商用無料の写真検索さん
           


Mercury Earth Path Indicator as used by the first American in orbit, John Glenn on MA-6 : 無料・フリー素材/写真

Mercury Earth Path Indicator as used by the first American in orbit, John Glenn on MA-6 / jurvetson
このタグをブログ記事に貼り付けてください。
トリミング(切り除き):
使用画像:     注:元画像によっては、全ての大きさが同じ場合があります。
サイズ:横      位置:上から 左から 写真をドラッグしても調整できます。
あなたのブログで、ぜひこのサービスを紹介してください!(^^
Mercury Earth Path Indicator as used by the first American in orbit, John Glenn on MA-6

QRコード

ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示 2.1
説明The newest addition to the Space Collection at work, it is incredibly rare to find control panel systems of the Mercury spacecraft. The Earth Path Indicator (EPI) consists of a small revolving globe driven by a wind-up clockwork mechanism. A pointer on the front face showed the astronaut their location, based on an adjustable orbital period, and where they would splashdown with reentry. It's essentially a simple analog computer.I am doing my research on this one still, and would love to know of any source for the part numbers for the EPIs that flew on MA-6 and possibly MA-7 and MR-4. Were any assigned to later missions, and subsequently removed before flight, as happened with MA-8?The “Inclination Degrees” shows how many degrees from exactly along the equator the orbital track was and was set for 32.5 degrees (of a possible 20°-40° range), the orbital inclination of Glenn’s inaugural orbital flight, and all of the Mercury flights to follow. It could run for 20 hours on a winding, while the earth turns inside the box once every 90 minutes (adjustable by the “orbit time” knob). Manufactured in 1960 by Honeywell.The Earth Path Indicator (EPI), also called an Earth Orbit Indicator, was one of the navigational tools installed in the Mercury space capsule. Like the Soviet Globus that followed in 1968, it consists of a small revolving globe driven by a clockwork mechanism. A means of replicating the Earth below, the EPI would inform the astronaut of his orbital tracking and where he was in relation to countries, cities, oceans, ground stations, and eventually the point of re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere. This information was critical to making observations of the Earth, maintaining communications, and concluding the mission with a safe and successful splashdown. The EPI was launched in 1961 on the unmanned test flight MA-4 (that unit is in the Smithsonian), and then on the 1962 Mercury flights of John Glenn and Scott Carpenter, the first Americans to orbit the Earth. The EPI was ultimately deemed superfluous and was part of the hardware removed for Wally Schirra’s Mercury-Atlas 8 mission. I wonder if this was the unit removed.
撮影日2023-04-29 13:51:52
撮影者jurvetson , Los Altos, USA
タグ
撮影地


(C)名入れギフト.com