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Nasa tapes over original moon walk footage

• Moon walk video restored despite the loss of original footage
• Loss of tapes went unnoticed for 35 years

It was mankind’s crowning achievement, with millions around the world glued to their television sets as astronaut Neil Armstrong took the first steps on the surface of the moon 40 years ago.

But in the scientific equivalent of recording an old episode of EastEnders over the prized video of your daughter’s wedding day, Nasa likely taped over its only high resolution images of the first moonwalk with electronic data from a satellite or a later manned space mission, officials said today.

It means that the familiar grainy and ghosting images of Armstrong’s “giant leap for mankind” are all that remain from the mission, though as a consolation prize the space agency has managed to digitally restore the footage into new broadcast-quality pictures that it released today.

“I don’t think anyone in the Nasa organisation did anything wrong. It slipped through the cracks, and nobody’s happy about it,” said Dick Nafzger, one of the last Apollo-era video engineers still working for the agency at Maryland’s Goddard Space Flight Centre.

In a technological feat that rivalled even putting Armstrong and shipmate Buzz Aldrin on the lunar surface, and one that has been largely overlooked since, a team of Nasa engineers and contractors fed live video from the moon via a series of relay stations in Australia and the US to homes around the world.

While Armstrong, Aldrin and Apollo 11 pilot Michael Collins trained for the mission, Nafzger and his partners were tasked with figuring out how to broadcast live from 240,000 miles away.

The images of Armstrong and Aldrin stepping onto the lunar surface and planting the US flag in the grey dust were seen by an estimated 600 million people. The tape recordings, taken for backup, were an afterthought, Nafzger told reporters in Washington today. “We all wish that somebody had said ‘those tapes are special, let’s pull them aside,’” he said.

Instead, their loss apparently went unnoticed for 35 years, until 2004 when an archive in Australia alerted Nasa that it believed it had found the “lost tapes” from the Apollo 11 mission. It shipped the tapes to Goddard, where Nasa maintains what officials say is the only machine in the world capable of reading the old tape technology. The first tapes did not have moon footage but touched off a massive search through archives stored in dusty basements across the world for those that did.

Nasa believed the original tapes might contain digital data sent from the moon that could be converted into much sharper pictures of the landing than those broadcast on the day, which were taken by a TV camera pointed at a giant wall monitor at mission control in Houston – effectively a copy of a copy.

But a standard Nasa money-saving measure in those days was to reuse the 14-inch tape reels after several years in storage. Agency officials ultimately concluded that the original Apollo 11 tapes were buried among an estimated 350,000 that were recycled in the 1970s and 80s and the data was lost forever. The newly released footage was taken from four copies, including one in a CBS television archive. It is undergoing restoration by a firm that specialises in cleaning up old Hollywood movies.

“I don’t believe that the tapes exist today at all,” Stan Lebar, the designer of the original lunar camera, told America’s National Public Radio. “It was a hard thing to accept. But there was just an overwhelming amount of evidence that led us to believe that they just don’t exist anymore.”

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Senate Confirms New NASA Administrator

Retired astronaut Maj. Gen. Charles Bolden is set to take over NASA July 20 as the space agency awaits the results of a blue-ribbon panel conducting an outside review of NASA’s program.
– Just hours after the July
15 liftoff of the space shuttle Endeavour to a 16-day mission to the International
Space Station, the U.S. Senate confirmed retired astronaut Maj. Gen. Charles
Bolden to be the next administrator of NASA. Bolden will be sworn into office
July 20, the 40th anniversary of…


Endeavour Suffers Debris Dings on Liftoff

As the Endeavour space shuttle streaks toward the International Space Station, NASA mission managers are reviewing the blastoff videotapes for heat shield damage to the spacecraft. NASA reports that Endeavour endured multiple debris hits during the liftoff.
– As the Space Shuttle Endeavour heads for a July 17 docking with the
International Space Station, NASA mission managers are poring over photos and
data to determine extent of the July 15 launch damage to Endeavour’s heat
shields. The spacecraft took multiple debris hits from what are likely to be …


Shuttle Endeavour Launch VIDEO: Blast Off Successful But NASA Concerned About Debris That Hit Shuttle

***SCROLL DOWN FOR VIDEO***

By MARCIA DUNN, AP Aerospace Writer

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – After more than a month’s delay, space shuttle Endeavour and seven astronauts thundered into orbit Wednesday on a flight to the international space statio…

Weaving the way

By Jonathan Fildes
Science and technology reporter, BBC News

As Apollo 11 sped silently on its way to landing the first men on the Moon, its safe arrival depended on the work of a long-haired maths student fresh out of college and a computer knitted together by a team of "little old ladies".

