UMSF space history photo of the month |
UMSF space history photo of the month |
Guest_PhilCo126_* |
Jan 3 2008, 06:23 PM
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#1
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Guests |
Maybe we could make this a monthly item, in which we could look back at the history of Unmanned Space missions.
For January 2008 I've chosen an image showing the coverage of the Sun by early Pioneer 5-8 spacecraft. Pioneer 5 to 8, or Pioneer V to VIII using the system of Roman numerals in vogue during the early 1960s for spacecraft designations, were directed towards the Sun along the earth's orbit to monitor solar activity. Pioneer V was launched on 11th March 1960 and provided the very first space weather report 4 to 8 hours before a solar storm hit the Earth. Some of this Pioneer quartet, Pioneer 6-7-8 even provided updates on our Sun's activity during the early Apollo Moon landings in order to check the damaging potential of solar flares to affect the astronauts. |
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Guest_PhilCo126_* |
Feb 1 2008, 06:05 PM
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#2
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Guests |
In late 1959, the 44 kilograms Pioneer 5 is being checked at the launchpad at the then named ETR 17A (Eastern Test Range). Pioneer 5 was intended for Venus flyby but the mission was downgraded to solar orbit in order to demonstrate deep-space probe technology. Launched in March 1960, final telemetry was received in June 1960 from a 36 million km record Earth distance…
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