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From 1893-1895 George Griffith was the most famous science fiction
writer in England. His books entranced the readers of the 19th
century with tales of Martians, submarines, immortality, rogue
comets and even spaceships whizzing around the solar system. He
invented the Countdown in 1897 and his son would become the
co-inventor of the jet engine. Griffith's name became synonymous
with high adventure and so in the Spring of 1894 he was recruited
to follow in the mythical footsteps of Jules Verne's Phileas Fogg.
In just 65 days Griffith travelled through 24 time zones and
established a new world record. Now for the first time in over 100
years his story can be retold along with a lengthy biography of his
many literary achievements by noted Space writer and editor, Robert
Godwin. It includes a special Introduction by John Griffith,
grandson of George Griffith.
This title includes 100+ posters, bonus disc & 2 pre-painted
models. Enclosed in this gift set are 100+ panoramic colour posters
complete with extensive descriptions of each location. See
remarkable new views that provide a depth of field previously
unseen on the moon. Over 2500 video screen captures have been
merged to show the historic exploration of the lunar surface in an
entirely new way. Size of each poster: 500x165mm. Bonus Disc: "New
Horizons: Panoramic Photography on the Moon".
NASA's ambitious but essential Gemini Program was culminated in
November 1966 with the launch of Gemini 12 from Kennedy Space
enter's Launch Complex 19. This tenth manned Gemini mission was the
final opportunity to develop and practice many new techniques that
were integral to the upcoming Apollo program. With the successful
conclusion of the Gemini 12 mission, veteran astronaut Command
Pilot James Lovell had set another new record with a total of 18
days in space, and Pilot Edwin (Buzz) Aldrin held the EVA duration
record with an umbilical EVA at the Agena work station of 2 hours
and 9 minutes. In all, three EVA (extra-vehicular activity)
sessions were performed during the mission. Going into the Gemini
12 mission, many questions of EVA procedure were still unresolved.
In the past, astronauts had expended too much energy simply staying
in position. In an effort to better develop techniques and train
astronauts, for the first time, underwater simulation was
incorporated into EVA training. Using a submerged mock-up of the
Gemini-Agena spacecraft, EVA training proceeded almost to the eve
of launch.;Training in the neutral-buoyancy underwater simulation
allowed the astronauts to practice the entire EVA procedure in a
single session - just as they would be required to do in space.
This was a major advance over simulated weightlessness in aircraft
parabolic flights, which provided only 30 seconds of weightlessness
at a stretch. Gemini 12 successfully executed a fuelless
station-keeping exercise for 4 hours and 20 minutes with the use of
a dacron tether between the Gemini and Agena vehicles. Once the
tether had been pulled taut, the reaction control systems for both
vehicles were turned off, and the slight difference in the Earth's
gravitational effect on the two space vehicles was sufficient to
keep the tether taut, so the two spacecraft remained at a constant
separation, without the use of any reaction control fuel. Despite
mission changes brought on by a radar lock-on failure and by a
malfunction of the Agena Primary Propulsion System (PPS), the
Gemini 12 mission was considered to be a major success, continuing
the success story of the entire Gemini program.;Apollo could take
man to the Moon only after Gemini had introduced him to the space
environment and taught him how to perform there. CD included.
In the 25 years that America has been flying Space Shuttles, they
have done more to further mankind's space effort than anyone could
have predicted. The accomplishments and discoveries of the Space
Shuttles are colorfully presented in this Pocket Space Guide, #10
in the series, which chronicles the events and machines that have
made humans at home in the Earth's orbit.
At 7:15 a.m. on October 3, 1962, Project Mercury Astronaut Walter
M. Schirra, Jr., in his Sigma 7 spacecraft, was launched into space
and orbited the Earth six times, completing another step in the
grand U.S. program to send a man to the Moon and then return him
safely to Earth. Because of the brief durations of the previous
Mercury flights, the astronauts spent the majority of their flight
time in getting to orbit and preparing to leave orbit. Schirra's
six-orbit mission lasted more than nine hours, which for the first
time allowed an astronaut to experience an extended period of
weightlessness. In addition, the time available allowed Schirra to
engage in orbital manoeuvring, exercising the various manual and
automatic control modes, and to spend time on photography and
scientific experiments. After his return to the United States,
Schirra described his Sigma 7 mission as "a text book flight." A
compilation of inputs from engineering, operations and medical
personnel had been integrated into a single flight plan, which
Schirra then carried out exactly as he had trained.;The unqualified
success of this flight paved the way for the planned upcoming
one-day mission, an important milestone on the journey to the Moon.
In this book the Mission Press Kit and press releases are combined
with the major post-mission reports to provide a comprehensive
picture of the flight from the planning stages through to its
successful completion. Sigma 7 - The NASA Mission Reports is taken
directly from the NASA archives. It presents the details of the
Mercury-Atlas 8 mission, the overall Project Mercury game plan,
astronaut Walter M. Schirra, Jr., and all of the many professional
support people and facilities that went into making the mission a
complete success. Includes a CD-ROM featuring: An exclusive
interview with Mercury Astronaut Walter M. Schirra, Jr; The NASA
movie - Flight of Sigma 7; NASA movie - Unmanned Mercury Missions;
NASA Document (pdf) - Space Medicine in Project Mercury.