Now, 40 years after Apollo 11 landed Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin on the Moon, the work of these unsung heroes who designed and built the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) is back in the spotlight.

"I wasn’t so aware of the responsibility at the time – it sort of sunk in later," said Don Eyles, a 23-year-old self-described "beatnik" who had just graduated from Boston University and was set the task of programming the software for the Moon landing.

"I don’t recall the risk and the responsibility and the fact that other people’s lives were to some extent in our hands."

But if Mr Eyles embodied the young, can-do attitude of many of the 400,000 people who are estimated to have worked on the Apollo programme, the "little old ladies" epitomised a more cautious approach.

"Why was onboard navigation a basic requirement for Apollo Well, because the Russians might not play fair"

Richard Battin

Director of the AGC project

The team of ex-textile workers and watch-makers were employed by defence firm Raytheon to "weave" the software into the memory of the computer.

"The astronauts toured the production facilities and got people to realise that it was real and they were real," explained Eldon Hall, designer of the AGC.

"The little old ladies said: ‘that could be my son so I am going to do my job as well as I can’."

Computer Jam

The AGC was a first-of-its-kind device that would become the forerunner of all "fly-by-wire" aircraft systems and the computer that would land man on the Moon.

"The computer was tiny compared to the one in your cell phone," said Mr Eyles. "Tiny in every dimension except size."

The one cubic-foot-sized machine had the equivalent of 160 kilobytes of memory and could do a very simple addition in 24 microseconds.

"That may sound very fast, but compared to modern computers that’s extremely slow," said Mr Eyles. "You have to understand that anything the computer did was made up of thousands if not millions of instructions."

Although relatively lethargic and cumbersome, Nasa realised early on that an onboard digital computer was the only way to guarantee success.

"Why was onboard navigation a basic requirement for Apollo Well, because the Russians might not play fair. They might jam communications," Dr Richard Battin, director of the AGC project, recently told a conference.

In addition, the missions were so complex that the fledgling space agency could see no other way for the astronauts to reach the Moon.

"The pilots could not fly the thing… even though they kept thinking they would," explained Mr Hall.

In fact, some engineers thought that any intervention from the astronauts was completely unnecessary.

"From our point of view the guidance system could be completely without the pilot," Mr Hall told BBC News.

The contract to build the system – between the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Nasa – was the first of the Apollo programme and was signed just 76 days after JFK outlined his plans, highlighting the importance placed on the machine.

But Mr Hall remembers that many remained sceptical that it would work.

"One you get it wired it’s not going to change without breaking those wires"

Eldon Hall

"The biggest problem was convincing people that a computer could be reliable," he said. "That was harder than designing it."

In the 1960s most computers were still housed in their own building and required huge amounts of power and frequent repairs.

In contrast, the AGC had to be small, lightweight, never fail and consume less power than a 60 watt light bulb. It also had to be designed and built in eight years or less by a team that were themselves grappling with new ideas.

"I only heard the word ‘digital’ once through my entire time at university," admitted Mr Hall.

But the MIT lab had a long history of designing instrumentation for weapons and aircraft and it was felt that the team of engineers were up to the task.

Early on, the constraints of the size and the requirements of the computer forced the team to make some bold decisions.

One of these was to use a fledgling technology known as integrated circuits – today, more commonly known as silicon chips. The first working circuit had only been shown off in 1958.

"It was an extremely courageous decision that was probably vital to the success of the mission," said Mr Eyles.

To simplify the design and manufacture – and, crucially, minimise the risk of failure – the computer used just one type of circuit.

The decision also ensured that the fast-changing silicon industry had an incentive to continue to produce the chips for the whole of the Apollo programme.

"The whole field was changing so rapidly that it was almost a suicide risk to choose one and use that thing to fly to the Moon 10 years later but that’s what we had to do," said Mr Hall.

However, the entire computer was not so hi-tech. In order to make sure that the software was robust it was "woven" into so-called "rope core memories".

These used copper wires threaded through or around tiny magnetic cores to produce the ones and zeroes of binary code at the heart of the software.

Pass the copper wire through the core and the computer read it as a one. Pass it around and it was read as a zero.

"Once you get it wired it’s not going to change without breaking those wires," said Mr Hall.

The rope core memories would become know as "LOL memory" after the "little old ladies" who knitted together the software at a factory just outside Boston.

These ladies would sit in pairs with a memory unit between them, threading metres and metres of slender copper wires through and around the cores.

"It’s an extremely time-consuming process and it meant that the programs had to be finished and fully tested months in advance," said Mr Eyles.

