|
Images
Audio Clips
Video Clips
Movies
Documents
|
 |

LINKING SCIENCE TO MANNED SPACE FLIGHT
Introduction
Scientific exploration of the moon required close cooperation between
two quite different organizations within the space agency. Space science
was an active field of research when NASA was created, with a
well-organized constituency and established procedures for generating
and developing experiments. The Office of Space Sciences, which managed
these projects, relied heavily on scientists outside the agency for
advice on policy and regarded itself as an operational arm of the
nation's scientific community, providing opportunities for that
community to conduct the research it deemed important. The Office of
Manned Space Flight, on the other hand, had no interested constituency
outside of the space agency. Having been handed their primary assignment
by the President in 1961, engineers of the manned space flight
organization reported to the NASA Administrator and to Congress on the
progress of their projects.
To get these two offices working together on exploration of the moon was
not simple. Starting in 1962, Homer Newell, director of the Office of
Space Sciences, began to lay the organizational foundations on which
eventual collaboration would be built. The Office of Manned Space
Flight, feeling the pressure of the Apollo deadline, was at first
reluctant to spend much time preparing for science. By the end of 1963,
however, much of the preliminary work had been done and the broad
outlines of a lunar science program were taking shape.
|