Information about Gemini Program

McDonnell Gemini spacecraft

Gemini spacecraft in orbit.
Description
Role:Orbital spaceflight
Crew: two; cmd pilot, pilot
Dimensions
Height:18.6 ft5.67 m
Diameter:10 ft3.05 m
Volume:90 ft³2.55 m³
Weights
Reentry module:4,372 lb1 983 kg
Retrograde module:1,303 lb591 kg
Equipment module:2,815 lb1 277 kg
Total:8,490 lb3 851 kg
Rocket engines
Retros (solid fuel) x 4:2,500 lbf ea11.12 kN
Reentry Control System (N2O4/MMHH) x 16:25 lbf ea111 N
OAMS
(N2O4/MMHH) x 2:
85 lbf ea378 N
OAMS
(N2O4/MMHH) x 6:
100 lbf ea445 N
OAMS
(N2O4/MMHH) x 8:
25 lbf ea111 N
Performance
Endurance:14 days206 orbits
Apogee:250 miles402 km
Perigee:100 miles160 km
Spacecraft delta v:728 ft/s222 m/s
Gemini spacecraft diagram

Gemini spacecraft diagram (NASA)
McDonnell Gemini Spacecraft




Project Gemini was the second human spaceflight program of the United States of America. It operated between Projects Mercury and Apollo, with 10 manned flights occurring in 1965 and 1966. Its objective was to develop techniques for advanced space travel, notably those necessary for Project Apollo, whose objective was to land men on the Moon. Gemini missions included the first American extravehicular activity, and new orbital maneuvers included rendezvous and docking.

Gemini was originally seen as a simple extrapolation of the Mercury program, and thus early on was called Mercury Mark II. The actual program had little in common with Mercury and was in fact superior to even Apollo in some ways. (See Big Gemini.) This was mainly a result of its late start date, which allowed it to benefit from much that had been learned during the early stages of the Apollo project (which, despite its later launch dates, was actually begun before Gemini).

Its primary difference from Mercury was that the earlier spacecraft had all systems other than the reentry rockets situated within the capsule, to which access of nearly all was through the astronaut's hatchway, while Gemini had many power, propulsion, and life support systems in a detachable module like a huge bowl; many components in the capsule itself were reachable each through its own small access door. The original intention was for Gemini to land on solid ground instead of at sea, using a paraglider rather than a parachute, and for the crew to be seated upright controlling the forward motion of the craft before its landing. To facilitate this, the parachute cord did not attach just to the nose of the craft; there was an additional attachment point for balance near the heat shield. This cord was covered by a strip of metal between the doors. Early short-duration missions had their electrical power supplied by batteries; later endurance missions had the first fuel cells in manned spacecraft.

The "Gemini" designation comes from the fact that each spacecraft held two men, as "gemini" in Latin means "twins". Gemini is also the name of the third constellation of the Zodiac and its twin stars, Castor and Pollux.

Unlike Mercury, which could only change its orientation in space, the Gemini capsule could alter its orbit. It could also dock with the Agena Target Vehicle, which had its own large rocket engine, was used to perform large orbital changes. Gemini was the first American manned spacecraft to include an onboard computer, the Gemini Guidance Computer, to facilitate management and control of mission maneuvers. It was also unlike other NASA craft in that it used ejection seats, in-flight radar and an artificial horizon - devices borrowed from the aviation industry. Using ejection seats to push astronauts to safety was first employed by the Soviet Union in the Vostok craft manned by cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin.

Gemini was designed by a Canadian, Jim Chamberlin, formerly the chief aerodynamicist on the Avro Arrow fighter interceptor program with Avro Canada. Chamberlin joined NASA along with 25 senior Avro engineers after cancellation of the Arrow program, and became head of the U.S. Space Task Group’s engineering division in charge of Gemini. The main contractor was McDonnell, which had lost out on main contracts for the Apollo Project. McDonnell sought to extend the program by proposing a Gemini craft which could be used to fly a cislunar mission and even achieve a manned lunar landing earlier and at less cost than Apollo, but these proposals were rejected.

The Gemini program cost $5.4 billion dollars. See NASA Budget.

