Search Results: All Fields similar to 'Skylab'

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Launch of unmanned Skylab 1 …
Title Launch of unmanned Skylab 1 space vehicle
Description The unmanned Skylab 1/Saturn V space vehicle is launched from Pad A, Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, Florida, at 12:00 noon, May 14, 1973, to place the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit.
Date Taken 1973-05-14
Skylab 4 crew portrait
Title Skylab 4 crew portrait
Description These three men are the prime crewmen for the Skylab 4 mission. Pictured in their flight suits with a globe and a model of the Skylab space station are, left to right, Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, commander, Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, science pilot, and Astronaut William R. Pogue, pilot.
Date Taken 1973-08-28
Skylab 2 Solar Physics Exper …
Title Skylab 2 Solar Physics Experiment
Description Skylab 2 Solar Physics Experiment. This black and white view of a solar flare was taken from the skylab remote solar experiment module mounted on top of the vehicle and worked automatically without any interaction from the crew. Solar flares or sunspots are eruptions on the sun's surface and appear to occur in cycles. When these cycles occur, there is worldwide electromagnetic interference affecting radio and television transmission.
Date Taken 1973-06-22
Astronaut Jack Lousma looks …
Title 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
Astronaut Jack Lousma egress …
Title Astronaut Jack Lousma egresses Skylab 3 Command Module
Description Astronaut Jack R. Lousma, Skylab 3 pilot, egresses the Skylab 3 Command Module aboard the prime recovery ship, U.S.S. New Orleans, during recovery operations in the Pacific Ocean. Note surgical masks on those assisting Lousma. This is to prevent the astronauts from contracting infections.
Date Taken 1973-09-25
Artist's concept of Skylab 4 …
Title Artist's concept of Skylab 4 astronauts observing Comet Kohoutek
Description An artist's concept illustrating how the Skylab 4 astronauts will observe through the scientific airlock of the Orbital Workshop the passing of the newly-discovered Comet Kohoutek. The favorable location of the Skylab space station in Earth orbit will help provide a comprehensive investigation of the nature and evolution of the coma and tails as the comet approaches, passes, and recedes from the Sun.
Date Taken 1973-11-27
Photograph of Comet Kohoutek …
Title Photograph of Comet Kohoutek taken from Skylab
Description Photograph of taken of the Comet Kohoutek from Skylab space station in Earth orbit by a Skylab 4 crewmen.
Date Taken 1973-12-21
Astronaut Edward Gibson stan …
Title Astronaut Edward Gibson stands at Apollo Telescope Mount in Skylab
Description Scientist-Astronaut Edward G. Gibson, Skylab 4 science pilot, stands at the Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM) console in the Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA) of the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit.
Date Taken 1974-02-11
Skylab 4 crewmen aboard the …
Title Skylab 4 crewmen aboard the U.S.S. New Orleans
Description The crewmen of the third and final manned Skylab mission relax on the U.S.S. New Orleans, prime recovery ship for their mission, about an hour after Command Module splashed down. Note the support crew behind the astronauts are all wearing surgical masks. This is to prevent passing on any illness to the crew.
Date Taken 1974-02-08
Emblem for the second manned …
Title Emblem for the second manned Skylab mission, Skylab 3
Description This is the emblem for the second manned Skylab mission. It will be a mission of up to 56 days. The patch symbolizes the main objectives of the flight. The central figure, adapted from one by Leonardo da Vinci, illustrates the proportions of the human form and suggests the many studies of man himself to be conducted in the zero-gravity environment of space. This drawing is superimposed on two hemispheres representing the two additional main areas of research - studies of the Sun and the development of techniques for survey of the Earth's resources. The left hemisphere show the Sun as it will be seen in the red light radiated by hydrogen atoms in the solar atmosphere. The right hemisphere is intended to suggest the studies of Earth resources to be conducted on Skylab. Although the patch denotes this mission as Skylab II, it is actually consided to be the Skylab III mission.