"It’s only now with the perspective of 40 years that Apollo stands out as a unique event, probably never to be repeated in my lifetime"

Don Eyles

"But it is extremely robust – that information probably still exists despite being left on the Moon."

To ensure reliability and the highest possible standards from the ladies, Nasa also chose to go on a PR mission to the factories.

"We used to go to the cafeteria and the astronauts would come in," said Mary Lou Rogers, one of the ladies who worked on the Apollo line.

"They’d explain the Moon shot and thank us for what a good job we were doing.

"Everybody got all excited when they came in – we were a bunch of married women with children."

However, Nasa did not just leave quality control to good will and chance, said Mrs Rogers, who also worked on Intercontinental Ballistic Missile programmes.

"[Each component] had to be looked at by three of four people before it was stamped off. We had a group of inspectors come in for the Federal Government to check our work all the time."

"It was bad when we worked on Poseidon and Trident. But nothing as bad as when we were on Apollo."

‘Spring loaded’

In the end, the attention to detail seemed to have paid off. On 20 July 1969, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin separated from the command module containing Michael Collins and began their descent to the lunar surface.

But just minutes before Neil Armstrong confirmed to Houston that the "Eagle had landed", the normally cool-headed astronaut was having a slightly more urgent exchange with mission control.

"Program alarm," the ex-fighter pilot called out over the radio.

Armstrong was confronted with a yellow warning light on the AGC, indicating a problem.

"When I heard that the computer was restarting I was very nervous because I thought something serious was going on, really serious," said Mr Hall, who – like 600 million other people – was watching the Moon landing on television.

"I was shaking in my boots. I was very concerned that they would have to abort."

Over the course of the next seven-and-a-half minutes the alarms sounded five more times; the last one went off just 2,000ft above the dusty lunar surface.

Each time Mission Control gave the command to press on with the landing.

Armstrong later explained: "In simulations we have a large number of failures and we are usually spring-loaded to the abort position.

"In the real flight, we are spring-loaded to the land position."

Seven-and-a-half-minutes after the first program alarm, Armstrong uttered the immortal words: "Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed."

But Mission Control had not been reckless. The Apollo Guidance Computer had worked perfectly.

Frantic analysis at MIT and in Houston determined that the alarms stemmed from a mistake in the astronauts’ training.

Although not needed for the landing, the rendezvous radar – used when the astronauts returned to the Command Module – was switched on in case the descent had to be aborted at short notice.

The data had overloaded the computer, which dealt with the problem by shedding "low priority tasks" and keeping life-critical functions running.

"The operating system was designed to handle that kind of problem," said Mr Hall.

"The computer was still functioning even though people still say it was failing," he added. "It was saving the mission."

In the end, the AGC and the sometimes-unlikely list of characters who designed and built the machine had succeeded: they had helped land the first men on the Moon and return them safely to Earth.

"It’s only now with the perspective of 40 years that Apollo stands out as a unique event, probably never to be repeated in my lifetime," said Mr Eyles.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Magic of Apollo

Moon (Nasa)

Project Apollo might have been commissioned as a feel good project to boost the morale of a bruised Superpower, but it was conceived as a piece of pure scientific exploration. In his final essay marking the 40th anniversary of Apollo 11, Dr Christopher Riley looks back at the part scientific curiosity played in inspiring the Moon landings and uniting the world during uncertain times.

One of Arthur C Clarke’s "laws" states that "any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic".

Some technological advancement take place over centuries, and some can occur within a single generation – leaving those who lived through it with that feeling of magic.

Apollo was an even faster example. Within eight years, we leapt from being unable to fly in space to living briefly on the Moon.

The world’s oldest man at the time – Charlie Smith – reportedly born in 1842 was at the launch of the final Moonshot and simply couldn’t believe where the men onboard were heading.

Buss Aldrin (Nasa)

Even Apollo 11′s Michael Collins, a man intimately connected with the machinations of his mission, once said he felt that there was some magic within the smooth clockwork-like running of his flight.

Such technological leaps require springboards of scientific curiosity, and Apollo was no exception.

Unsure about where the new president would point them (as Nasa always tends to be when new administrations come to office), the agency had prepared a number of options for President Kennedy to consider.

Chief amongst these were plans for a manned lunar exploration programme; conceived not by military strategists for reasons of Cold War bravado, nor by politicians with an eye on national prestige, but by one of the greatest scientific minds of the 20th Century – a man passionately interested in our origins.

Planetary scientist Harold Urey had first suggested to Nasa that it commence a lunar exploration programme in the 1950s.

Urey figured that the Moon, lacking atmospheric weathering and the recycling of its crust through plate tectonics, might preserve some truly ancient geological relics from the early Solar System, long gone on Earth.

