, science pilot, and William R. Pogue, pilot. They are seated in the crew quarters wardroom of the Orbital Workshop. |
Date Taken |
1973-12-27 |
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Solar corona/prominence seen
Title |
Solar corona/prominence seen through the White Light Coronograph |
Description |
The solar corona and a solar prominence as seen through the White Light Coronograph, Skylab Experiment S052, on January 17, 1974. This view was reproduced from a television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The bright spot is a burn in the vidicon. The solar corona is the halo around the Sun which is normally visible only at the time of solar eclipse by the Moon. The Skylab coronography uses an externally-mounted disk system which occults the brilliant solar surface while allowing the fainter radiation of the corona to enter an annulus and be photographed. A mirror system allows either TV viewing of the corona or photographic recording of the image. |
Date Taken |
1974-01-17 |
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Skylab 2 crewmen give demons
Title |
Skylab 2 crewmen give demonstration on effects of weightlessness |
Description |
The three Skylab 2 crewmen give a demonstration on the effects of weightlessness in the Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 and 2 space station cluster in Earth orbit, as seen in this reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. Astronauts Charles Conrad Jr., Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz are crouched in a fast-start stance to race around the dome area of the OWS forward compartment. The astronauts had ease of motion and good maneuverability in the zero-gravity of space. |
Date |
06.01.1973 |
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Astronaut Jack Lousma hooks
Title |
Astronaut Jack Lousma hooks up cable for rate gyro six pack during EVA |
Description |
Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, hooks up a 23 ft. 2 in. connecting cable for the rate gyro six pack during extravehicular activity (EVA) on August 24, 1973, as senn in this photographic reproduction taken from a color television tranmsission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The rate gyros were mounted inside the Multiple Docking Adapter opposite the Apollo Telescope Mount control and display console. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-24 |
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Astronaut Owen Garriott at t
Title |
Astronaut Owen Garriott at the Apollo Telescope Mount control/display console |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, Skylab 3 science pilot, is seen at the Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM) control/display console in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The ATM control/display console is located in the space station's Multiple Docking Adapter. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-07 |
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View of Jack Lousma's hands
Title |
View of Jack Lousma's hands using silverware to gather food at food station |
Description |
A close-up view of Skylab 3 pilot Jack Lousma's hands using a silverware utensil to gather food at the food station, in this photographic reproduction taken from a television transmission made by a color TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. Astronaut Alan L. Bean, commander, had just zoomed the TV camera in for this closeup of the food tray following a series of wide shots of Lousma at the food station. |
Date Taken |
1973-08-01 |
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Astronaut Jack Lousma works
Title |
Astronaut Jack Lousma works at Multispectral camera experiment |
Description |
Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, works at the S190A multispectral camera experiment in the Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA), seen from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. Lousma later used a small brush to clean the six lenses of the multispectral camera. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-08 |
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Solar disk photographed thro
Title |
Solar disk photographed through Ultraviolet Spectrograph/Heliograph |
Description |
The solar disk photographed through the Skylab S082 Ultraviolet Spectrograph/Heliograph can be seen in this reproduction taken from a television tranmission made by a TV camera aboard the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The S082 experiment is located in the Apollo Telescope Mount. This spectroheliogram shows specific emission features greatly enhanced over photographs of the solar disk in white light. |
Date Taken |
1974-01-17 |
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Deployment of "Parasol" sola
Title |
Deployment of "Parasol" solar shield |
Description |
The deployment of the "Parasol" solar shield, a sunshade to help cool the overheated Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 space station cluster in Earth orbit, can be seen in the reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. The camera is in the Command Module, and the view is looking through the truss of the Apollo Telescope Mount. The sunshade is only partially deployed in this picture. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-26 |
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Deployment of "Parasol" sola
Title |
Deployment of "Parasol" solar shield |
Description |
The deployment of the "Parasol" solar shield, a sunshade to help cool the overheated Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 space station cluster in Earth orbit, can be seen in the reproduction taken from a color television transmission made by a TV camera aboard the space station. The camera is in the Command Module, and the view is looking through the truss of the Apollo Telescope Mount. The sunshade is only partially deployed in this picture. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-26 |
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