Date 02.01.1973
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 01.19.1972
Skylab-4 Mission EVA
Name of Image Skylab-4 Mission EVA
Date of Image 1974-07-26
Full Description In this photograph, a skylab-4 astronaut performs Extra Vehicular Activities (EVA) outside of the lab. The third crew (Skylab-4) spent 84 days in the orbiting laboratory. The solar observatory was designed for full exposure to the Sun throughout most of the Skylab mission. Solar energy was transformed into electrical power for operation of all spacecraft systems. The proper operation of these solar arrays was vital to the mission.
Skylab Orbital Workshop Asse …
Name of Image Skylab Orbital Workshop Assembly
Date of Image 1972-09-01
Full Description This photograph shows the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) assembled, with its Thruster Attitude Control System (TACS) and radiator, ready for placing on the transporter. Twenty-two titanium spheres above the radiator housed the nitrogen required for operation of the TACS. At one end of the OWS, the TACS provided short-term control of the attitude of the Skylab.
Skylab-1 on Pad Ready for La …
Name of Image Skylab-1 on Pad Ready for Launch
Date of Image 1973-05-01
Full Description In 1973, Skylab, America's first space station, was launched aboard a two-stage Saturn V vehicle. Saturn IB rockets were used to launch three different three-man crews to the Skylab space station.
Skylab Logo
Name of Image Skylab Logo
Date of Image 1970-01-01
Full Description In 1973, Skylab, America's first space station, was launched aboard a two-stage Saturn V vehicle. Saturn IB rockets were used to launch three different three-man crews to the Skylab space station.
Assembly of the Skylab Orbit …
Name of Image Assembly of the Skylab Orbital Workshop
Date of Image 1970-01-01
Full Description This photographs shows technicians positioning the Skylab Orbital Workshop (OWS) on a rotating work dolly during the assembly phase of the OWS at the McDornell Douglas facility in California. The OWS was the living and working quarters for the astronauts. The Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) had responsibility for developing and integrating most of the major components of the Skylab: the Orbital Workshop (OWS), Airlock Module (AM), Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA), Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM), Payload Shroud (PS), and most of the experiments.
The Skylab Airlock Module
Name of Image The Skylab Airlock Module
Date of Image 1971-01-01
Full Description This 1971 photograph was taken during the assembly of the Flight Article of the Skylab Airlock Module (AM). The Am, fabricated by McDornell Douglas under the direction of the Marshall Flight Center, allowed Skylab crew members an exit to perform extravehicular activities. The Module also contained many of the supplies and control panels for electrical power distribution and internal environment.
Assembling the Skylab Cluste …
Name of Image Assembling the Skylab Cluster
Date of Image 1972-01-01
Full Description In this photograph, a technician is securing a forward access hatch handle on the Orbital Workshop (OWS), that cornected to the Airlock Module (AM). The OWS provided living and working quarters for the Skylab crews. The AM provided an airlock for extravehicular activities, the main systems for communication and data transmittal, environmental and thermal control systems, and the electric power control system. The Marshall Space Flight Center had responsibilities for the design and development of the Skylab hardware, and management of experiments.
Skylab Food Heating and Serv …
Name of Image Skylab Food Heating and Serving Tray
Date of Image 1970-01-01
Full Description Shown here is the Skylab food heating and serving tray in its stowed position. The Marshall Space Flight Center had program management responsibility for the development of Skylab hardware and experiments.
Skylab Multiple Docking Adap …
Name of Image Skylab Multiple Docking Adapter - Internal Aft View
Date of Image 1972-09-01
Full Description This September 1972 photograph shows the internal configuration of Skylab's Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA) flight article as it appeared during the Crew Compartment and Function Review at the Martin-Marietta Corporation's Space Center facility in Denver, Colorado. Designed and manufactured by the Marshall Space Flight Center, the MDA housed a number of experiment control and stowage units and provided a docking port for the Apollo Command Module.
A Solar Prominence Taken by …
Name of Image A Solar Prominence Taken by the Skylab Telescope
Date of Image 1973-08-21
Full Description This photograph shows a solar prominence in action, one of Skylab's many splendorous views. It was taken on August 21, 1973. Interpretation of the rich store of Skylab ultraviolet solar data was facilitated by computerized color enhancement of the original black-and-white images, highlighting subtle but important brightness differences.
