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Search Results: All Fields similar to 'Skylab' and Where equal to 'Texas'
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Skylab 4 crew in preflight t
Title |
Skylab 4 crew in preflight training at Apollo Telescope Mount mock-up |
Description |
The three members of the prime crew of the third of three scheduled manned Skylab missions (Skylab 4) go through Skylab preflight training in the Mission Training and Simulation Facility at JSC. Astronaut Gerald P. Carr (on right), Skylab 4 commander, is seated at a simulator which represents the control and display console of the Apollo Telescope Mount which is located in the space station's Multiple Docking Adapter. Seated on the left is Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, Skylab 4 science pilot. In the left background is Astronaut William R. Pogue, Skylab 4 pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-02-01 |
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Terry Quist Discusses Skylab
Name of Image |
Terry Quist Discusses Skylab Experiment |
Date of Image |
1972-08-21 |
Full Description |
San Antonio, Texas high school student, Terry C. Quist (left), and Dr. Raymond Gause of the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), discuss the student?s experiment to be performed aboard the Skylab the following year. His experiment, ?Earth Orbital Neutron Analysis? required detectors such as the one he is examining in this photo. The detector was to be attached to a water tank in Skylab. Neutrons striking the detectors left traces that were brought out by a chemical etching process after the Skylab mission. Quist?s experiment seeked to record neutron hits, count them, and determine their direction. This information was to help determine the source of neutrons in the solar system. Quist was among 25 winners of a contest in which some 3,500 high school students proposed experiments for the following year?s Skylab mission. The nationwide scientific competition was sponsored by the National Science Teachers Association and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The winning students, along with their parents and sponsor teachers, visited MSFC two months earlier where they met with scientists and engineers, participated in design reviews for their experiments, and toured MSFC facilities. Of the 25 students, 6 did not see their experiments conducted on Skylab because the experiments were not compatible with Skylab hardware and timelines. Of the 19 remaining, 11 experiments required the manufacture of additional equipment. The equipment for the experiments was manufactured at MSFC. |
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Neutron Analysis - Skylab St
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Neutron Analysis - Skylab Student Experiment ED-76 |
Date of Image |
1973-01-01 |
Full Description |
The rate of neutron flow is commonly referred to as a flux. The measurement of neutron fluxes in Skylab was the subject of a proposal by Terry Quist of San Antonio, Texas. This chart describes Quist's experiment, Neutron Analysis, Skylab student experiment ED-76. These measurements were considered important not only by NASA but also by the scientific community for four reasons. High energy neutrons can be harmful to human tissue if they are present in significant quantities. Fluxes of neutrons can damage film and other sensitive experimental equipment in a marner similar to those produced by x-rays or other radiation. Furthermore, neutron fluxes can be used as a calibration source for other space-oriented particle physics experiments. Finally, neutron fluxes can affect sensitive x-ray and gamma-ray astronomy observations. Quist's objectives were to measure the neutron fluxes present in Skylab and, with the assistance of NASA and other physicists, to attempt determination of their origin as well as their energy range or spectrum. This experiment had stimulated interest in further studies of neutron phenomena in space. In March 1972, NASA and the National Science Teachers Association selected 25 experiment proposals for flight on Skylab. Science advisors from the Marshall Space Flight Center aided and assisted the students in developing the proposals for flight on Skylab. |
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Skylab Solar Shield
Title |
Skylab Solar Shield |
Full Description |
A sail like sunshade for possible use as a sunscreen for the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) is shown being fabricated in the GE Building across the street from Johnson Space Center, Houston Texas. Three people help the steamstress feed the material through the sewing machine. The three-layered sunshade will be composed of a top layer of aluminized mylar, a middle layer of laminated nylon ripstop, and a bottom layer of thin nylon. Working on the sunshade are from left to right: Dale Gentry, Elizabeth Gauldin, Alyene Baker, and James H. Barnett Jr. Mrs. Baker, a GE employee, operates the double needle Singer sewing machine. Barnett is head of the Crew Equipment Development Section of JSC Crew Systems Division. Mrs. Gauldin is also with the Crew Systems Division. Gentry works for GE. The work shown here is part of the crash program underway to prepare a sunshield for Skylab to replace the orginal shield which was lost when Skylab 1 was launched on May 14, 1973. The improvised solar shield selected to be used will be carried to Earth orbit by the Skylab 2 crewman who will then deploy the reflective parasol to shade part of the OWS from the hot rays of the sun. Loss of the orginal sun shield has caused an overheating problem. in the Orbital Work Shop. |
Date |
01/01/1973 |
NASA Center |
Headquarters |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr.
