|
Images
Audio Clips
Video Clips
Movies
Documents
|
 |

FINAL PREPARATIONS: 1968
Introduction
Apollo took longer strides in 1968, perhaps, than in any previous year.
In April, fifteen months after the fire, a Saturn V carried an unmanned
command module into earth orbit to test launch vehicle and spacecraft
systems and to simulate reentry from a lunar voyage. Only months before
Apollo 7 tested the redesigned command module with a crew in October,
officials at the Manned Spacecraft Center began to think about a much
more ambitious flight. After selling their proposal to Headquarters,
they began making plans to send a crew to the vicinity of the moon. For
Christmas 1968 NASA gave the world a present to remember: live
television pictures and oral commentary from the crew of the Apollo 8
spacecraft in lunar orbit.
On the science side, progress was less spectacular. Technical problems
with the lunar surface experiments were largely overcome, but doubts
about the astronauts' ability to unload and deploy the instruments in
the time available eventually caused program officials to substitute a
smaller science package on the first lunar mission. Several of the
systems for handling lunar samples in the lunar receiving laboratory
caused major delays, but when the year ended the staff was gearing up
for a full-scale simulation.
|