Space Station/Skylab Sketch
Name of Image Space Station/Skylab Sketch
Date of Image 1966-01-01
Full Description Seldom in aerospace history has a major decision been as promptly and concisely recorded as with the Skylab shown in this sketch. At a meeting at the Marshall Space Flight Center on August 19, 1966, George E. Mueller, NASA Associate Administrator for Marned Space Flight, used a felt pen and poster paper to pin down the final conceptual layout for the budding space station's (established as the Skylab in 1970) major elements. General Davy Jones, first program director, added his initials and those of Dr. Mueller in the lower right corner. The goals of the Skylab were to enrich our scientific knowledge of the Earth, the Sun, the stars, and cosmic space, to study the effects of weightlessness on living organisms, including man, to study the effects of the processing and manufacturing of materials utilizing the absence of gravity, and to conduct Earth resource observations. The Skylab also conducted 19 selected experiments submitted by high school students. Skylab's 3 different 3-man crews spent up to 84 days in Earth orbit. The Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) had responsibility for developing and integrating most of the major components of the Skylab: the Orbital Workshop (OWS), Airlock Module (AM), Multiple Docking Adapter (MDA), Apollo Telescope Mount (ATM), Payload Shroud (PS), and most of the experiments. MSFC was also responsible for providing the Saturn IB launch vehicles for three Apollo spacecraft and crews and a Saturn V launch vehicle for the Skylab.
Ultraviolet (UV) X-Ray Solar …
Name of Image Ultraviolet (UV) X-Ray Solar Photography - Experiment S020
Date of Image 1972-01-01
Full Description This chart details Skylab's Ultraviolet (UV) X-Ray Solar Photography experiment (S020) in an Apollo Telescope Mount facility. It was designed to photograph normal and explosive areas within the solar atmosphere in the UV and x-ray spectra. The Marshall Space Flight Center had program management responsibility for the development of Skylab hardware and experiments.
X-Ray Spectrographic Telesco …
Name of Image X-Ray Spectrographic Telescope - Experiment S054
Date of Image 1973-01-01
Full Description This chart details Skylab's X-Ray Spectrographic Telescope, an Apollo Telescope Mount facility. It was designed to sequentially photograph solar flares and other active regions in the x-ray spectrum. The Marshall Flight Center had program management responsibility for the development of Skylab hardware and experiments.
Skylab Experiments
Name of Image Skylab Experiments
Date of Image 1973-01-01
Full Description This chart lists the various experiments that flew on Skylab, along with their assigned numerical designations. The Marshall Space Flight Center had program management responsibility for the development of Skylab hardware and experiments.
Bacteria and Spores - Skylab …
Name of Image Bacteria and Spores - Skylab Student Experiment ED-31
Date of Image 1973-01-01
Full Description Pictures 1 and 2 show samples of Bacillus Subtillus grown during the first performance of Robert Staehle's experiment (ED-31) aboard Skylab. Pictures 3 and 4 show colonies of the same bacteria that developed during the second performance of the experiment. The experiment ED-31 was proposed by Robert L. Staehle of Rochester, New York to determine the effect of the Skylab environment (particularly weightlessness) on the survival, growth rates, and mutations of certain bacteria and spores.
Astronaut Paul Weitz gets ph …
Title Astronaut Paul Weitz gets physical examination from Astronaut Joseph Kerwin
Description Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, Skylab 2 pilot, gets a physical examination by a fellow crewman during the 28-day Skylab 2 mission. Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, Skylab 2 science pilot and a doctor of medicine, uses a stethoscope to check the Weitz's heartbeat. They are in the Orbital Workshop crew quarters of the Skylab 1 and 2 space station in Earth orbit. This photograph was taken by Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander.
Date Taken 1973-06-01
Astronaut Charles Conrad tri …
Title Astronaut Charles Conrad trims hair of Astronaut Paul Weitz
Description Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., Skylab 2 commander, trims the hair of Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, Skylab 2 pilot, during the 28-day Skylab 2 mission in Earth orbit. They are in the crew quarters wardroom of the Orbital Workshop of the Skylab 1 and 2 space station. Weitz is holding a vacuum hose in his right hand. This picture was taken by Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, Skylab 2 science pilot.