Announcement

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced December 7, 1961, a plan to extend the existing manned space flight program by the development of a two-man spacecraft. The progam was first called Mercury Mark II. The program was officially designated Gemini on January 3, 1962.

Team

The Gemini program was managed by the Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas, under direction of the Office of Manned Space Flight, NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C, Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator of NASA for Manned Space Flight, served as acting director of the Gemini program. William C. Schneider, Deputy Director of Manned Space Flight for Mission Operations, served as Mission Director on all Gemini flights beginning with Gemini V.

Program objectives

The Gemini Program was conceived after it became evident to NASA officials that an intermediate step was required between the projects Mercury and Apollo. The major objectives assigned to Gemini were:
  • To subject two men and supporting equipment to long-duration flights, a requirement for projected later trips to the Moon or deeper space.
  • To effect rendezvous and docking with other orbiting vehicles, and to maneuver the docked vehicles in space, using the propulsion system of the target vehicle for such maneuvers.
  • To perfect methods of reentry and landing the spacecraft at a pre-selected land-landing point.
  • To gain additional information concerning the effects of weightlessness on crew members and to record the physiological reactions of crew members during long-duration flights.
After 10 successful flights, the Gemini program clearly placed the United States in the lead over the Soviet Union in manned spaceflight. The flight of Gemini VIII concluded with the successful emergency recovery of the tumbling orbiting capsule piloted by Neil Armstrong and David Scott.

Gemini applications

Military

Enlarge picture
Replica of a Gemini capsule at the Neil Armstrong Air and Space Museum
Enlarge picture
A cutaway of the Project Gemini spacecraft
The United States Air Force had an interest in the system, and decided to use its own modification of the spacecraft as the crew vehicle for the Manned Orbital Laboratory. To this end, one of the unmanned Gemini spacecraft was refurbished and flown again atop a mockup of the MOL, sent into space by a Titan III-M. This was the first time a spacecraft went into space twice.

The USAF also had the notion of adapting the Gemini spacecraft for military applications, such as crude observation of the ground (no specialized reconnaissance camera could be carried) and practicing making rendezvous with suspicious satellites. This project was called Blue Gemini. The US Air Force did not like the fact that Gemini would have to be recovered by the US Navy, so they intended for Blue Gemini eventually to use the paraglider and land on three skids, something from the original design of Gemini.

At first some within NASA welcomed sharing of the cost with the USAF, but it was later agreed that NASA was better off operating Project Gemini by itself. MOL was cancelled in 1968 and Blue Gemini too was cancelled without any use by military astronauts.

Other proposals

Other Gemini derivatives were proposed, including Gemini LOR, Gemini Lunar Lander, Gemini-Centaur, Gemini Ferry, Gemini Transport, Gemini - Saturn I, Gemini - Saturn IB, Gemini - Saturn V, Gemini Pecan, Extended Mission Gemini, Gemini - Double Transtage, Gemini Satellite Inspector, Gemini Lunar Surface Rescue Spacecraft, Gemini observatory, Gemini Paraglider, Rescue Gemini, Winged Gemini, Gemini LORV and Gemini Lunar Surface Survival Shelter.[1]

Current

In 2005, NASA Administrator Michael Griffin announced that the new Crew Exploration Vehicle, an Apollo-derived spacecraft, would use the Gemini/Agena chasedown and docking technique when NASA starts sending crews back out to the Moon by 2019. The CEV, which will replace the Space Shuttle (which currently lands on a conventional runway similar to the early Gemini and Blue Gemini paraglider/skids technique), will use deployable airbags, eliminating a large naval recovery force.

