On July 19, after Apollo 11 had flown behind the moon out of contact with Earth, they performed the first lunar orbit insertion manoeuvre. On July 18, Armstrong and Aldrin climbed through the docking tunnel from Columbia to Eagle to check out the LM, and to make the second TV transmission. The launch had been so successful that the other three were not needed. Later, on July 17, a three-second burn of the SPS was made to perform the second of four scheduled midcourse corrections programmed for the flight. The first colour TV transmission to Earth from Apollo 11 occurred during the translunar coast of the CSM/LM. The S-IVB stage separated and injected into heliocentric orbit 4 hours and 40 minutes into the flight. After transposition and jettisoning of the SLA panels on the S-IVB stage, the CSM docked with the LM. The command and service module, or CSM, Columbia separated from the stage, which included the spacecraft-lunar module adapter, or SLA, containing the lunar module, or LM, Eagle. 2 hours, 44 minutes and one-and-a-half revolutions after launch, the S-IVB stage reignited for a second burn of 5 minutes, 48 seconds, placing Apollo 11 into a translunar orbit. The way they came apart made the moon landing happen. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.Components of Saturn V were discarded one by one. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2018. The zero-day Moon - The 1st-day Moon - The 2nd-day Moon - The 3rd-day Moon - The 4th-day Moon - The 5th-day Moon - The 6th-day Moon - The 7th-day Moon - The 8th-day Moon - The 9th-day Moon - The 10th-day Moon - The 11th-day Moon - The 12th-day Moon - The 13th-day Moon - The 14th-day Moon - The 15th-day Moon - The 16th-day Moon - The 17th-day Moon - The 18th-day Moon - The 19th-day Moon - The 20th-day Moon - The 21st-day Moon - The 22nd-day Moon - The 23rd-day Moon - The 24th-day Moon - The 25th-day Moon - The 26th-day Moon - The 27th-day Moon - The 28th-day Moon - The 29th-day Moon - Further reading - Appendix 1 Phases of the Moon - Appendix 2 Chronology of lunar selenography - Appendix 3 Index of lunar named features - Index.ĭay-by-day photographic guide to observing the features of the Moon through a small telescope.ĭescription based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Įlectronic reproduction. Intro - Contents - Acknowledgments - Introduction - About this book - How this atlas was done - Before we begin. Summary: Day-by-day photographic guide to observing the features of the Moon through a small telescope. The zero-day Moon - The 1st-day Moon - The 2nd-day Moon - The 3rd-day Moon - The 4th-day Moon - The 5th-day Moon - The 6th-day Moon - The 7th-day Moon - The 8th-day Moon - The 9th-day Moon - The 10th-day Moon - The 11th-day Moon - The 12th-day Moon - The 13th-day Moon - The 14th-day Moon - The 15th-day Moon - The 16th-day Moon - The 17th-day Moon - The 18th-day Moon - The 19th-day Moon - The 20th-day Moon - The 21st-day Moon - The 22nd-day Moon - The 23rd-day Moon - The 24th-day Moon - The 25th-day Moon - The 26th-day Moon - The 27th-day Moon - The 28th-day Moon - The 29th-day Moon - Further reading - Appendix 1 Phases of the Moon - Appendix 2 Chronology of lunar selenography - Appendix 3 Index of lunar named features - Index.
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