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A Very Merry Christmas! |
This is the info page for Flash #71470 |
THE SPACE AGE |
APOLLO |
GEMINI |
MERCURY |
Size and STATs |
CREDITS |
S T A T E S |
U N I T E D |
REDSTONE |
REDSTONE |
REDSTONE |
ATLAS |
ATLAS |
ATLAS |
BACK |
BACK |
BACK |
The MR system is one of the prettiest systems ever put on a launchpad. Its beautifully contrasting black and white markings made tracking it easier. The red escape tower adds a bright dash of color to its overall symmetrical lines. The black and white scheme dates back to Fritz Lang's 1929 silent movie "Frau Im Mond" (Lady in the Moon). A German science fiction movie which influenced many of the Geman rocket scientists who designed the Redstone booster. The markings on the fictional rocket resemble those of the V-2 and Mercury Redstones. There were to be two unmanned MR flights followed by a chimpanzee flight. Then there were to be three manned MR flights. Mercury-Redstone flights MR-3, [8]whose capsule was named "Freedom 7", and MR-4 [9], whose capsule was named "Liberty Bell 7". The third manned mission was cancelled after the first two were deemed successful to the point that a third flight was unnecessary. The program then proceeded to Mercury-Atlas or "MA". Although designed as an orbital vehicle, the Mercurys used in Redstone flights were all suborbital test missions. The Redstone booster simply did not have the power to get a manned platform into orbit. Though a successful system overall, the Mercury-Redstone system was not trouble free. In one of the greatest ironies of manned spaceflight, the MR system was up and running ahead of Russia's Vostock. The American system had only been held back by bureaucratic conservatism, inter-service rivalry, a lack of push by some in the government and the fact that the USA did not realize how advanced the Russian manned program was. |
START LAUNCH |
AGAIN? |
START LAUNCH |
START LAUNCH |
START LAUNCH |
START LAUNCH |
It's first successful flight was in December of 1957. By 1965, over 1,000 Atlas missiles were deployed in underground silos throughout the northern part of the United States. Each carried a nuclear warhead aimed at a military target in the Soviet Union. The original Atlas was 90 feet long and 12 feet in diameter. It used liquid-propellant. Its first design was called a "stage and a half" because it had a single main engine with side by side booster engines, all powered by liquid oxygen and kerosene. All three engines fired at launch, but the two boosters dropped away during the first stage burn. This Atlas had a takeoff thrust of 350,000 pounds. Not long after it became operational, the well-proven design was brought into NASA service. It's most significant mission was part of Project Mercury. The mission goal was to put a human into orbit, study his or her physical and mental reaction to the environment, and return them safely. This was accomplished on Feb. 20, 1962, when the Atlas-launched Friendship 7 carried John Glenn into space, making him the first American astronaut to orbit the Earth. The Atlas Mercury was unique in that a special safety tower and rocket was mounted on top of the capsule to permit it break away from the main missile if a problem developed during launch. Although the Atlas played an important role in the manned-launch program, that role was taken over by the Titan II in 1965. New, more powerful versions of the Atlas were soon developed, including the E and F models. Soon, powerful second stages were added. First the Agena and later the Centaur. All were used to launch satellites. |
U N I T E D S T A T E S |
U S A |
The Saturn V (pronounced 'Saturn Five', popularly known as the Moon Rocket) was a multistage liquid-fuel expendable rocket used by NASA's Apollo and Skylab programs. The largest production model of the Saturn family of rockets, the Saturn V was designed under the direction of Wernher von Braun at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, with Boeing, North American Aviation, Douglas Aircraft Company, and IBM as the lead contractors. It remains the most powerful launch vehicle ever brought to operational status, from a height, weight and payload standpoint, although the Russian Energia, which flew only two test missions, had slightly more takeoff thrust. In all, NASA launched thirteen Saturn V rockets between 1967 and 1973, with no loss of payload. The design payload was the manned Apollo spacecraft used by NASA for moon landings, and the Saturn V went on to launch the Skylab space station. The three stages of the Saturn V were developed by various NASA contractors, but following a sequence of mergers and takeovers all of them are now owned by Boeing. Each first and second stage was test fired at the Stennis Space Center located near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. The facility was later used for the testing and verification of both the Space Shuttle Main Engine and the newer RS-68 rocket engine currently used on the Delta IV EELV rocket and in the future, on the Ares V rocket. |
ABORT |
BACK |
Project Gemini was the second human spaceflight program of the United States of America. It operated between Projects Mercury and Apollo, with 10 manned flights occurring in 1965 and 1966. Its objective was to develop techniques for advanced space travel, notably those necessary for Project Apollo, whose objective was to land men on the Moon. Gemini missions included the first American extravehicular activity, and new orbital maneuvers included rendezvous and docking. Gemini was originally seen as a simple extrapolation of the Mercury program, and thus early on was called Mercury Mark II. The actual program had little in common with Mercury and was in fact superior to even Apollo in some ways. (See Big Gemini.) This was mainly a result of its late start date, which allowed it to benefit from much that had been learned during the early stages of the Apollo project (which, despite its later launch dates, was actually begun before Gemini). Its primary difference from Mercury was that the earlier spacecraft had all systems other than the reentry rockets situated within the capsule, to which access of nearly all was through the astronaut's hatchway, while Gemini had many power, propulsion, and life support systems in a detachable module like a huge bowl; many components in the capsule itself were reachable each through its own small access door. The original intention was for Gemini to land on solid ground instead of at sea, using a paraglider rather than a parachute, and for the crew to be seated upright controlling the forward motion of the craft before its landing. To facilitate this, the parachute cord did not attach just to the nose of the craft; there was an additional attachment point for balance near the heat shield. This cord was covered by a strip of metal between the doors. Early short-duration missions had their electrical power supplied by batteries; later endurance missions had the first fuel cells in manned spacecraft. |
Mercury Atlas |
Mercury Redstone |
Gemini Titan II |
Apollo Saturn V |
Mercury Redstone |
Mercury Atlas |
Gemini Titan II |
Apollo Saturn V |
Stages |
1 |
2 |
3 |
Crew |
Height |
363 ft |
103 ft |
75 ft |
67 ft |
Major Achievement |
First American to go into space |
First American to Orbit the Earth |
First American space walk |
First Human to land on the Moon |
First launch |
1961 |
1962 |
1965 |
1968 |
Animation |
PROP DESIGN |
INFORMATION |
MUSIC |
Rocket DESIGN |
Encratis |
Wikipedia & Einsteins-emporium.com |
James Horner |
NASA |
ActionScript [AS1/AS2]
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Library Items
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Instance Names
"bar" | Symbol 11 MovieClip Frame 1 | Symbol 5 MovieClip |
Special Tags
FileAttributes (69) | Timeline Frame 1 | Access local files only, Metadata not present, AS1/AS2. |
Labels
"loaded" | Symbol 11 MovieClip Frame 5 |
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