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Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. working with control panel in Skylab simulation |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. is seen working with the control panels of the Skylab Orbital Workshop trainer during Skylab training at the Johnson Space Center. |
Date Taken |
1973-02-01 |
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Skylab 4 astronauts during a
Title |
Skylab 4 astronauts during an "open house" press day in Skylab mock-up |
Description |
These three men make up the crew of the Skylab 4 mission. They are, left to right, Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, science pilot, Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, commander, and Astronaut William R. Pogue, pilot. They were photographed and interviewed during an "open house" press day in the realistic atmosphere of Skylab mock-up and trainers in the Mission Simulation and Training facility at the Manned Spacecraft Center. |
Date Taken |
1972-01-19 |
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Skylab 2 astronauts eat spac
Title |
Skylab 2 astronauts eat space food in wardroom of Skylab trainer |
Description |
The three members of the prime crew of the first manned Skylab mission dine on specially prepared Skylab space food in the wardromm of the crew quarters of the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer during Skylab training at the Johnson Space Center. They are, left to right, Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot, Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, pilot, and Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Terry Quist Discusses Skylab
Name of Image |
Terry Quist Discusses Skylab Experiment With NASA Personnel |
Date of Image |
1972-08-21 |
Full Description |
Terry C. Quist (center), high school student from San Antonio, Texas, discusses his proposed Skylab experiment with Marshall Space Flight Center?s (MSFC) Henry Floyd (left), coordinator of the Skylab Student Experiment Project, and DR. Raymond Gause, scientific advisor to Quist. The student?s experiment, ?Earth Orbital Neutron Analysis?, was aimed at learning more about the source of neutrons in the solar system by seeking the number and direction from which each comes. Quist was among the 25 winners of a contest in which some 3,500 high school students proposed experiments for the following year?s Skylab mission. Of the 25 students, 6 did not see their experiments conducted on Skylab because the experiments were not compatible with Skylab hardware and timelines. Of the 19 remaining, 11 experiments required the manufacture of equipment, such as Quist?s experiment, which required detector hardware. |
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Motor Sensory Performance -
Name of Image |
Motor Sensory Performance - Skylab Student Experiment ED-41 |
Date of Image |
1973-01-01 |
Full Description |
This chart describes the Skylab student experiment Motor Sensory Performance, proposed by Kathy L. Jackson of Houston, Texas. Her proposal was a very simple but effective test to measure the potential degradation of man's motor-sensory skills while weightless. Without knowing whether or not man can retain a high level of competency in the performance of various tasks after long exposure to weightlessness, this capability could not be fully known. Skylab, with its long-duration missions, provided an ideal testing situation. The experiment Kathy Jackson proposed was similar in application to the tasks involved in docking one spacecraft to another using manual control. It required one of the greatest tests of the motor-sensory capabilities of man. In March 1972, NASA and the National Science Teachers Association selected 25 experiment proposals for flight on Skylab. Science advisors from the Marshall Space Flight Center aided and assisted the students in developing the proposals for flight on Skylab. |
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Astronaut Robert Crippen hol
Title |
Astronaut Robert Crippen holds training model of Skylab experiment |
Description |
Astronaut Robert L. Crippen, SMEAT crew commander, holds the training model of Skylab experiment T003, the aerosol analysis test, in this preview of activity the Skylab Medical Experiment Altitude Test (SMEAT). |
Date Taken |
1972-06-15 |
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Parasol construction in bldg
Title |
Parasol construction in bldg 10 for Skylab 2 flight |
Description |
Technicians in the Technical Services shop in bldg 10 work on the fabrication of the umbrella-like mechanical device called the "parasol" during Skylab 2 preflight preparations at JSC. Here, they are attaching the telescoping extension rods to the canopy. The "parasol" is one of several sunscreen possibilities being considered for use in shading the overheated Skylab 1 Orbital Workshop. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-23 |
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Prime crew of the Skylab 2 m
Title |
Prime crew of the Skylab 2 mission stand beside T-38 prior to take off |
Description |
Members of the prime crew of the first manned Skylab Mission (Skylab 2) stand beside a NASA T-38 jet aircraft trainer at nearby Ellington Air Force Base prior to take off for the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. They are (left to right) Astronauts Paul J. Weitz, mission pilot, Charles Conrad Jr., commander, and scientist Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot. The three crewmen have completed their pre-launch training at JSC. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-13 |
