Transcript Slide 1

By Ian Lambert
Centuries of Exploration
• For hundreds of years, the telescope was
the main way to observe the moon.
• The first advancement past the telescope
was in 1959 when a spacecraft from Earth
flew past the moon and sent data back to
Earth about the moon.
Luna Series
• The Luna series was a series of lunar
probes sent out by the former Soviet
Union.
• Luna 1 had the first successful flyby
before going into orbit around the sun.
• Luna 2 crashed into the moon.
• Luna 3 orbited the moon and sent the
first close up pictures of the moon’s
surface and the first pictures of the far
side of the moon.
Pioneer space probes
•The Pioneer space probes were
launched by the United States the
same time the Luna space probes
were in progress.
•All Pioneers 1,2, and 3 were
successful in their mission.
•Pioneer 4 reached escape velocity
from Earth and sent data back to
Earth as it passed the moon.
Kennedy’s Goal
• In 1961 President John F. Kennedy made
it a national goal to land an astronaut on
the moon and return the astronaut safely
to Earth.
• The lunar probes Ranger and Surveyor
were sent to search for a safe landing site
on the moon. They were designed to send
back pictures of the moon’s surface then
crash into it.
Soviet Union Progress
• The former Soviet Union had orbited a
cosmonaut and also had a cosmonaut,
Gherman Titov, complete a 17 orbit flight
that lasted over 25 hours.
• This all took place while U.S. astronauts
were still preparing for their first orbital
flight.
Mercury and Gemini part I
• The first American spacecraft to carry
astronauts was called Mercury.
• Alan Shepard flew the first flight of nine
flights of Mercury.
• John Glenn, in Mercury 6, became the first
American to orbit Earth. He orbited Earth 3
times in almost 5 hours.
• The final flight of the series, mercury 9,
completed 22 orbits and lasted over 34
hours.
Mercury and Gemini part II
• The Gemini spacecraft was designed for
two astronauts.
• Ten missions were flown in Gemini from
March 1965 to November 1966.
• The two purposes of the missions were to
find if a human could survive and work in
the weightlessness of space for ten days
(which is the amount of time needed to fly
to the moon and back) and to train
astronauts to maneuver the spacecraft.
APOLLO missions (1963-72)
• The purpose of the Apollo missions was
to achieved the goal of landing an
astronaut on the moon and bringing them
back to Earth safely.
• There were 12 Apollo missions. 6 landed
on the moon and returned safely. Others
orbited Earth or the moon. Only one
mission was unsuccessful in
accomplishing either of the two.
APOLLO 1 and 7
• The first Apollo mission (Apollo 1) was a
disastrous mission where 3 astronauts
died in a fire during a flight pretest.
• The next manned mission was Apollo 7.
Apollo 7 carried a lunar module pilot but
no lunar module. Apollo 7 spent more time
in space than all the Soviet space flights
combined up to that time.
APOLLO 8,9, and 10
• Apollo 8 splashed down in the Pacific
Ocean after traveling over 500,000 miles
and orbiting the moon ten times, collecting
data and photographs.
• Apollo 9 was the first manned flight of
Apollo hardware in Earth orbit and the first
manned flight of the lunar module. This
flight paved the way for Apollo 10
• Apollo 10 was the first to travel to the
moon with the entire Apollo configuration.
APOLLO 11
• Apollo 11 was the first manned mission to
land on the moon.
• On January 20th, 1969, Neil Armstrong and
Buzz Aldrin were the first humans to step
foot on the moon. They were also the first
to bring back samples from an other
planetary body. This is the flight that
accomplished the mission of sending an
astronaut to and from the moon safely.
Neil Armstrong video
APOLLO 13
• Apollo 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17 were all
successful in landing astronauts on the
moon and returning them home safely.
• Apollo 13 could not complete its mission
because of an explosion in one of the
oxygen tanks. This forced them to orbit the
moon and return to Earth without landing
on the moon’s surface.
Space Shuttle
• The space shuttle was designed to be
reusable unlike the space crafts before it.
• The space shuttle can make a trip into orbit,
come back to Earth, and in a few months be
ready to make another trip.
• This enables scientists to have the power to
observe important astronomical events,
drastic weather changes, or other
environmental crises.
Skylab, Salyut, and Mir
• In 1971 the Soviets launched the world’s first
space station – Salyut 1.
• In 1973 the US launched Skylab, a larger
space station hosted 3 crews and was
abandoned.
• In 1986 the soviets put the Mir Space Station
in orbit which was the most successful space
station until it was abandoned and burned up
in the atmosphere in 2001. The Mir space
station traveled around Earth more than
85,000 times and was home to astronauts
from Russia and the US
International Space Station
 The International Space Station is a large
human inhabited satellite orbiting more than
250 miles above the Earth
 The first 2 parts of the space station were
launched in 1998. It is still under
construction
 Crews have been living there since 2000
 The first crew consisted of one American
and two Russian astronauts. It is a global
partnership between 16 countries. When it is
finished, up to seven astronauts will live
aboard it for 3 to 6 months
Bibliography

"Apollo Project." Nasa. Nasa. 2 June 2006.

Earth Science. Cincinaty: Spaulding, 2005. 1-682.

"Luna Probes." nasa. 27 May 2006
<http://www.nasaexplores.com/show2_articlea.php?id=04-024>. "Pioneer

Moon Landing, Project Apollo. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1969. 1-107

"Pioneer 1." Nasa.Gov. nasa. 2 June 2006
<http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/database/MasterCatalog?sc=1958-007A>.

Space Station" Nasa.Gov. nasa. 2 June 2006
<http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/database/MasterCatalog?sc=1958-007A>. "Apollo 11."
Nasa.Gov/Images. nasa. 23 May 2006
.