Enlarge picture
Liftoff of Gemini 6A from Pad 19 with astronauts Walter Schirra and Thomas Stafford aboard

Astronauts

The following astronauts flew on the 10 Gemini missions:

From the Mercury Seven
Astronaut Service Mission
Leroy Gordon Cooper, Jr.USAFGemini V
Virgil Ivan "Gus" GrissomUSAFGemini III
Walter Marty Schirra, Jr.USNGemini VI-A
From Astronaut Group 2
Astronaut Service Mission
Neil Alden Armstrong(ret. USN)Gemini VIII
Frank Frederick Borman IIUSAFGemini VII
Charles "Pete" Conrad, Jr.USNGemini V, Gemini XI
James Arthur Lovell, Jr.USNGemini VII, Gemini XII
James Alton McDivittUSAFGemini IV
Thomas Patten StaffordUSAFGemini VI-A, Gemini IX-A
Edward Higgins White IIUSAFGemini IV
John Watts YoungUSNGemini III, Gemini X
From Astronaut Group 3
Astronaut Service Mission
Edwin Eugene "Buzz" AldrinUSAFGemini XII
Eugene Andrew CernanUSNGemini IX-A
Michael CollinsUSAFGemini X
Richard Francis Gordon, Jr.USNGemini XI
David Randolph ScottUSAFGemini VIII

Crew Selection

Deke Slayton as head of the Astronaut Office had the main role in the choice of crews for the Gemini program. This selection process, with the prospect of more ambitious missions that would follow with Apollo, became even more political than in the Mercury Program. With Gemini it became a procedure that each flight had a primary crew and backup crew and that the backup crew would rotate to primary crew status three flights later. Slayton also intended for first choice of mission commands to be given to the four remaining active astronauts of the Mercury Seven, Alan Shepard, Gus Grissom, Gordon Cooper and Wally Schirra. John Glenn had retired from NASA in January 1964 and Scott Carpenter, who was blamed by some in NASA management for the problematic reentry of Aurora 7, was on leave to participate in the Navy's SEALAB project and was grounded from flight in July 1964. Slayton himself continued to be grounded due to a heart problem.

In late 1963, Slayton selected Alan Shepard and Thomas Stafford for Gemini 3, James McDivitt and Ed White for Gemini 4, and Wally Schirra and John Young for Gemini 5 (the first Agena rendezvous mission). Gemini 3 was backed up by Gus Grissom and Frank Borman, who were also slated for Gemini 6, the first long-duration mission. Finally Pete Conrad and James Lovell were assigned as the backup for Gemini 4.

Delays in the production of the Agena Target Vehicle caused the first rearrangement of the crew rotation. The Schirra and Young mission was bumped to Gemini 6 and they now were the backup crew for Shepard and Stafford. Grissom and Borman now had their long-duration mission assigned to Gemini 5.

The second rearrangement occurred when Alan Shepard developed Meniere's disease, an inner ear problem. Gus Grissom was moved to command Gemini 3. Slayton felt that Young was a better personality match with Grissom and switched Stafford and Young. Finally Slayton tapped Gordon Cooper to command the long-duration Gemini 5. Again for reasons of compatibility he moved Pete Conrad from being the backup commander of Gemini 4 to be the pilot of Gemini 5, and Frank Borman to the backup command of Gemini 4. Finally he assigned Neil Armstrong and Elliott See to be the backup crew for Gemini 5.

The third rearrangement of crew assignment occurred when Deke Slayton felt that Elliot See wasn't up to the physical demands of EVA on Gemini 8. He reassigned Elliot See to be the prime commander of Gemini 9 and put Dave Scott as pilot of Gemini 8 and Charles Bassett as the pilot of Gemini 9.

The fourth and final rearrangement of the Gemini crew assignment occurred after the deaths of Elliot See and Charles Bassett in a plane crash in St. Louis. The backup crew of Tom Stafford and Eugene Cernan was moved up to become the new prime crew of Gemini 9. James Lovell and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin were moved from being the backup crew of Gemini 10 to be the backup crew of Gemini 9. This cleared the way through the crew rotation for Lovell and Aldrin to become the prime crew of Gemini 12. Along with the deaths of Grissom, White, and Chaffee in the fire of Apollo 1, this rearrangement is what finally determined the makeup of the early Apollo crews. These events were decisive in determining who would be in position to first walk on the Moon.

In his autobiography "Deke!" Slayton relates that he would probably have replaced Aldrin with Eugene Cernan, the backup pilot for Gemini 12, if the second flight of the AMU had flown on Gemini 12.

