" MANNED SPACE FLIGHT FILM REPORT " 1968 NASA APOLLO 7 MISSION 71452

Описание к видео " MANNED SPACE FLIGHT FILM REPORT " 1968 NASA APOLLO 7 MISSION 71452

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"Manned Space Flight Film Report’ is an educational film made and produced by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) which documents the 1968 manned space flight into space on the Apollo 7 (October 11–22). This mission was a part of the Apollo program, also known as Project Apollo, which was the United States human spaceflight program carried out by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, which succeeded in preparing and landing the first men on the Moon from 1968-1972. There were three astronauts on Apollo 7: Walter Marty Schirra, Donn F. Eisele, and Walter Cunningham. This mission was also notable because it was the first time that live footage of the Astronauts in Apollo 7 was captured and streamed to televisions across America. The other objectives of the mission were to demonstrate command and service module (CSM) and crew performance, CSM rendezvous capability, demonstrate the performance of the crew, space vehicles, and mission support facilities performance.

00:08 NASA Logo 00:12 Movie Title: ‘Manned Space Flight Film Report’ 00:17 00:24 View of Apollo 7 at Complex 34 launching station at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida 00:37 View of the tip of Apollo 7 with the moon positioned behind it 00:45 Picture of Apollo 7 to one side with the Apollo 7’s primary objectives listed 1:28 Astronauts being fitted for new space suits in a laboratory 1:32 Close up of astronaut Walter Marty Schirra  1:39 Donn F. Eisele being fitted 1:42 Walter Cunningham speaking to technician 2:00 View of the launchpad for the Apollo 7 spacecraft 2:08 Manned launch operations team in the control room at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida 2:14 Aerial view of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama 2:19 View of NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas 2:50 A tracking ship at sea 2:51 Aircraft (possibly a Boeing EC-18B) 3:05 Sign for the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbell, Maryland 3:17 Flight crew arriving at the launchpad for the Apollo 7 4:32 Engines igniting on the Apollo 7 4:48 Slow motion footage of the base of the Apollo 7 lifting off 4:59 Umbilical arms disconnecting from Apollo 7 5:38 View of Apollo 7 in the sky with the outboard engines separating 6:36 illustration of Apollo 7 with text : S-IVB/CSM PASSIVATION: NOMINAL 6:47 Illustration of the second stage disconnecting from Apollo 7 with text: S-IVB/CSM Separation: 0:02:55 G.E.T. 7:01 Illustration showing the command module facing the second stage with text: CSM Transposition: 0:03:03 G.E.T. 7:07 View of the spacecraft lunar module adaptor in space 7:23 Illustration of a phasing maneuver with the service module reaction control system with text: SM-RCS Burn#1 0:03:30 G.E.T. 8:09 Commander Schirra in Apollo 7 and writing on a notepad 8:20 Illustration of the distance between the spacecraft and the second stage, 84 N.M 8:22 Illustration of the spacecraft point down with flame at the base of it and text: SPS Burn#1 1:02:25 G.E.T 8:38 Illustration of the co-elliptical orbit around the second stage and text: SPS Burn #2 1:04:00 G.E.T 8:55 View of the night sky from Apollo 7 9:07 View of the second stage against earth’s atmosphere from Apollo 7 9:54 The second stage rotating against a dark sky 10:22 Illustration of Apollo 7’s ‘10 sec burn’ and it’s calculations 10:50 View of earth from space 10:59 Astronauts moving through the Apollo 7 11:22 Black and white live footage of the astronauts from space inside Apollo 7 12:03 S-band stations in Corpus Christi, Texas and the Kennedy Space Center, Florida 12:14 Lab converting images from space for television 12:32 Illustration of the fourth minimum SPS burn and it’s calculations 12:52 View of Hurricane Gladys in the Gulf of Mexico seen from space 13:03 Illustration of the fifth minimum SPS burn and it’s calculations 13:34 Illustration of the sixth minimum SPS burn and it’s calculations 13:48 Illustration of the seventh minimum SPS burn and it’s calculations 14:29 Illustration of the eighth minimum SPS burn and it’s calculations 14:47 The spacecraft in the ocean after ‘splashdown’ with helicopters hovering above 15:13 Space crew exiting a helicopter onto the USS Essex aircraft carrier onto a red carpet.

Motion picture films don't last forever; many have already been lost or destroyed. For almost two decades, we've worked to collect, scan and preserve the world as it was captured on 35mm, 16mm and 8mm movies -- including home movies, industrial films, and other non-fiction.

This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2K. For more information visit http://www.PeriscopeFilm.com

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