Date Taken 1973-06-01
View of Astronaut Owen Garri …
Title View of Astronaut Owen Garriott taking video of two Skylab spiders experiment
Description View of Scientist-Astronaut Owen K. Garriott, Skylab 3 science pilot, taking TV footage of Arabella and Anita, the two Skylab 3 common cross spiders "aranous diadematus," aboard the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. During the 59 day Skylab 3 mission the two spiders Arabella and Anita, were housed in an enclosure onto which a motion picture and still camera were attached to record the spiders' attempts to build a web in the weightless environment. Note the automatic data acquisition camera (DAC) about 3.5 feet to Garriott's right (about waist level).
Date Taken 1973-08-16
View of Arabella, one of two …
Title View of Arabella, one of two Skylab spiders and her web
Description A close-up view of Arabella, one of the two Skylab 3 common cross spiders "aranous diadematus," and the web it had spun in the zero gravity of space aboard the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. During the 59 day Skylab 3 mission the two spiders Arabella and Anita, were housed in an enclosure onto which a motion picture and still camera were attached to record the spiders' attempts to build a web in the weightless environment.
Date Taken 1973-08-16
Artist's concept of deployme …
Title Artist's concept of deployment of twin pole thermal shield on Skylab
Description An artist's concept of the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit illustrating the deployment of the twin pole thermal shield to shade the Orbital Workshop (OWS) from the Sun. This is one of the sunshade possibilities considered to solve the problem of the overheated OWS. Here the two Skylab 2 astronauts have completely deployed the sunshade. Note the evidence of another Skylab problem - the solar panels on the OWS are not deployed as required (26127), In this view the Skylab astronauts have partially deployed the sunshade (26128).
Date Taken 1973-05-18
Double exposure to illustrat …
Title Double exposure to illustrate size difference between Skylab 1 and 2
Description A deliberate double exposure to help illustrate the comparative sizes and configurations of the Skylab 1 and Skylab 2 space vehicles at Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, Florida. The double exposure creates an illusion that the rockets are side by side, though actually they are 1 1/2 miles apart. The Skylab 1/Saturn 1B space vehicle on Pad A is on the left. On the right is the Skylab 2/Saturn 1B space vehicle on Pad B.
Date Taken 1973-05-07
Skylab 2 prime crew photogra …
Title Skylab 2 prime crew photographed at Launch Complex 39 KSC
Description The three prime crew members of the first manned Skylab mission (Skylab 2) are photographed at Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Cneter, during preflight activity. They are, left to right, Astronaut Paul J. Weitz, pilot, Astronaut Charles Conrad Jr., commander, and Scientist-Astronaut Joseph P. Kerwin, science pilot. In the background is the Skylab 1/Saturn V space vehicle with its Skylab space station payload on Pad A.
Date Taken 1973-05-04
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
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
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
Skylab 3 crewmen during pres …
Title 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
View of Arabella, one of the …
Title View of Arabella, one of the two Skylab 3 spiders used in experiment
Description A close-up view of Arabella, one of the two Skylab 3 common cross spiders "Araneus diadematus," and the web it had spun in the zero gravity of space aboard the Skylab space station cluster in Earth orbit. This is a photographic reproduction made from a color television transmission aboard Skylab. Arabella and Anita, were housed in an enclosure onto which a motion picture camera and a still camera were attached to record the spiders' attempts to build a web in the weightless environment.
Date Taken 1973-08-08
Flight controllers discuss p …
Title Flight controllers discuss procedures for repair of coolant system in Skylab
Description The procedures for repairing the coolant system aboard the Airlock Module of the Skylab space station in Earth orbit are discussed by flight controllers in the Mission Operations Control Room in the Mission Control Center at JSC. Skylab 4 Flight Director Neil Hutchinson is on the right. Astronaut Russell L. Schweickart is wearing the sports shirt. Astronaut Bruce McCandless II, a Skylab 4 CAPCOM, is seated next to Schweickart. Items of equipment in the foreground are similar to components of a special coolant re-servicing kit which was taken to Earth orbit by the Skylab 4 crewmen. The kit consists of a tank containing 42 pounds of COOLANOL, a series of saddle valves, bolts and spacers, and leak-check hoses. The re-supply tank is a modified command module reaction control subsystem (RCS) fuel tank.