Missions

There were 12 Gemini flights, including two unmanned flight tests.

Unmanned

Mission Rocket LV Serial No Mission Dates Launch Time Duration Remarks
Gemini 1Titan IIGLV-1 12556April 8-12, 196416:01 UTC03d 23hFirst test flight of Gemini
Gemini 2Titan IIGLV-2 12557January 19, 196514:03 UTC00d 00h 18m 16sSuborbital flight to test heat shield

Manned

Mission Rocket LV Serial No Command Pilot Pilot Mission Dates Launch Time Duration
Gemini IIITitan IIGLV-3 12558GrissomYoungMarch 23, 196514:24 UTC00d 04h
52m 31s
First manned Gemini flight, three orbits.
Gemini IVTitan IIGLV-4 12559McDivittWhiteJune 03-07, 196515:15 UTC04d 01h 56m 12s
Included first extravehicular activity (EVA) by an American; White's "space walk" was a 22 minute EVA exercise.
Gemini VTitan IIGLV-5 12560CooperConradAugust 21-29, 196513:59 UTC07d 22h 55m 14s
First week-long flight; first use of fuel cells for electrical power; evaluated guidance and navigation system for future rendezvous missions. Completed 120 orbits.
Gemini VIITitan IIGLV-7 12562BormanLovellDecember 04-18, 196519:30 UTC13d 18h 35m 01s
When the original Gemini VI mission was scrubbed because its Agena target for rendezvous and docking failed, Gemini VII was used for the rendezvous instead. Primary objective was to determine whether humans could live in space for 14 days.
Gemini VI-ATitan IIGLV-6 12561SchirraStaffordDecember 15-16, 196513:37 UTC01d 01h 51m 24s
First space rendezvous accomplished with Gemini VII, station-keeping for over five hours at distances from 0.3 to 90 m (1 to 295 ft).
Gemini VIIITitan IIGLV-8 12563ArmstrongScottMarch 16, 196616:41 UTC00d 10h 41m 26s
Accomplished first docking with another space vehicle, an unmanned Agena stage. When undocked, a Gemini spacecraft thruster malfunction caused near-fatal tumbling of the craft, which Armstrong was able to overcome; the crew effected the first emergency landing of a manned U.S. space mission.
Gemini IX-ATitan IIGLV-9 12564StaffordCernanJune 03-06, 196613:39 UTC03d 00h 21m 50s
Rescheduled from May to rendezvous and dock with augmented target docking adapter (ATDA) after original Agena target vehicle failed to orbit. ATDA shroud did not completely separate, making docking impossible. Three different types of rendezvous, two hours of EVA, and 44 orbits were completed.
Gemini XTitan IIGLV-10 12565YoungCollinsJuly 18-21, 196622:20 UTC02d 22h 46m 39s
First use of Agena target vehicle's propulsion systems. Spacecraft also rendezvoused with Gemini VIII target vehicle. Collins had 49 minutes of EVA standing in the hatch and 39 minutes of EVA to retrieve experiment from Agena stage. 43 orbits completed.
Gemini XITitan IIGLV-11 12566ConradGordonSeptember 12-15, 196614:42 UTC02d 23h 17m 08s
Gemini record altitude, 1,189.3 km (739.2 mi) reached using Agena propulsion system after first orbit rendezvous and docking. Gordon made 33-minute EVA and two-hour standup EVA. 44 orbits.
Gemini XIITitan IIGLV-12 12567LovellAldrinNovember 11-15, 196620:46 UTC03d 22h 34m 31s
Final Gemini flight. Rendezvoused and docked manually with its target Agena and kept station with it during EVA. Aldrin set an EVA record of 5 hours, 30 minutes for one space walk and two stand-up exercises.



Gemini-Titan launches and serial numbers

The Gemini-Titan launch vehicles, like the Mercury-Atlas vehicles before them, were ordered by NASA through the U. S. Air Force and were in reality missiles. The Gemini-Titan II rockets were assigned U.S. Air Force serial numbers, which were painted in four places on each Titan II (on opposite sides on each of the first and second stages). U.S. Air Force crews maintained Launch Complex 19 and prepared and launched all of the Gemini-Titan II launch vehicles.