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Skylab 3 crewmen practice EV
Title |
Skylab 3 crewmen practice EVA procedures |
Description |
The three prime crewmen of the Skylab 3 mission practice procedures which will be used during the extravehicular activity (EVA) portion of the scheduled Skylab rate gyro six-pac installation. They are Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott (center), Astronaut Alan L. Bean (center background) and Astronaut Jack R. Lousma (right). Garriott is working with a mock-up of a trunion plug plate which is on the space station's deployment assembly. This picture was taken during Skylab 3 prelaunch training at JSC. In the left foreground with back to camera is Astronaut Russell L. Schweickart, who is assisting with the Skylab 3 training. Another training officer is in the left background (31322), Lousma practices procedures for EVA in his extravehicular mobility unit (EMU). He is working with a mock-up of a trunion plug plate which is on the space station's deployment assembly (31323). |
Date Taken |
1973-06-30 |
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Keith D. McGee Greeted By As
Name of Image |
Keith D. McGee Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel |
Date of Image |
1972-06-02 |
Full Description |
Garland, Texas high school student, Keith D. McGee, is greeted by (left to right): Astronauts Russell L. Schweickart, and Owen K. Garriott, Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) Skylab Program Manager, Leland Belew, and MSFC Director of Administration and Technical Services, David Newby, during a tour of MSFC. McGee was among 25 winners of a contest in which some 3,500 high school students proposed experiments for the following year?s Skylab Mission. The nationwide scientific competition was sponsored by the National Science Teachers Association and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The winning students, along with their parents and sponsor teachers, visited MSFC where they met with scientists and engineers, participated in design reviews for their experiments, and toured MSFC facilities. Of the 25 students, 6 did not see their experiments conducted on Skylab because the experiments were not compatible with Skylab hardware and timelines. Of the 19 remaining, 11 experiments required the manufacture of additional equipment. |
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Kathy L. Jackson Greeted By
Name of Image |
Kathy L. Jackson Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel |
Date of Image |
1972-06-02 |
Full Description |
Houston, Texas high school student, Kathy L. Jackson, is greeted by astronauts Russell L. Schweickart (left) and Owen K. Garriott (center), and Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) Skylab Program Manager, Leland Belew during a tour of the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC). Jackson was among 25 winners of a contest in which some 3,500 high school students proposed experiments for the following year?s Skylab mission. The nationwide scientific competition was sponsored by the National Science Teachers Association and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The winning students, along with their parents and sponsor teachers, visited MSFC where they met with scientists and engineers, participated in design reviews for their experiments, and toured MSFC facilities. Of the 25 students, 6 did not see their experiments conducted on Skylab because the experiments were not compatible with Skylab hardware and timelines. Of the 19 remaining, 11 experiments required the manufacture of additional equipment. |
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Terry Quist Greeted By Astro
Name of Image |
Terry Quist Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel |
Date of Image |
1972-06-02 |
Full Description |
San Antonio, Texas high school student, Terry C. Quist, is greeted by (left to right): Astronauts Russell L. Schweickart, and Owen K. Garriott, Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) Skylab Program Manager, Leland Belew, and MSFC Director of Administration and Technical Services, David Newby, during a tour of MSFC. Quist was among 25 winners of a contest in which some 3,500 high school students proposed experiments for the following year?s Skylab mission. The nationwide scientific competition was sponsored by the National Science Teachers Association and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The winning students, along with their parents and sponsor teachers, visited MSFC where they met with scientists and engineers, participated in design reviews for their experiments, and toured MSFC facilities. Of the 25 students, 6 did not see their experiments conducted on Skylab because the experiments were not compatible with Skylab hardware and timelines. Of the 19 remaining, 11 experiments required the manufacture of additional equipment. |
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Kathy Jackson Discusses Expe
Name of Image |
Kathy Jackson Discusses Experiment With NASA Personnel |
Date of Image |
1972-08-21 |
Full Description |