Date Taken 1973-11-19
Launch of the Skylab 4/Satur …
Title Launch of the Skylab 4/Saturn 1B space vehicle
Description The Skylab 4/Saturn 1B space vehicle is launched from Pad B, Launch Complex 39, Kennedy Space Center, Florida, at 9:01;23 a.m., Friday, November 16, 1973. Skylab 4 is the third and last of three scheduled manned Skylab missions. In addition to the Command/Service module and its launch escape system, the Skylab 4 space vehicle consisted of the Saturn 1B first (S-1B) stage and the Saturn 1B second (S-IVB) stage.
Date Taken 1973-11-16
Skylab 4 crewmen passing tra …
Title Skylab 4 crewmen passing trash bags in to the OWS waste disposal tank
Description Two Skylab 4 crewmen are seen passing trash bags through the trash airlock of the Orbital Workshop (OWS) of the Skylab space station in Earth orbit. The trash airlock leads to the OWS waste disposal tank. Astronaut William R. Pogue, Skylab 4 pilot, holds onto the OWS crew quarters ceiling as he prepares to jump onto the OWS airlock hatch cover to force another trash bag further down into the airlock. Astronaut Gerald P. Carr, Skylab 4 commander, is assisting. Carr is holding onto the trash bags. A third trash bag is floating in the zero-gravity environment near Pogue's right leg. The wardroom can be seen behind Pogue.
Date Taken 1974-02-11
General Description S73-16765 (02/01/73) - 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.
Internal Arrangement of Skyl …
Name of Image Internal Arrangement of Skylab Workshop Crew Quarters
Date of Image 1972-01-01
Full Description This image depicts a layout of the Skylab workshop 1-G trainer crew quarters. At left, in the sleep compartment, astronauts slept strapped to the walls of cubicles and showered at the center. Next right was the waste management area where wastes were processed and disposed. Upper right was the wardroom where astronauts prepared their meals and foods were stored. In the experiment operation area, upper left, against the far wall, was the lower-body negative-pressure device (Skylab Experiment M092) and the Ergometer for the vectorcardiogram experiment (Skylab Experiment M063). The trainers and mockups were useful in the developmental phase, while engineers and astronauts were still working out optimum designs. They provided much data applicable to the manufacture of the flight articles.
Skylab Earth Resource Experi …
Name of Image Skylab Earth Resource Experiment Package (EREP) Photograph
Date of Image 1973-06-01
Full Description This EREP high-definition color photograph of the Uncompahgre Plateau area of Colorado was taken in June of 1973 by the Earth Terrain Camera (Skylab Experiment S190B) of the Skylab's Multi-spectral Photographic Facility during the Skylab-2 mission. High-definition color film was considered best for delineation of vegetation boundaries. In most cases, Skylab stereoscopic data provided the best identification of vegetation complexes and delineation of vegetation boundaries, particularly in areas where changes in release were related to changes in vegetation type (a common occurrence in wild-land vegetation communities).
Cheryl A. Peltz Greeted By A …
Name of Image Cheryl A. Peltz Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel
Date of Image 1972-06-02
Full Description Littleton, Colorado high school student, Cheryl A. Peltz, 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. Peltz 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.
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.
Roger Johnston Greeted By As …
Name of Image Roger Johnston Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel
Date of Image 1962-06-02
Full Description St. Paul, Minnesota high school student, Roger Johnston, 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. Johnston 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.
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.
Gregory A. Merkel Greeted By …
Name of Image Gregory A. Merkel Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel
Date of Image 1972-06-02
Full Description Springfield, Massachusetts high school student, Gregory A. Merkel, 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. Merkel 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.
Jeanne Leventhal Greeted By …
Name of Image Jeanne Leventhal Greeted By Astronauts and MSFC Personnel
Date of Image 1972-06-02
Full Description Berkley, California high school student, Jeanne L. Leventhal, is greeted by (left to right): Astronauts Russell L. Schweickart, and Owen K. Garriott, and Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) Skylab Program Manager, Leland Belew during a tour of MSFC. Leventhal 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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