Enlarge picture
Gemini 6A launch. USAF serial number location on Titan II.


The USAF serial numbers assigned to the Gemini-Titan launch vehicles are given in the tables above. Fifteen Titan IIs were ordered in 1962 so the serial is "62-12XXX", but only "12XXX" is painted on the Titan II. The order for the last three of the fifteen launch vehicles was cancelled on July 30, 1964, and they were never built. Serial numbers were, however, assigned to them prospectively: 12568 - GLV-13; 12569 - GLV-14; and 12570 - GLV-15.

Enlarge picture
All Gemini Launches from GT-1 through GT-12.

Gemini-Titan in fiction

In an episode of Chuck Jones' Tom and Jerry, "Puss N Boats", Tom was holding a hose that was on and was flung to the sky, and saw the Gemini spacecraft in space.

Two Gemini spacecraft (called "Jupiter" in the film) play a role in the James Bond movie You Only Live Twice. The first is captured in space by an unidentified (and supposedly Soviet) spacecraft early in the movie. A second almost meets the same fate during the final showdown, but is saved by Bond who blows up the hostile vessel seconds before it can capture the capsule.

In the 1968 Robert Altman-directed film Countdown, a modified Gemini spacecraft is sent to the moon with a single astronaut in an effort to beat the Soviets following delays to Apollo. In the film the mission and craft are called Pilgrim. The film uses footage from both Gemini and Apollo launches. In real life, contractors for Project Gemini made proposals to NASA to develop the Gemini spacecraft as a cheaper and quicker vehicle to carry out a cislunar mission.

In the 1964 version of the novel Marooned, by Martin Caidin, a Mercury astronaut is stranded in Earth's orbit and a boilerplate Gemini (GT-2) is launched to rescue.

The novel Autopsy for a Cosmonaut, by Jacob Hay and John Keshishian, is an account of a pathologist trained for a Gemini 12-A flight and EVA, to conduct in-flight autopsies of Soviet cosmonauts who have perished in a marooned Voskhod prototype.

In the comic book series Dan Cooper number 16 - "SOS dans l'espace" by Albert Weinberg, a "Gemini 13" mission plays an important role.

In the TV series I Dream of Jeannie, footage from the project is used to depict a fictional Gemini mission.

References

See also

Further reading

External links

human spaceflight is a spaceflight with a human crew, and possibly passengers. This makes it unlike robotic space probes or remotely-controlled satellites. Human spaceflight is sometimes called manned spaceflight
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Project Mercury was the first human spaceflight program of the United States. It ran from 1959 through 1963 with the goal of putting a man in orbit around the Earth. The Mercury-Atlas 6 flight on February 20, 1962 was the first Mercury flight to achieve this goal.
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Apollo program was a human spaceflight program undertaken by NASA during the years 1961 – 1975 with the goal of conducting manned moon landing missions. John F. Kennedy announced this goal in 1961, and it was accomplished on July 20 1969 by Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin
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Moon  

The Moon as seen by an observer on Earth
Orbital characteristics
Periapsis: 363,104 km
0.0024 AU
Apoapsis: 405,696 km
0.0027 AU
Semi-major axis: 384,399 km
0.
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Extra-vehicular activity (EVA) is work done by an astronaut away from the Earth and outside of a spacecraft. The term most commonly applies to an EVA made outside a craft orbiting Earth (a spacewalk) but also applies to an EVA made on the surface of the Moon (a
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space rendezvous between two spacecraft, often between a spacecraft and a space station, is an orbital maneuver where the two arrive at the same orbit, make the orbital velocities the same, and bring them together (an approach maneuver, taxiing maneuver); it may or may not include
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Big Gemini (or "Big G") was proposed to NASA by McDonnell Douglas in August, 1969, as an advanced version of the Gemini spacecraft system. It was intended to provide large-capacity, all-purpose access to space, including missions that ultimately used Apollo or the Space
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A retrorocket is a rocket engine used to provide thrust opposing the motion of a spacecraft, thereby causing it to decelerate. When a spacecraft in orbit is slowed sufficiently, its altitude decreases to the point at which aerodynamic forces begin to rapidly slow the motion of the
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life support system is a group of devices that allow a human being to survive in outer space. NASA often uses the phrase Environmental Control and Life Support System or the acronym ECLSS when describing these systems for its human spaceflight missions.
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Paragliding is a recreational and competitive flying sport. A paraglider is a free-flying, foot-launched aircraft. The pilot sits in a harness suspended below a fabric wing, whose shape is formed by the pressure of air entering vents in the front of the wing.
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fuel cell is an electrochemical energy conversion device. It produces electricity from external supplies of fuel (on the anode side) and oxidant (on the cathode side). These react in the presence of an electrolyte.
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Gemini