The dazzling vistas that the Hubble Space Telescope has recorded
since its launch in 1990 are presented in this book, along with
explanations of what exactly Hubble has seen during it's years in
orbit. This Pocket Space Guide, #7 in the series, tells the
complete Hubble story--from the program's shaky start to the
extraordinary success that followed, inspiring bigger and better
successors in the years to follow. Line drawings of its hardware
offer a supplementary understanding of Hubble's technological
development.
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Mars (Paperback)
Robert Godwin
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R234
R208
Discovery Miles 2 080
Save R26 (11%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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If you always thought that it was Giovanni Schiaparelli who first
coined the phrase 'Canali' pertaining to the straight lines he
appeared to observe on Mars you'd be wrong. In 1858, an astronomer
working at the Vatican observatory named father Pietro Angelo
Secchi took it upon himself to create his own drawings of Mars. The
red planet was now nearing a close approach to earth and the
powerful Vatican telescope was capable of resolving detail
previously invisible to most astronomers. Secchi thought he saw a
series of straight lines on the Martian surface so he made an
innocuous notation in his notes. His sketches and articles were
published in 1859 in which he referred several times to 'Canale
Atlantico' or 'Canale Ceruleo'. His regrettable choice of words
would not have an impact for another eight years. This volume tells
not only of people and places that have influenced mankind's
relationship with the enigmatic red planet, but it also shows you
the colour drawings that Secchi made, which were provided to us
directly by the Vatican itself. Along with many other interesting
stories, drawings and photographs this book will be a prize for
both the novice or ardent student of Mars.
CD-ROM and Book. Lost in the glare of Apollo's success, the Gemini
program is often forgotten. Without the ten successful manned
Gemini missions NASA could not have accomplished Kennedy's
seemingly impossible goal of landing a man on the moon in the
1960s. Gemini 6 the fifth manned flight of America's two-man
spacecraft. Aboard were Commander Wally Schirra and rookie pilot
Tom Stafford. Their original mission flight plan was to attempt the
first ever docking and rendezvous in space, an essential step if
the pilots flying Apollo would ever be able to meet up in orbit
around the moon. The Soviet Union had claimed the first space
rendezvous but many felt that unless the pilot was in control and
able to manoeuvre around the accompanying vehicle it could not
truly be called a rendezvous. On October 25th 1965 the target
vehicle, known as Atlas/Agenda failed to make orbit and so the crew
of Gemini 6 were suddenly presented with a totally revised and
audacious flight plan. The long duration Gemini 7 mission was
already scheduled for launch and so the crew of Gemini 6 were told
that NASA would attempt a double manned mission and
rendezvous.;This was undoubtedly a risky proposition which would
stretch the NASA infra-structure to its limits. On December 15th
1965 ace pilot Schirra and rendezvous maestro Stafford closed to
within a meter of Gemini 7 and America was one step closer to the
moon. Includes: Windows CD-ROM featuring: an exclusive recent
interview with Commander Wally Schirra; all of the still photo
images taken during the mission; two 28 minutes - 'Gemini Science'
and 'Gemini 7 and 6' plus the complete 16 mm film from the mission.
By July of 1968, the British blues band The Yardbirds had played
their last concert, leaving newcomer guitarist, Jimmy Page, with a
manager, some contracts and a name. Page and manager Peter Grant
determined to create a new band -- a phoenix of gargantuan
proportions -- Led Zeppelin. From their first concerts in
Scandinavia to their final sad separation, Jimmy Page, Robert
Plant, John Paul Jones, John Bonham and manager Peter Grant proved
themselves to be consummate professionals, especially in the way
they presented themselves to the media. For twelve years the music
tabloids and mainstream press followed the bands every move,
extracting interviews at any opportunity. Thousands of fans around
the world kept abreast of their movements through the press,
especially in the United Kingdom where radio was still a government
monopoly. Noted Led Zeppelin expert Robert Godwin has collected and
reviewed over a thousand articles from around the globe. Reports of
the bands activities from Tokyo to New York and from Sydney to
London are compiled and collated in chronological order.
