Neil Armstrong On The Moon (Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 Liftoff (Image Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 Liftoff (Image Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 (Image Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 (Image Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 Liftoff (Image Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 Liftoff (Image Credit: NASA)

Apollo 11 (Image Credit: NASA)

Moonrock - Earthbound (Copyright 2008-2009 by Alan Bean. All rights reserved.)

  • Apollo 11 Moon Missions 40th Anniv.
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40th Anniversary Apollo11 Moon Mission

Updated: Monday, 20 Jul 2009, 11:32 PM EDT
Published : Thursday, 16 Jul 2009, 5:35 AM EDT

WASHINGTON - On July 16, 1969, Apollo 11, carrying astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins, blasted off from Cape Kennedy on the first manned mission to the surface of the moon.

Find stories and links celebrating the 40th anniversary on myfoxdc!

LISTEN to Audio of the Apollo 11 Moon Landing
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/apollo11_landing/


The Apollo Missions | nasa.gov

Forty years ago, men from Earth began for the first time to leave our home planet and journey to the moon.

From 1968 to 1972, NASA's Apollo astronauts tested out new spacecraft and journeyed to uncharted destinations.

It all started on May 25, 1961, when President John F. Kennedy announced the goal of sending astronauts to the moon before the end of the decade. Coming just three weeks after Mercury astronaut Alan Shepard became the first American in space, Kennedy's bold challenge set the nation on a journey unlike any before in human history.

Eight years of hard work by thousands of Americans came to fruition on July 20, 1969, when Apollo 11 commander Neil Armstrong stepped out of the lunar module and took "one small step" in the Sea of Tranquility, calling it "a giant leap for mankind."

Six of the missions -- Apollos 11, 12, 14, 15, 16 and 17 -- went on to land on the moon, studying soil mechanics, meteoroids, seismic, heat flow, lunar ranging, magnetic fields and solar wind. Apollos 7 and 9 tested spacecraft in Earth orbit; Apollo 10 orbited the moon as the dress rehearsal for the first landing. An oxygen tank explosion forced Apollo 13 to scrub its landing, but the "can-do" problem solving of the crew and mission control turned the mission into a "successful failure."


Google Launches Guided Moon Tours

Google Inc. is offering a more wide-ranging view of the Moon, 40 years after humans first landed there. To commemorate Monday's anniversary of the Apollo 11 crew's first steps on the lunar surface, Google Earth is adding a guided moon tour with astronauts Buzz Aldrin and Jack Schmitt, who was a pilot on the later Apollo 17 mission.

CLICK HERE TO SEE THE NEW FEATURES!


Apollo 11 (wikipedia)

The Apollo 11 mission was the first manned mission to land on the Moon. It was the fifth human spaceflight of Project Apollo and the third human voyage to the Moon. Launched on July 16, 1969, it carried Mission Commander Neil Alden Armstrong, Command Module Pilot Michael Collins and Lunar Module Pilot Edwin Eugene 'Buzz' Aldrin, Jr. On July 20, Armstrong and Aldrin became the first humans to walk on the Moon, while Collins orbited above.

The mission fulfilled President John F. Kennedy's goal of reaching the moon by the end of the 1960s, which he expressed during a speech given before a joint session of Congress on May 25, 1961:[2]

"I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the Moon and returning him safely to the Earth."


NASA Links:

NASA High Definition Video: Partially Restored Apollo 11 Video
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/hd/apollo11.html

LRO Sees Apollo Landing Sites
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LRO/multimedia/lroimages/apollosites.html

Explore the Apollo 11 Landing Site
http://www.nasa.gov/externalflash/apollo11_landing/index.html


NASA Refurbishes Video Copies of Moon Landing


(Full-length video from myfoxtampabay.com)

NASA could put a man on the moon but didn't have the sense to keep the original video of the live TV transmission.

In an embarrassing acknowledgment, the space agency said Thursday that it must have erased the Apollo 11 moon footage years ago so that it could reuse the videotape.

But now Hollywood is coming to the rescue.

The studio wizards who restored "Casablanca" are digitally sharpening and cleaning up the ghostly, grainy footage of the moon landing, making it even better than what TV viewers saw on July 20, 1969. They are doing it by working from four copies that NASA scrounged from around the world.

"There's nothing being created; there's nothing being manufactured," said NASA senior engineer Dick Nafzger, who is in charge of the project. "You can now see the detail that's coming out."

The first batch of restored footage was released just in time for the 40th anniversary of the "one giant leap for mankind," and some of the details seem new because of their sharpness. Originally, astronaut Neil Armstrong's face visor was too fuzzy to be seen clearly. The upgraded video of Earth's first moonwalker shows the visor and a reflection in it.

The $230,000 refurbishing effort is only three weeks into a monthslong project, and only 40 percent of the work has been done. But it does show improvements in four snippets: Armstrong walking down the ladder; Buzz Aldrin following him; the two astronauts reading a plaque they left on the moon; and the planting of the flag on the lunar surface.