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List of stars in Gemini
Abbreviation: Gem
Genitive: Geminorum
Symbology: the Twins, Castor & Pollux
Right ascension: 7 h
Declination: +20
Area: 514 sq. deg.
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For other uses, see Zodiac (disambiguation).


The term zodiac denotes an annual cycle of twelve stations along the ecliptic, the apparent path of the sun across the heavens through the constellations that divide the ecliptic into twelve equal
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Castor (α Gem / α Geminorum / Alpha Geminorum) is the second brightest star in the constellation Gemini and one of the brightest stars in the nighttime sky. Although it has the Bayer designation "alpha", it is actually fainter than Beta Geminorum (Pollux).
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Pollux (β Gem / β Geminorum / Beta Geminorum) is one of the brightest stars in the constellation Gemini and one of the brightest in the nighttime sky.
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For other uses, see orientation.
Orientation means direction of some axis or vector or pseudo-vector. It can be orientation of an arrow of a compass, or orientaiton of the director in the nematic liquid crystal, as orientation of an electric or magnetic
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ORBit is a CORBA compliant Object Request Broker (ORB). The current version is called ORBit2 and is compliant with CORBA version 2.4. It is developed under the GPL license and is used as middleware for the GNOME project.
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Agena target vehicle (ATV) was a spacecraft used by NASA to develop and practice orbital space rendezvous and docking techniques in preparation for the Apollo program lunar missions.
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ejection seat is a system designed to rescue the pilot or other crew in an emergency. In most designs, the seat is propelled out of the aircraft by an explosive charge or rocket motor, carrying the pilot with it. The concept of an ejectable escape capsule has also been tried.
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Radar is a system that uses electromagnetic waves to identify the range, altitude, direction, or speed of both moving and fixed objects such as aircraft, ships, motor vehicles, weather formations, and terrain.
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attitude indicator (AI), gyro horizon or artificial horizon, is an instrument used in an aircraft to inform the pilot of the orientation of the airplane relative to earth.
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The Vostok programme (Восто́к, translated as "East") was a Soviet human spaceflight project that succeeded in putting a person into Earth orbit for the first time.
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Yuri Gagarin
Юрий Гагарин


Cosmonaut
Nationality Russian

Status Deceased
Born March 9 1934
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James A. (Jim) Chamberlin (1915-1981) was a Canadian aerodynamicist who contributed to the design of the Canadian Avro Arrow, NASA Gemini space capsule and Apollo Lunar Module (LM).
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Aerodynamics (shaping of objects that affect the flow of air or gas) is a branch of fluid dynamics concerned with the study of forces generated on a body in a flow.
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Type Interceptor
Manufacturer Avro Aircraft Limited (Canada)
Designed by James C. Floyd
Maiden flight 25 March 1958
Introduction 4 October 1957
Status Cancelled 20 February 1959
Primary user
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Cislunar space (alternatively, cis-lunar space) is the volume within the Moon's orbit, or a sphere formed by rotating that orbit. Volumes within that such as low earth orbit (LEO) are distinguished by other names.
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration

NASA Insignia
established: July 29, 1958 (by the National Aeronautics and Space Act)
Administrator: Mike Griffin
budget: $17.
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration

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Motto: For the Benefit of All[1]

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Agency overview
Formed 29 July 1958

Headquarters Washington D.C.

Annual Budget $16.
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