The compact and concise design of this guide to the Apollo missions
belies its enormous content, with pertinent facts and color images
for each mission--from Apollo 1 to Apollo 10. Providing an overall
picture of the Apollo program, this guide includes sections on
astronauts, mission patches, launch vehicles, command vehicles,
landing vehicles, launch dates, mission objectives, flight plans,
space suits, life support systems, and triumphs and failures. Both
seasoned space buffs and young adults nurturing their interest in
the space program will find this a perfect resource for the first
10 Apollo missions.
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Deep Space (Paperback)
Robert Godwin
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R234
R208
Discovery Miles 2 080
Save R26 (11%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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For as long as mankind has possessed a sense of wonder, astronomy
has been practised in one form or another. It can be thought of as
having graduated to the status of a true science at the point in
history when it became forever separated from astrology. Clearly
they were not of the same mould; astronomy was hard to do;
astrology was merely hard to swallow. The next significant change
came in the early 20th century. Men and women of science felt it
was no longer sufficient to simply catalogue the visual
characteristics of the stars and other heavenly bodies; the desire
to understand their physical makeup, behaviour and creation gave us
the study of astrophysics. As the name suggests, this is the
physics of astronomical bodies and the space they inhabit. During
the second half of the 20th century interest turned also to the
other eight planets of our solar system, spawning several new
disciplines relating to Planetology, the formation of the solar
system, and the possibility of past or present extraterrestrial
life. Every decade of the last century brought ever more numerous
and fascinating discoveries. It was not until 1930 that Pluto, the
ninth planet, was discovered.;Only as late as 1978 was it
discovered that Pluto possessed a moon. And now, in late 2005,
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has given astronomers evidence that
Pluto may have not one, but three moons. In recent decades much
interest has also been given to the far reaches of the universe --
far stars; other galaxies, some old, some still forming; and even
the earliest detectable galaxies of the universe, at the very
limits of our ability to probe. Each field of space study requires
its own special tools and its own expertise. The many programs that
come loosely under the headings of astronomy and space exploration
are as varied and rewarding as the fascinating discoveries that
they have made. To the uninformed, the exploration of deep space
may seem esoteric and unexciting, but in truth the wonder and the
beauty of deep space outshine almost anything that Earth and man
can offer. The time when people can go and explore deep space in
person is still well into the future. Until then, we shall continue
to do as we have done for the past 40 years, sending unmanned
spacecraft and satellites as our proxies and ambassadors to the
universe.;This book examines deep space exploration missions, past,
present and future, and their results.
CD-ROM and Book. The Red Planet has been a beacon to every race of
mankind since the dawn of history. Today Mars stands as a symbol of
the high frontier the next logical step in our exploration of the
universe around us. In 1964 the United States of America launched
Mariner 4 towards Mars in the hope that a handful of pictures
returned by the spacecraft might answer some age-old questions. Was
there an ancient Martian civilisation? Would there be any signs of
life? So began the first step in a close examination of our
neighbouring planet. Between Mariner 4 and Mars Global Surveyor in
1988 the United States has sent a fleet of robots to Mars with
wildly varying degrees of success. Thanks to these versatile probes
we now know almost as much about Mars on a global scale as we do
about our own Earth. In this book the triumphs and tribulations of
the American Mars programme is gathered together in one place.
Press Kits and Mission Reports from every Mars mission are
collected together for the first time. Reading these documents
presented here in chronological order gives a fascinating insight
into how our understanding of the Red Planet has grown over the
past four decades.;These robot voyages are the advance guard,
scouting out the path for the day when men will launch a manned
mission to Mars.
CD-ROM and Book. When the crew of Apollo 11 returned to earth in
July 1969 they brought with them a wealth of new information about
the moon. Now astronauts Charles (Pete) Conrad, Alan Bean and
Richard Gordon would return to the moon and build on that
knowledge. The real test for the crew of Apollo 12 was not to see
if they could get to the moon, but to see if they could get to an
exact place on the moon. Their target was in an area known as the
Ocean of Storms. On 14 November 1969 the crew of Apollo 12 blasted
off to their place in history. Not only would Conrad and Bean
become the third and fourth men to walk on the moon but they would
land the lunar module Intrepid within 600 feet of their designated
target. Waiting for them was the unmanned space probe Surveyor 3
which had soft-landed in April 1967. The flight of Apollo 12, which
began almost catastrophically when the huge Saturn V was struck by
lightning just moments after lift off, went on to yield an enormous
amount of valuable data collected during over seven and a half
hours on the lunar surface. On their return home the crew of Apollo
12 became the first humans to witness an eclipse of the Sun by the
Earth.
Book & DVD. This next volume in the acclaimed NASA Mission
Reports Series is packed full of never before seen materials. This
book include the NASA Mission Reports for Apollo 17 as well as the
NASA press releases from 1972 relating to the flight. The DVD in
the back contains an exclusive video interview with Apollo 17
astronaut Gene Cernan, the last man to set foot on the moon. Apollo
17 was the first time that a scientist was a member of the crew.
Geologist/Lunar Module Pilot Harrison Schmitt stepped onto the
Lunar surface along with Commander Eugene Cernan on the edge of the
Sea of Serenity. Apollo 17 was the longest of the Apollo missions,
it was also the heaviest payload and the longest Lunar stay. The
lunar rover carried to the moon allowed the astronauts to travel
further from their landing point than they ever had before. Also as
part of this mission the moon was photographed from orbit in
unprecedented detail. All of these amazing accomplishments are
covered in this book. The DVD Bonus DVD features an exclusive
interview with Apollo 17 Commander Eugene Cernan.
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