Ignited by Urey’s curiosity, Nasa came up with ambitious plans to investigate his theories, harnessing an armada of robotic mapping missions and culminating in a manned landing.

With an estimated price tag of $11bn, there was little chance of it being adopted by the new President, but Nasa had it on the table just in case.

Saturn V engines (Nasa)

That case arose on the 12 April 1961, just three months after Kennedy had come to office, when Major Yuri Gagarin became the first man to orbit the Earth.

Kennedy immediately consulted his Vice President to find out what they could do to restore some national pride and Johnson was quick to recommend Nasa’s novel lunar exploration programme.

At first Kennedy was reportedly unsure. With no guarantees of success, it seemed like a lot of money to convince Congress to spend. But Johnson was persuasive.

Saturn V in flight (Nasa)

"To be second in space is to be second in everything," he told the President. Put that way, Kennedy had little choice but to embrace it.

Marshalling over 400,000 men and woman across America for this single, focused and determined goal, Nasa’s philosophy borrowed from another of Clarke’s laws – "the only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible".

Examine the newspapers from any time during the 1960s and you will read of Apollo’s "show stopping" engineering set-backs.

From the seemingly insurmountable problems of getting each stage of the Saturn V to work, to the challenges of making the Command Module safe following the fire that killed the first Apollo astronauts, even the engineers would have told you at times that they didn’t think it could be done.

But against all the odds, on the 16 July 1969, just 30 months after the fatal fire – the first Saturn V rocket attempting to carry men from the surface of one world to another rose into the Florida sky.

Those who had worked on Apollo – who intimately knew every nut and bolt – were left gasping at what they’d accomplished.

For the rest of us – marvelling at the heaviest vehicle ever to lift off the ground – it was nothing short of magic.

Three days later when the first men to reach another world arrived, their initial act, within moments of setting foot there, was to document and collect a precious sample of lunar dust, to share with laboratories across the Earth.

It was a fitting thing to do at the climax of a voyage which had been started by a grand scientific idea about our origins.

Neil Armstrong on the Moon (Nasa)

As this series of essays has shown – whilst Apollo emerged during troubled times; accelerated into being as an antidote to the persistent terror of Armageddon, what transpired was far more than a Cold War race.

America’s immense national effort devoted to something other than war had united the world in admiration.

In these similar times of great uncertainty – engaged in more un-winnable wars and threatened by new terrors – perhaps we need another magical project inspired by scientific curiosity and delivered by engineering ingenuity to lift our spirits and win over hearts and minds.

The writer J. Bainbridge summed up Apollo as "a story of engineers who tried to reach the heavens".

Is it time once more to challenge our scientists and engineers to reach for the heavens for the sake of all mankind

Dr Christopher Riley is the author of the new Haynes guide: Apollo 11 – an owner’s workshop manual. He also curates the Apollo film at the online archive collection Footagevault. He is the producer of the 2009 director’s cut of Nasa’s original documentary feature film Moonwalk One</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

One giant leap

In July 1969, astronaut Neil Armstrong’s ‘giant leap for mankind’ was watched by millions of people around the world.

The BBC’s aerospace correspondent at the time, Reg Turnill, reported on the Apollo 11 launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, and later from mission control near Houston.

He is now retired, but here – with the help of archive material from the mission, and the US and UK number one records from that week – he recalls how Nasa rose to the challenge of putting man on the Moon.

Images courtesy Nasa, AP, PA, AFP and Getty Images.

Music by Zager and Evans (US number one at time of moon landing), Fifth Dimension,
Thunderclap Newman (UK number one at time of moon landing) and courtesy KPM Music.

Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 16 July 2009.


READ MORE: Apollo 11 special report

Links

Nasa
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

More audio slideshows

To the Moon and beyond: Nasa at 50

The Information Revolution

The art of camouflage
</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Space shuttle delays cost Nasa $4.5m

The lightning storms and tank problems that have blighted five attempts to launch the space shuttle Endeavour will leave cash-strapped Nasa footing $4.5 million (Dh16.52 million) in extra costs, the US space agency said.  "The cost of a scrub is approximately one million dollars," said spokesmanThe lightning storms and tank problems that have blighted five attempts to launch the space shuttle Endeavour will leave cash-strapped Nasa footing $4.5 million (Dh16.52 million) in extra costs, the US space agency said. “The cost of a scrub is approximately one million dollars,” said spokesman

Weather Again Halts Endeavour Blastoff to ISS

Thunderstorms and lightning strikes within 20 miles of the Cape Canaveral launch facilities again force NASA to cancel the blastoff of the Space Shuttle Endeavour on a mission to the International Space Station. If the weather cooperates, NASA will on July 15 attempt again to get Endeavour off the ground.
– Stormy Florida weather July 13
postponed the launch of the Space Shuttle Endeavour for the third consecutive
day and marked the fifth time since June that NASA has been forced to postpone
the mission to deliver and install Japan’s
4.5 million-ton Kibo space-exposed laboratory complex.