Kathy Jackson, high school student from Houston, Texas, discusses her experiment with Dr. Robert Allen (left) and her scintific advisor Arthur White, both of the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC). Miss Jackson?s experiment tested the motor sensory performance of an astronaut at various times during the Skylab flight to detect any degredation in his eye-hand coordination. She was one of the 25 winners of a contest in which some 3,500 high school students proposed experiments for the following year?s Skylab mission. Of the 25 students, 6 did not see their experiments conducted on Skylab because the experiments were not compatible with Skylab hardware and timelines. Of the 19 remaining, 11 experiments required the manufacture of equipment. |
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Dr. Lubos Kohoutek in Missio
Title |
Dr. Lubos Kohoutek in Mission Control during Skylab 4 |
Description |
Dr. Lubos Kohoutek, discoverer of the Comet Kohoutek, is seen in the Mission Operations Control Room in the Mission Control Center during a visit to JSC. He is talking over a radio-telephone with the Skylab 4 crewmen in the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. Professor Kohoutek, a well-known Czechoslovakian astronomer who works at the Hamburg Observatory in West Germany, discussed the comet with Astronauts Gerald P. Carr, Edward G. Gibson, and William R. Pogue. Dr. Zdenek Sekania, who accompanied Dr. Kohoutek on the visit to JSC, is on the telephone in the left background. Dr. Sekania is with the Smithsonian Observatory in Cambridge, Massachusetts. |
Date Taken |
1974-01-03 |
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Flight Directors Puddy and S
Title |
Flight Directors Puddy and Shaffer in Mission Control during Skylab 2 launch |
Description |
Flight Directors Donald R. Puddy (left background) and Philip C. Shaffer are seated at the flight director's console in the Mission Opeations Control Room in the Mission Control Center at JSC during Skylab 2 launch activity. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-25 |
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View of Mission Control Cent
Title |
View of Mission Control Center during Skylab 3 recovery |
Description |
Overal view of the Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR) in Mission Control Center (MCC), bldg 30, during the Skylab 3 recovery. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-27 |
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Astronaut Robert Crippen sim
Title |
Astronaut Robert Crippen simulates preparation of Skylab meal |
Description |
Astronaut Robert L. Crippen, SMEAT crew commander, simulates the preparation of a Skylab meal. Crippen is one of three astronauts who will spend up to 56 days in altitude chamber at the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) beginning in mid-July to obtain medical data and evaluate medical experiment equipment for Skylab. SMEAT stands for Skylab Medical Experiment Altitude Test. |
Date Taken |
1972-06-15 |
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Astronaut William Pogue usin
Title |
Astronaut William Pogue using Skylab Viewfinder Tracking System experiment |
Description |
Astronaut William R. Pogue, Skylab 4 pilot, using the Skylab Viewfinder Tracking System (S191 experiment) during a training exercise in the Multiple docking adapter (MDA) one-G trainer at JSC. In the background is Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, seated at the control panel for the Earth Resources Experiments Package (EREP). Carr is Skylab 4 crew commander, and Gibson is Science pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-10 |
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Astronaut Alan Bean looks ov
Title |
Astronaut Alan Bean looks over data acquisition camera on Skylab trainer |
Description |
Astronaut Alan L. Bean, commander for Skylab 3, the second manned Skylab mission, looks over the data acquisition camera mounted on the water tank in the upper level of the Orbital Workshop (OWS) one-G trainer at the Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC). |
Date Taken |
1972-09-01 |
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Astronaut Paul Weitz works w
Title |
Astronaut Paul Weitz works with UV Stellar Astronomy Experiment |
Description |
Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, pilot of the first manned Skylab mission, works with the UV Stellar Astronomy Experiment S019 in the forward compartment of the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer during Skylab training at JSC. The equipment consists of a reflecting telescope, a 35mm camera and an additional mirror. It is mounted in an anti-solar scientific airlock in the side of the OWS. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad fol
Title |
Astronaut Charles Conrad following exercise session on bicycle ergometer |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander of the first manned Skylab mission, wipes perspiration from his face following an exercise session on the bicycle ergometer during Skylab training at JSC. Conrad is in the work and experiments compartment of the crew quarters of the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer at JSC. In addition to being the prime exercise for the crewmen, the ergometer is also used for the vector-cardiogram test and the metabolic activity experiment. The bicycle ergometer produces measured work loads for use in determining man's metabolic effectiveness. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Astronaut Paul Weitz lies in
Title |
Astronaut Paul Weitz lies in lower body negative pressure device in trainer |
Description |
Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, pilot of the first manned Skylab mission, lies in the lower body negative pressure device during Skylab training at JSC. Operating the controls in the background is scientist-astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot of the mission. They are in the work and experiments area of the crew quarters of the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer at JSC. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Astronauts Conrad and Kerwin
Title |
Astronauts Conrad and Kerwin practice Human Vestibular Function experiment |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander of the first manned Skylab mission, checks out the Human Vestibular Function, Experiment M131, during Skylab training at JSC. Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot of the mission, goes over a checklist. The two men are in the work and experiments compartment of the crew quarters of the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer at JSC. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad che
Title |
Astronaut Charles Conrad checks out Human Vestibular Function experiment |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander of the first manned Skylab mission, checks out the Human Vestibular Function, Experiment M131, during Skylab training at JSC. Conrad is in the work and experiments compartment of the crew quarters of the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer at JSC. The reference sphere with a magnetic rod is used by the astronaut to indicate body orientation non-visually. The litter chair in which he is seated can be rotated by a motor at its base or, when not being rotated, can tilt forward, backward or to either side. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Skylab flight controllers an
Title |
Skylab flight controllers and JSC Officials in Mission Control Center |
Description |
A group of key Skylab flight controllers and JSC Officials cluster around Flight Director Donald R. Puddy's console in the Mission Operations Control Room in the Mission Control Center at JSC during consideration of the problem of the undeployed solar panels on the Skylab 1 Orbital Workshop. Dr. Christopher C. Kraft Jr. (wearing coat), JSC Director, is standing behind Puddy. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-14 |
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Prime crew of Skylab 2 missi
Title |
Prime crew of Skylab 2 mission go over checklist during prelaunch training |
Description |
The members of the prime crew of the first manned Skylab misison go over a checklist during Skylab prelaunch training activity at JSC. They are in the Apollo Command Module Mission Simulator in bldg 5 at JSC. They are, left to right, Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander, Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot, and Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-08 |
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Skylab 3 crewmen go over che
Title |
Skylab 3 crewmen go over checklist in crew quarters of OWS trainer |
Description |
The three crewmen of the second manned Skylab mission (Skylab 3) go over a checklist during preflight training at JSC. They are, left to right, Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, science pilot, Astronaut Alan L. Bean, commander, and Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, pilot. They are in the crew quarters of the Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer in the Mission Training and Simulation Facility, bldg 5, at JSC. |
Date Taken |
1973-07-16 |
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Personnel in Mission Control
Title |
Personnel in Mission Control examine replica of spider habitat from Skylab 3 |
Description |
Flight Director Neil B. Hutchinson, left, and Astronaut Bruce McCandless II hold up a glass enclosure - home for the spider Arachne, which is the same species as the two spiders carried on the Skylab 3 mission. The real spider is the one barely visible at the upper right corner of the square, the larger one is a projected image on the rear-screen-projected map in the front of the Mission Operations Control Room (MOCR) of the Mission Control Center (MCC). McCandless served as backup pilot for the first manned Skylab mission and was a spacecraft-communicater (CAPCOM) for the second crew. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-25 |
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Skylab 4 crewmen at Ellingto
Title |
Skylab 4 crewmen at Ellington AFB before flying to Kennedy Space Center |
Description |
The prime crewmen of the third manned Skylab mission pause at a USAF T-38A jet at Ellington Air Force Base, Texas before flying to Kennedy Space Center (KSC) at Cape Canaveral, Florida. Skylab 4 crewmen are Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, center, commander, Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, science pilot, left, and Astronaut William R. Pogue, pilot. |
Date Taken |
1973-11-12 |
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Parasol", sunshade for Skyla
Title |
Parasol", sunshade for Skylab 1, receives checkout in bldg 10 |
Description |
An umbrella-like mechanical device called the "parasol", one of the several sunscreen possibilities being considered for use in shading the overheated Skylab 1 Orbital Workshop (OWS), receives a checkout in the Technical Services shop in bldg 10 at JSC. Here, the "parasol" sunshade is almost fully deployed. The "parasol" is designed to fit into the T027 experiment photometer canister. The canopy portion of the "parasol" measures 24 feet by 22 feet. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-23 |
