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Apollo 14 Crew Examine Lunar Samples

February 09, 2016

A Most Interesting Man on the Moon: Remembering Edgar D. Mitchell

Story

On Thursday, February 4, the world lost the last of the Apollo 14 astronauts. Edgar Dean Mitchell, U.S. Navy test pilot and the sixth person to walk on the Moon, passed away in his sleep near his Florida home at the age of 85. Though it was his only flight into space, Apollo 14 provided the rather insightful Mitchell with an opportunity to test the bounds of the human mind in ways sometimes only he knew of at the time. Characterized later as the “Overview Effect,” he described the space travel experience as one that shifted his own beliefs about human existence, though having an openness to such a change was always a part of Mitchell’s way of life.

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STS-51L Crew Members

January 28, 2016

Remembering the Challenger Seven

Story

The Challenger explosion is one of the most significant events of the 1980s. The crew members of represented a cross section of the America.

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Alan Eustace’s Right Overglove

January 20, 2016

Discovering Alan Eustace’s Asymmetrical Gloves

Story

Every once in a while a curator will receive a new collection of objects that has in it one very special item that begs to have its story told. This recently happened to me when I unpacked Alan Eustace’s stratospheric spacesuit. The former Google executive and engineer, along with his StratEx team, set several records on October 24, 2014 including the world’s highest altitude parachute jump at 41.425 kilometers (135,899 feet).

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Apollo Inflight Exerciser

January 07, 2016

Apollo Inflight Exerciser

Story

Here on Earth, everyone knows exercise is important, but in the weightless environment of space, it’s really important.

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Gemini VII Photographed by Gemini VI

December 15, 2015

The World’s First Space Rendezvous

Story

On December 15, 1965, Gemini VI and VII met for the first rendezvous in space. This was not NASA’s original plan.

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Alan Eustace Visits the Conservation Labratory

November 27, 2015

Comparing Alan Eustace’s Spacesuit with Neil Armstrong’s

Story | Inside the Conservation Lab

Our conservation team had the pleasure of hosting Alan Eustace, former Google executive, engineer, and stratospheric explorer, this month in the Emil Buehler Conservation Laboratory. Eustace and his StratEx team are well known for their three world records including one for the highest altitude jump at 41,422 meters (135,899 feet) in 2014. The adventurer was in town giving a lecture about his historic jump and to donate to the Museum the suit, life support, and balloon equipment module he used during the jump.

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Diagram from Apollo Handbook

November 12, 2015

Transcribing Apollo Stowage Lists With Help from Volunteers

Story

Apollo artifacts have begun to receive increased scrutiny in light of recent discussions about returning humans to the Moon and the upcoming 50th anniversary of the historic Apollo missions. What did astronauts of the 1960s and 1970s bring back from the Moon? What was left behind? And how can we verify the authenticity of any of those objects if they have been or will be recovered?

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Construction of the ISS

September 11, 2015

Building a Spacesuit out of Spare Parts

Story

I never would have guessed I’d spend the summer building a spacesuit. It isn’t exactly your typical internship. But with a lot of “spare” parts generously donated to the Museum by the manufacturer, ILC Dover, there’s a spacesuit just begging to be assembled. I spent weeks figuring out how to put this suit together, and with more than 400 parts in the collection, it’s not as simple as you might think.

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Apollo 17 LRV

August 31, 2015

Duct Tape Auto Repair on the Moon

Story | At the Museum

When most people think of emergency fixes in space, the first incident that comes to mind is the famous Apollo 13 mission. The astronauts fashioned duct tape and surplus materials into air filtration canisters in the lunar module to keep all three astronauts alive for the entire trip home.

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Gene Kranz

August 27, 2015

Gene Kranz’s Apollo 13 Vest

Story

Gene Kranz is best known for his stellar performance as flight director for the ill-fated Apollo 13 mission. But Kranz is also known for another thing: his white vests. Kranz’s vests had legendary status around mission control, and also in the minds of the public after actor Ed Harris wore an exact replica of Kranz’s most famous vest in the 1995 movie, Apollo 13. Kranz’s vests represented the strong and can-do approach that pervaded his mission control team, especially during the Apollo 13 mission in which the astronauts’ lives were at stake.

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