Login:   Password:
Not Register?    Sign Up NOW!
Date: 05 December 2008
Google
 
Gemini 12  
Search Country   Reset filter

Gemini 12

Product Name: Gemini 12

Product Description

Gemini 12 was the tenth and final flight of the Gemini series, which bridged the Mercury and Apollo programs. This mission, carrying astronauts Jim Lovell and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin, was scheduled to perform rendezvous and docking with the Agena target vehicle, to conduct three ExtraVehicular Activity (EVA) operations, to conduct a tethered stationkeeping exercise, to perform docked maneuvers using the Agena propulsion system to change orbit, and demonstrate an automatic reentry. There were also 14 scientific, medical, and technological experiments on board. Mission Profile Gemini 12 was launched from Complex 19 on 11 November 1966 at 3:46:33 p.m. EST (20:46:33.419 UT) and inserted into a 160.8 x 270.6 km Earth orbit at 3:52:40. At 7:32 p.m. rendezvous was achieved with the Gemini Agena Target Vehicle (GATV), which had been launched an hour and a half before Gemini 12. Docking with the GATV was accomplished 28 minutes later, at 4:14 ground elapsed time (GET) on the third orbit, relying heavily on visual sightings due to problems with the onboard radar. During insertion of the GATV into orbit an anomaly was noted in the primary propulsion system, so the plan to use the GATV to lift the docked spacecraft into a higher orbit was abandoned. Instead, two phasing maneuvers using the GATV secondary propulsion system were accomplished to allow the spacecraft to rendezvous with the November 12 total eclipse over South America at about 9:20 a.m. EST with the crew taking pictures through the spacecraft windows. The first standup EVA took place with the hatch opening at 11:15 a.m. EST (19:29 GET) on 12 November and Aldrin standing on his seat with his upper body out of the hatch. The EVA lasted 2 hours 29 minutes during which Aldrin mounted a camera to the side of the spacecraft and collected a micrometeorite experiment, with the hatch closing at 1:44 p.m. On 13 November at 7:16 a.m. the crew reported little or no thrust was available from two of the maneuvering thrusters. At 10:34 a.m. (42:48 GET) the hatch was opened for the second EVA. Aldrin was outside the spacecraft at 10:38, attached to a 9 meter umbilical cord. He first worked in the hatch and nose area, and then moved along a handrail he had installed to the adapter section where he used foot restraints and tethers to position himself in front of a work panel mounted on the rear of the adaptor where he performed 17 relatively simple manual tasks. He then moved to the target vehicle adapter area and carried out another series of tasks, including use of a torque wrench while tethered. He attached a 30 meter long tether stowed in the GATV adapter to the Gemini adapter bar. About a dozen two-minute rest periods were scheduled during the EVA to prevent Aldrin from becoming overtaxed as happened to previous spacewalkers. Aldrin reentered the capsule at 12:33 p.m. and closed the hatch at 12:40 p.m. All tasks were accomplished and total EVA time was 2 hours 6 minutes. At 3:09 p.m. Gemini 12 undocked from the GATV, moved to the end of the tether connecting the two vehicles, and began the tether experiment by moving in a cicular orbit about the GATV. The tether tended to remain slack, but the crew believed the two craft slowly attained gravity-gradient stabilization. The tether was released at 7:37 p.m. On 14 November the hatch was opened at 9:52 a.m. (66:06 GET) and Aldrin began the second standup EVA which included photography, additional experiments and the jettison of unused equipment. The EVA ended after 55 minutes when the hatch was closed at 10:47 a.m. Minor fuel cell and thruster problems were reported, but did not affect the remainder of the mission. The automatically controlled reentry sequence began with retrofire at the end of revolution 59 on 15 November at 1:46:31 p.m. EST. Splashdown occurred at 2:21:04 p.m. in the western Atlantic at 24.58 N, 69.95 W, 4.8 km from target point. The crew was picked up by helicopter and brought aboard the U.S.S. Wasp at 2:49 p.m., the spacecraft was picked up at 3:28 p.m. Total mission elapsed time was 94:34:31. All primary mission goals were successfully accomplished except performance of maneuvers using the Agena propulsion system due to fluctuations in the system noticed by ground controllers. There were minor fuel cell and attitude control thruster problems during the mission. The successfully performed scientific experiments were (1) frog egg growth under zero-g, (2) synoptic terrain photography, (3) synoptic weather photography, (4) nuclear emulsions, (5) airglow horizon photography, (6) UV astronomical photography, and (7) dim sky photography. Two micrometeorite collection experiments, as well as three space phenomena photography experiments, were not fully completed.

Related Products: 4 Point Probe in UHV UHV NANOPROBE System, Alcatel-Lucent 1354 SN Submarine Management System (SMS), Alcatel-Lucent OAL Repeaters for Submarine Systems, Alcatel-Lucent Optical Management Solutions, Arabia, Somalia, the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden on Earth, Astronaut Information on the NASA World Wide Web, Bridging the Technological Gap: From Gemini to Apollo, Clouds over the Western Pacific and the full Moon seen from Earth, Combined SPM/SEM/SAM MULTISCAN LAB, Earth - Gemini 7, Earth - Gemini 9, Eastern Algeria and Libya, Africa, on the Earth, Economic Pump Laser MonoDisk-515, Gemini, Gemini, Gemini 1, Gemini 10, Gemini 11, Gemini 11 Target, Gemini 2, Gemini 3, Gemini 4, Gemini 5, Gemini 6, Gemini 6 Target
Home | Members.Benefit | Privacy.Policy | Bookmark.This.Page | Contact.Us
© 2006 - 2007 4engr. All Rights reserved |Recommended Engineering Sites:| Center for Respect of Life and Environment | Internet Dictionary|Enginering intent(Engineering Events) | Map Archive