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Parasol", sunshade for Skyla
Title |
Parasol", sunshade for Skylab 1, receives checkout in bldg 10 |
Description |
An umbrella-like mechanical device called the "parasol", one of the several sunscreen possibilities being considered for use in shading the overheated Skylab 1 Orbital Workshop (OWS), receives a checkout in the Technical Services shop in bldg 10 at JSC. Here, a technician starts to deploy the"parasol" sunshade. The "parasol" is designed to fit into the T027 experiment photometer canister. The canopy portion of the "parasol" measures 24 feet by 22 feet. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-23 |
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Skylab 3 crew in the One-G t
Title |
Skylab 3 crew in the One-G trainer Multiple Docking Adapter |
Description |
These three men are the prime crewmen for the Skylab 3 mission. Pictured in the One-G trainer Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA) at JSC are, left to right, Scientist-Astronaut Owen F. Garriott, science pilot, and Astronauts Jack R. Lousma and ALan L. Bean, pilot and commander, respectively. |
Date Taken |
1973-06-29 |
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Dr. Robert Clark studies lev
Title |
Dr. Robert Clark studies levels of radiation Skylab 2 crew was exposed to |
Description |
In the Radiation Counting Laboratory sixty feet underground at JSC, Dr. Robert S. Clark prepares to load pieces of iridium foil - sandwiched between plastic sheets - into the laboratory's radiation detector. The iridium foil strips were worn by the crew of the second Skylab flight in personal radiation dosimeters throughout their 59.5 days in space. Inside the radiation detector assembly surrounded by 28 tons of lead shielding, the sample will be tested to determine the total neutron dose to which the astronauts were exposed during their long stay aboard the space station. |
Date Taken |
1973-11-06 |
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Skylab 3 crewmembers greeted
Title |
Skylab 3 crewmembers greeted on return to Ellington Air Force Base |
Description |
Dr. Christopher C. Kraft Jr., center, shakes hands with Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, during welcome ceremonies following crew arrival at Ellington Air Force Base. The crewmen greet their wives after spending 59.5 days in the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. From left to right are Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriot, science pilot, Mrs. Garriott, Dr. Donald K. Slyaton, Director of Flight Crew Operations at JSC, Dr. Kraft, Astronaut Alan L. Bean, commander, Mrs. Bean, and the Lousmas. The group stands in front of the VC-140 (Jet Star) which flew the crewmen from San Diego to Ellington Air Force Base. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-27 |
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Skylab 4 crewmen look over n
Title |
Skylab 4 crewmen look over notes for press conference |
Description |
The three crewmen of the third manned Skylab mission look over their notes for their upcoming post-mission press conference at JSC. They are, from left to right, Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, commander, Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, science pilot, and Astronaut William R. Pogue, pilot. The three astronauts spent 84 days aboard the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. |
Date Taken |
1974-02-21 |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad goe
Title |
Astronaut Charles Conrad goes through checklist of experiment activity |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander of the first manned Skylab mission, goes through a checklist of experiment activity during Skylab training at JSC. Conrad is standing in the Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA) in the Mission Simulation and Training Facility At JSC. He is working at the "materials processing in space" facility in the MDA. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Astronaut Charles Conrad tak
Title |
Astronaut Charles Conrad takes items from materials processing storage area |
Description |
Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander of the first manned Skylab mission, takes items from the M512 materials processing equipment storage assembly during Skylab training at JSC. Conrad is standing in the Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA) trainer in the JSC Mission Simulation and Training Facility. The assembly holds equipment designed to explore space manufacturing capability in a weightless state. Conrad is holding one of the experiment parts in his left hand. |
Date Taken |
1973-03-01 |
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Flight Operations Director's
Title |
Flight Operations Director's console in Mission Control during Skylab 4 |
Description |
An overall view of the Flight Operations Director's console in the Mission Operations Control Room in the Mission Control Center at JSC during the launch of the Skylab 4 mission. The television monitor records the progress of the flight seconds after liftoff. Left to right, are Dr. Christopher C. Kraft Jr., JSC Director, Howard W. Tindall Jr., JSC Director of Flight Operations, and Flight Director M.P. Frank. Public Affairs commentator John E. McLeish can be seen at the PAO console in the background. |
