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The Apollo Chronicles

Page 37

by Brandon R. Brown


  2Interview with Gerry Griffin, 2016; NASA Oral Histories interviews with Gerry Griffin; understandably, different retellings, even from one person, have the labels varying. (In some cases, Armstrong wrote “peace” and not “talent” on one of the curves, etc.) Armstrong himself, according to Griffin, later told Griffin that he didn’t recall the graphic display.

  3Ward, Dr. Space, p. 128.

  4NASA Oral Histories interview with Joseph “Guy” Thibodaux.

  5Interview with Gerry Griffin, 2016.

  6NASA Oral Histories interview with Peter Armitage.

  7NASA Oral Histories interview with Elmer Barton.

  8NASA Oral Histories interview with Peter Armitage.

  9Bilstein, Stages to Saturn, Chapter 9; Dunar and Waring, Power to Explore, p. 48; NASA Oral Histories interview with Aleck Bond.

  10NASA Oral Histories interview with Henry Pohl.

  11Interview with Marlowe Cassetti, 2017.

  12Interview with Aldo Bordano, 2016.

  13NASA Oral Histories interviews with Marlowe Cassetti and Henry Pohl; interview with Aldo Bordano, 2016; NASA Oral Histories interview with Caldwell Johnson.

  14NASA Oral Histories interviews with John Mayer and Peter Armitage.

  15Murray and Cox, Apollo, pp. 264–265.

  16NASA Oral Histories interview with Hal Beck.

  17Interviews with Henry Pohl, 2017 and 2016.

  18NASA Oral Histories interview with Thomas Moser.

  19Interview with Marlowe Cassetti, 2018; French and Burgess, In the Shadow of the Moon, pp. 50–51; Murray and Cox, Apollo, p. 448.

  20Kraft, Flight, p. 340; interview with Gerry Griffin, 2016.

  21NASA Oral Histories interview with Joseph Allen; meta-analysis piggy-backing on Matthew Tribbe’s No Requiem for the Space Age and Gerard De Groot’s Dark Side of the Moon.

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  Index

  Figures are indicated by an italic f following the page/paragraph number

  Aaron, John, 191–192,199,200

  Abernathy, Ralph, 182

  ablator, 34–35

  accelerometer, 29–30

  Agnew, Spiro, 195

  Aldridge, Arnold, 56–57,199

  Aldrin, Buzz, 188

  Allen, Harvey, 34

  Allen, Joe, 206–207,239

  Altamont Pass, 195

  American astronauts. See also Russian cosmonauts

  Apollo 8 astronauts as Time magazine “man of the year,” 168

  astronaut safety, 91

  celebrity status of, 65–66

  deploying lunar science projects, 206f

  as field geologists, 206–207

  first Earth orbit, 64–66

  frustrated relationship with science, 206

  loss of, 123–124

  navigating home by star reference, 123–124

  parade for, 66

  radiation dosage on, 189

  reaction to Saturn V’s launch, 159

  space simulations for, 121–123

  space walk, 104

  training female, 81–82

  training for lunar landing, 151–152

  training of, 121–123

  in vacuum chamber, 120

  amp trap, 192

  Anders, William, 166,168

  Apollo 8

  astronauts jarring takeoff, 159

  barbecue mode, 161–162

  Christmas Eve broadcast, 166

  command mistype, 167

  communication time delays, 163–164

  earthrise photograph, 166

  on far side of the Moon, 164–165

  Gerry Griffin on, 159–160

  launch of, 159–160

  lunar orbit, 164–166

  outbound trip, 159–162

  path of, 161

  radio black-out, 164

  re-entry violence, 167–168

  return to Earth, 166–168

  space sickness during, 160–161

  temperature extremes, 161–162

  Apollo 11

  Armstrong’s famous statement during, 186

  astronaut quarantine, 189–190

  celebrations for, 189

  communication systems, 186–187

  empty fuel tank warning, 184

  lander descent, 182–184

  landing radar, 183

  launch of, 182

  lunar landing module setting down, 185

  Moon liftoff, 188

  protests on, 182

  radiation dosage on astronauts, 189

  return to Earth, 188–189

  splash down, 189

  stepping on the Moon, 186–187

  television audience and, 186

  trip to the Moon, 182

  TV signal, 186–187

  United
States flag and, 181–182,188

  warning alarms during, 183–184

  Apollo 13

  astronauts dehydrating during, 202

  budgeting electricity, 200

  carbon dioxide filters, 201

  Cassetti on near tragedy of, 197

  entering barbecue mode, 202

  inter-center tensions discussing, 203

  liquid oxygen tank malfunction, 197–198

  near tragedy of, 197

  oxygen tank explosion, 198–199

  preparing for, 197

  preparing for re-entry, 202

  stirring oxygen tank, 198–199

  Apollo 13 (film), 203–204

  Apollo applications, 129–130

  Apollo capsule, 35,133,150,213

  Apollo display, 197

  Apollo missions. See also Apollo 11; Apollo 13; Apollo 8; lunar landing module; return-on-investment

  American’s interest in, 211–212

  Apollo 1, 135–136,137–138

  Apollo 7, launching of, 157–158

  Apollo 9, 161,173–174,175–176

  Apollo 10, 176–179

  Apollo 12, 191–195

  Apollo 14, 204–205

  Apollo 15, 142f,207

  Apollo 17, 210

  autopilot for, 116

  canceled, 220–221

  close of, 210

  command module, 133–134,138

  declining television ratings, 211–212

  extra-sensory perception experiments, 205

  first manned, 157–158

  geology field and, 205

  goal of, 47–48,59

  modules, 134f

  negativity facing, 80

  postpartum effects, 211

  science experiments, 205,226–227

  service module, 133–134

  simulated countdown, 135–136

  spacesuit for (see spacesuits)

  step-by-step illustration, 178f

  Apollo Soyuz program, 212–213

  Apple Computer company, 219

  Armitage, Peter, 44–45,232–233,235–236

  Armstrong, Neil, 124,151–152,184–185,186,188,230–231

  Arrow jet fighter, 37

  ascent engine, 89–90

  Astronauts. See American astronauts; Russian cosmonauts

  Atlas missile, 39–40,45,47

  Austin, Bob, 18–19,75,101–102,210

  automated systems, 90–91

  Bales, Steve, 13–14,183–184

  barbecue mode, 161–162,202

  Barton, Elmer, 233

 

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