NASA w…


Bad weather foils shuttle launch

The seven-member crew of the Endeavour. Photo: 13 July 2009

The US space agency Nasa is preparing to make a fifth attempt to launch the space shuttle Endeavour, which has been delayed by bad weather.

The seven-member crew boarded the spacecraft despite forecasts giving only a 40% chance of favourable weather conditions at Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Nasa said the launch was scheduled at 1851 local time (2251 GMT).

Earlier launches were called off because of lightning strikes around the launch pad and over hydrogen leaks.

Meteorologists are predicting further heavy showers and lighting near the launch site on Monday and over the next couple of days.

However, Nasa spokesman Allard Beutel said the agency was "going to give it a shot".

New experiments

The Endeavour crew is set to install an external platform on Japan’s space station lab, Kibo.

The orbiter is taking a seven-strong crew into space, made up of six Americans and one Canadian – Julie Payette – who will operate the shuttle’s robotic arm during the mission.

Their arrival will bring the total crew on the outpost to 13 – a record for the International Space Station (ISS).

During five spacewalks, a platform will be added to the Japanese lab complex, which can be used for experiments that require materials to be exposed to the harsh environment of space.

In addition, Endeavour will deliver a new long-stay US crew member, Tim Kopra, to the ISS and bring back Japan’s Koichi Wakata, who has lived aboard the platform for more than three months.

The space station, now about the size of a four-bedroom house, has been under construction for more than a decade.

When it launches, Endeavour will make the 127th space shuttle flight, the 29th to the station, the 23rd for Endeavour and the third in 2009.

Seven further flights to the platform remain before the shuttles retire in 2010.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Thunderstorms Delay Endeavour Launch Again

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Thunderstorms forced NASA to call off Sunday evening’s launch of shuttle Endeavour, the fourth delay for the space station construction mission.

The launch team came within minutes of sending Endeavour and seven a…

Storms Ground Fourth Endeavour Shot at ISS

The weather again refuses to cooperate with NASA’s fourth attempt in a month to send the space shuttle Endeavour to the International Space Station. NASA aims for another shot at the ISS July 13 in hopes of finally delivering and installing Japan’s massive Kibo space-exposed laboratory complex.
– The seemingly snake-bit
Endeavour mission to the International Space Station missed its fourth
consecutive liftoff opportunity July 12 as thunderstorms and lightning again
shut down the launch. The volatile weather at Cape Canaveral also forced NASA to scratch a scheduled July
11 blastoff.

Wi…


Nasa aiming to launch space shuttle today

Hoping to end a string of delays, Nasa will try to launch the space shuttle Endeavour on Sunday on a mission to deliver the last piece of Japan’s Kibo laboratory to the International Space Station. Launch is scheduled for 7:13pm EDT (2313 GMT) from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Nasa

Lightning Delays Space Shuttle Endeavour Launch

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA scrubbed space shuttle Endeavour’s Saturday evening launch after lightning struck at least 11 times near the seaside launch pad.

NASA technicians found no damage after an electrical storm Friday afternoon, bu…

Lightning Strikes Delay Endeavour’s Launch

Twice delayed in June, NASA again scratches its mission to the International Space Station after 11 lightning strikes are recorded in the launch area. After a check of all systems, NASA hopes to finally get the mission under way July 12.
– NASA called off the launch of the space shuttle Endeavour for a third time
July 11 after lightning strikes in the Cape Canaveral area prompted the space
agency to move the liftoff to July 12. The mission to deliver equipment to the International
Space Station was scratched twice in June due to a …


NASA Hopes Third Try at ISS Won’t Be a Strikeout

Launch weather conditions continue to threaten the Endeavour space shuttle’s planned July 11 liftoff for its journey to the International Space Station. The mission to deliver the final permanent components of Japan’s Kibo exposed space laboratory was scratched twice in June due to a launch-pad hydrogen gas leak that NASA thinks it has solved. Now, if only the weather will cooperate.
– The Space Shuttle Endeavour’s launch countdown
operations continued without a hitch July 10, although predicted stormy weather
continues to threaten the scheduled July 11 7:39 p.m. EDT
liftoff. The mission, hauling the large, last pieces of the Japanese Kibo
laboratory exposed complex to the Int…