| Ultimi arrivi - Original Nasa Apollo Frames: from Apollo 4 to Apollo 17 |

as12-47-6913.JPGAS 12-47-6913 - "Give me the ALSEP!"57 visiteCaption NASA originale:"116:33:36 MT - Pete Conrad is using a lanyard to pull the ALSEP packages out of the SEQ Bay on a rail. Note his chest-mounted camera, the OPS antenna behind his head, his cuff checklist and the pocket mounted on his left thigh to hold the contingency sample".Apr 29, 2006
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as12-47-6897.JPGAS 12-47-6897 - Deploying the Flag57 visiteCaption NASA originale:"116:20:22 MT - Alan Bean took this picture of Pete Conrad early in the first EVA, shortly after they deployed the U.S. Flag. Note the length of Pete's shadow. The shadow of the LM enters the picture from the middle of the left edge.
Pete is grasping the flag because the locking hinge that was supposed to hold the crossbar and flag out from the staff would not latch".Apr 29, 2006
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as12-47-6870.JPGAS 12-47-6870 - Tsiolkovsky Crater57 visiteApr 29, 2006
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as17-149-22857.JPGAS 17-149-22857 - The "Challenger", in Space (1)58 visiteCaption NASA originale:"Ron Evans took this stunning picture of Challenger during a post-rendezvous mutual inspection. Harald Kucharek raised the possibility that the bright arc visible in the LM window might be Gene Cernan's bubble helmet. Subsequent discussion between Kucharek, Markus Mehring, Brian McInall, Mick Hyde, Marv Hein, Ron Wells and Eric Jones in late 2000 established the following: (1) the orientation of the LM at this time is such that reflections of the CSM off the flat surface of Gene's window would not be visible to Evans; (2) the orientation of the shadows on the front surface of the LM clearly indicate that, from our perspective, the Sun is overhead and that the bright, rectangular light-source above the arc is the rendezvous window with sunlight shining through it; (3) Cernan and Schmitt wore their bubble helmets - but not their LEVAs - for liftoff and rendezvous. Therefore, the bright arc is likely to be either a sunlit portion of the top of Gene's bubble helmet or, as Hein suggests with reference to AS17-149-22859 (see below), Gene's hair. Mick Hyde has produced a labeled detail. The rendezvous window can also be seen at top center in Jack Schmitt's post-EVA-3 portrait of Gene, AS17-145-22225. Finally, as indicated in the labeled detail and in second detail, there seemed to be a possibility that we were seeing a reflection from the front of Gene's helmet of the lunar horizon partially blocked by the CSM. A view of the CSM during the final phases of rendezvous can be seen in AS17-145-22257 which was taken out Gene's window. However, a higher-resolution detail from 22857 by Kipp Teague makes that interpretation less likely. Journal Contributor Markus Mehring notes that, in this detail, Gene's handcontroller can be seen at the bottom corner of the window".Apr 23, 2006
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as17-146-22294.JPGAS 17-146-22294 - "Fragments"...of the Moon60 visiteCaption NASA originale:"165:49:31 MT - Station 6 "locator" to the LRV, with Jack in the background taking photos AS17-139-21206 to 21211 and using Fragment 2 to give him some stability. Fragment 3 is the smaller piece of rock that is next to Fragment 2 and to the right of Jack".Apr 23, 2006
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as17-140-21496.JPGAS 17-140-21496 - Little Big Man...57 visiteCaption NASA originale:"Jack has just retrieved the gnomon and is headed around the south side of Tracy's Rock for the Rover. The East Massif dominates the horizon on the left side of the picture".Apr 23, 2006
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as17-140-21409.JPGAS 17-140-21409 - A VERY Hazardous Parking Place!57 visiteCaption NASA originale:"165:08:18 MT - "Locator" to the Rover, probably from the Station 6 overhang sample. Note the excellent definition on the sunlit face of the scarp".Apr 23, 2006
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APOLLO 17 AS 17-140-21391.jpgAS 17-140-21391 - The Man on the Moon (detail mgnf)55 visiteApr 23, 2006
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as17-140-21391.JPGAS 17-140-21391 - The Man on the Moon56 visiteCaption NASA originale:"164:11:18 MT - This is the best of the portraits that Jack took of Gene at the start of EVA-3. Jack, with the South Massif behind him, is clearly visible in Gene's face plate. A detail shows the RCU and the OPS activator on the left side (from our perspective), the label at the lower right for the push-to-talk switch, and the camera-mount attachment hardware at left center". Apr 23, 2006
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as17-140-21371.JPGAS 17-140-21371 - The Lunar Module56 visiteCaption NASA originale:"Frame from Jack's EVA-3 pan. Up-Sun photo of the LM ladder, the hatch, the MESA to the left of the ladder, the LRV deployment hardware to the right, and the SEP pallet against the leftmost (north) strut. Note the jettison bags under the LM at the right edge of the frame". Apr 23, 2006
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as17-140-21359.JPGAS 17-140-21359 - Jack Schmitt's Shadow56 visiteCaption NASA originale:"EVA-3 images. Jack Schmitt uses the magazine to take a pan at the LM. 163:56:50 MT - EVA-3 pan at the LM. Jack's shadow".
Apr 23, 2006
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as15-94-12850.JPGAS 15-94-12850 - Lunar Maria on the Near-Side57 visitenessun commentoApr 23, 2006
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