Nafzger said a huge search that began three years ago for the old moon tapes

led to the "inescapable conclusion" that 45 tapes of Apollo 11 video were erased and reused. His report on that will come out in a few weeks.

The original videos beamed to Earth were stored on giant reels of tape that each contained 15 minutes of video, along with other data from the moon. In the 1970s and '80s, NASA had a shortage of the tapes, so it erased about 200,000 of them and reused them.

How did NASA end up looking like a bumbling husband taping over his wedding video with the Super Bowl?

Nafzger, who was in charge of the live TV recordings back in the Apollo years, said they were mostly thought of as data tapes. It wasn't his job to preserve history, he said, just to make sure the footage worked. In retrospect, he said he wished NASA hadn't reused the tapes.

Outside historians were aghast.

"It's surprising to me that NASA didn't have the common sense to save perhaps the most important historical footage of the 20th century," said Rice University historian and author Douglas Brinkley. He noted that NASA saved all sorts of data and artifacts from Apollo 11, and it is "mind-boggling that the tapes just disappeared."

The remastered copies may look good, but "when dealing with historical film footage, you always want the original to study," Brinkley said.

Smithsonian Institution space curator Roger Launius, a former NASA chief historian, said the loss of the original video "doesn't surprise me that much."

"It was a mistake, no doubt about that," Launius said. "This is a problem inside the entire federal government. ... They don't think that preservation is all that important."

Launius said federal warehouses where historical artifacts are saved are "kind of like the last scene of `Raiders of the Lost Ark.' It just goes away in this place with other big boxes."

The company that restored all the Indiana Jones movies, including "Raiders," is the one bailing out NASA.

Lowry Digital of Burbank, Calif., noted that "Casablanca" had a pixel count 10 times higher than the moon video, meaning the Apollo 11 footage was fuzzier than that vintage movie and more of a challenge in one sense.

Of all the video the company has dealt with, "this is by far and away the lowest quality," said Lowry president Mike Inchalik.

Nafzger praised Lowry for restoring "crispness" to the Apollo video. Historian Launius wasn't as blown away.

"It's certainly a little better than the original," Launius said. "It's not a lot better."

The Apollo 11 video remains in black and white. Inchalik said he would never consider colorizing it, as has been done to black-and-white classic films. And the moon is mostly gray anyway.

The restoration used four video sources: CBS News originals; kinescopes from the National Archives; a video from Australia that received the transmission of the original moon video; and camera shots of a TV monitor.

Both Nafzger and Inchalik acknowledged that digitally remastering the video could further encourage conspiracy theorists who believe NASA faked the entire moon landing on a Hollywood set. But they said they enhanced the video as conservatively as possible.

Besides, Inchalik said that if there had been a conspiracy to fake a moon landing, NASA surely would have created higher-quality film.

Back in 1969, nearly 40 percent of the picture quality was lost converting from one video format used on the moon -- called slow scan -- to something that could be played on TVs on Earth, Nafzger said.

NASA did not lose other Apollo missions' videos because they weren't stored on the type of tape that needed to be reused, Nafzger said.

As part of the moon landing's 40th anniversary, the space agency has been trotting out archival material. NASA has a Web site with audio from private conversations in the lunar module and command capsule. The agency is also webcasting radio from Apollo 11 as if the mission were taking place today.

The video restoration project did not involve improving the sound. Inchalik said he listened to Armstrong's famous first words from the surface of the moon, trying to hear if he said "one small step for man" or "one small step for A man," but couldn't tell.

Through a letter read at a news conference Thursday, Armstrong had the last word about the video from the moon: "I was just amazed that there was any picture at all."


Links:

Apollo 11 40th Anniversary: Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
http://www.nasm.si.edu/

NASA - The Apollo Missions
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/apollo/index.html

NASA - Apollo 40th Anniversary
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/apollo/40th/index.html

We Choose The Moon | Recreation of the Apollo 11 Mission
http://wechoosethemoon.org/

Google Moon
http://www.google.com/moon/

Countdown to the Moon Day!
http://www.nasm.si.edu/events/apollo11/moonday/

#478 - Neil Armstrong Check - RR Auction
http://rrauction.com/bidtracker_detail.cfm?IN=478

AlanBean.com
http://www.alanbean.com/index.cfm

The Alan Bean Gallery
http://www.alanbeangallery.com/

Gallery 1
http://www.alanbean.com/gallery1.cfm?id=2008-Skiing-the-Mountains-of-the-Moon

Gallery 2
http://www.alanbean.com/gallery2.cfm?id=2006-Is-Anyone-Out-There

Gallery 3
http://www.alanbean.com/gallery3.cfm?id=1990-Heavenly-Reflections

Gallery 4
http://www.alanbean.com/gallery4.cfm?id=1985-Helping-Hands

Gallery 5
http://www.alanbean.com/gallery5.cfm?id=1984-Moonrock-Earthbound

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