Date Taken |
1973-11-16 |
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Astronaut Jack Lousma at tab
Title |
Astronaut Jack Lousma at table with crew and flight surgeon before training |
Description |
Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, sits at a table with fellow crewmen and the flight surgeon prior to water egress training at the Johnson Space Center, Houston. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-01 |
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Astronaut Edard Gibson exami
Title |
Astronaut Edard Gibson examines film for 16mm Data Acquisition Camera |
Description |
Scientist-Astronaut Edard G. Gibson, science pilot for the third manned Skylab mission, reads the markings on a magazine of 400 feet of film for the 16mm Data Acquisition Camera (DAC), during a training exercise in the Orbital Workshop (OWS) trainer at JSC. |
Date Taken |
1973-09-09 |
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View of northeastern Mexico
Title |
View of northeastern Mexico and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas |
Description |
An oblique view of northeastern Mexico and the Rio Grande Valley of Texas (26.0N,100.0W), as photographed from the Skylab space station by one of the Skylab 4 crewmen. Mexico's Sierra Madre Oriental Mountains are in the center of the picture. The Gulf of Mexico is in the background. Note the lakes on the Rio Grande River. Monterrey is near the center of the picture. Field patterns in the lower Rio Grande Valley can easily be identified. The stark, linear roughness of the Sierra Madre Oriental Mountains is the most prominent feature. |
Date Taken |
1973-12-28 |
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Skylab 2 crew during "open h
Title |
Skylab 2 crew during "open house" press day at Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) |
Description |
These three men are the crewmen for the first manned Skylab mission. They are astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander, standing left, scientist-astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, seated, and Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, pilot. They were photographed and interviewed during an "open house" press day in the realistic atmosphere of the Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA) trainer in the Mission Simulation and Training Facility at the Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC). The control and display panel for the Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM) is at right. |
Date Taken |
1972-01-19 |
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Skylab 4 astronauts during p
Title |
Skylab 4 astronauts during preflight press conference |
Description |
The three members of the prime crew of the third of three scheduled manned Skylab missions (Sklab 4) appear before a gathering of news media representatives at a press conference held at the Manned Spacecraft Center. They are, left to right, Astronaut William R. Pogue, pilot, Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, science pilot, and Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, commander. |
Date Taken |
1972-12-01 |
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Two of three astronauts who
Title |
Two of three astronauts who will participate in SMEAT activity |
Description |
Two of three astronauts who will spend up to 56 days in an altitude test chamber at the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC) beginning in mid-July to obtain medical data and evaluate medical experiment equipment for Skylab, go over a menu in the food preparation area. Seated at the simulated wardroom food table is Astronaut Karol J. Bobko, SMEAT pilot. Astronaut Robert L. Crippen, SMEAT crew commander, is standing. Dr. William E. Thornton, science pilot, is the third SMEAT crewman. SMEAT stands for Skylab Medical Experiment Altitude Test. |
Date Taken |
1972-06-15 |
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Skylab 2 prime crew suit up
Title |
Skylab 2 prime crew suit up during prelaunch training activity |
Description |
Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, prime crew pilot of the first manned Skylab mission, is suited up in bldg 5 at JSC during prelaunch training activity. He is assisted by Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., prime crew commander. The man in the left background is wearing a face mask to insure that Conrad, Joseph Kerwin, and Weitz are not exposed to disease prior to launch (25399), Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin (on left), and Weitz assist each other in suiting up in bldg 5 at JSC during pre-launch training activity (25400). |
Date Taken |
1973-05-08 |
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Skylab 3 prime crew particip
Title |
Skylab 3 prime crew participate in water egress simulations at JSC |
Description |
The three members of the prime crew of the second manned Skylab mission participate in prelaunch training, specifically water egress simulations at JSC. They are, left to right, Astronaut Alan L. Bean, commander, Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, science pilot, and Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, pilot. This training took place in JSC's bldg 220 on May 1, 1973. |
Date Taken |
1973-05-01 |
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