[Apollo 10] Unbelievable Earth; “It is just sitting out there in the middle of nowhere and it’s unbelievable.” Thomas Stafford, 18–26 May 1969. Printed 1969. Vintage chromogenic print on fiber-based Kodak paper [NASA image AS10–34-5014]. 25.4×20.3 cm (10×8 in), with ”A Kodak Paper" watermarks on the verso (NASA Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas). Literature: LIFE, 6 June 1969, ppg. 38–39; The View from Space: American Astronaut Photography, 1962–1972, Schick and Van Haaften, pg. 53; Moon: Man’s Greatest Adventure, Thomas, ed., pg. 171; Apollo: Through the Eyes of the Astronauts, Jacobs, pg. 52. At the beginning of their journey to the Moon, the Apollo10 astronauts were offered an exhilarating and unbelievable view (see mission transcript) of the Earth receding behind the spacecraft. Thomas Stafford took this “out of this world” Hasselblad photograph from about 21,000 nautical miles away through the 80mm lens as the crew were also sending a color TV transmission of the Earth to Mission Control. From the mission transcript as the Apollo 10 crew and Mission Control in Houston (watching the TV transmission from the spacecraft) were commenting this view of Earth: 005:04:00 Public Affairs Office (Mission Control): Apollo 10 is going to try to bring up another live color TV show, showing the Earth. We’ll stand by for this transmission. Apollo 10’s distance from the Earth now 21,119 nautical miles. Velocity; 13,170 feet per second. 005:05:27 Cernan: Charlie, if you see this, it’s going to be out of this world, literally. [...] 005:06:54 Stafford: I figure right there you should be able to see the United States, Mexico, Baja California - 005:06:57 Duke (Mission Control): Hey, it’s really beautiful, Tom. It (the TV)’s coming in great. 005:07:01 Stafford: You ought to see it up here, Charlie. 005:07:03 Young: We’ve got the whole globe there. [...] 005:08:10 Stafford: Okay. And it looks like the Rocky Mountains are orange colored to me. The rest of U.S., Baja California, that really stands out as all brownish, and the oceans are blue; but there are so many clouds out to the northeast of the United States, you can’t believe it. Covers the Far East over to Europe as far as you can see. [...] 005:10:05 Duke (Mission Control): Okay, this has got to be the greatest sight ever. 005:10:08 Stafford: You ought to see it up here. [...] 005:10:57 Cernan: Charlie, this is - It’s so hard to describe. You can go right up past Alaska, and you can see the polar caps. It’s incredible. [...] 005:11:12 Cernan: That’s great. And the blackest black that you ever could conceive is the setting for all this. [...] 005:11:53 Cernan: Charlie, you know, you blink your eyes and you look out there and you know it’s three dimensional, but it is just sitting out there in the middle of nowhere and it’s unbelievable.
Condition
[Apollo 10] Unbelievable Earth; “It is just sitting out there in the middle of nowhere and it’s unbelievable.” Thomas Stafford, 18–26 May 1969. Printed 1969. Vintage chromogenic print on fiber-based Kodak paper [NASA image AS10–34-5014]. 25.4×20.3 cm (10×8 in), with ”A Kodak Paper" watermarks on the verso (NASA Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, Texas). Literature: LIFE, 6 June 1969, ppg. 38–39; The View from Space: American Astronaut Photography, 1962–1972, Schick and Van Haaften, pg. 53; Moon: Man’s Greatest Adventure, Thomas, ed., pg. 171; Apollo: Through the Eyes of the Astronauts, Jacobs, pg. 52. At the beginning of their journey to the Moon, the Apollo10 astronauts were offered an exhilarating and unbelievable view (see mission transcript) of the Earth receding behind the spacecraft. Thomas Stafford took this “out of this world” Hasselblad photograph from about 21,000 nautical miles away through the 80mm lens as the crew were also sending a color TV transmission of the Earth to Mission Control. From the mission transcript as the Apollo 10 crew and Mission Control in Houston (watching the TV transmission from the spacecraft) were commenting this view of Earth: 005:04:00 Public Affairs Office (Mission Control): Apollo 10 is going to try to bring up another live color TV show, showing the Earth. We’ll stand by for this transmission. Apollo 10’s distance from the Earth now 21,119 nautical miles. Velocity; 13,170 feet per second. 005:05:27 Cernan: Charlie, if you see this, it’s going to be out of this world, literally. [...] 005:06:54 Stafford: I figure right there you should be able to see the United States, Mexico, Baja California - 005:06:57 Duke (Mission Control): Hey, it’s really beautiful, Tom. It (the TV)’s coming in great. 005:07:01 Stafford: You ought to see it up here, Charlie. 005:07:03 Young: We’ve got the whole globe there. [...] 005:08:10 Stafford: Okay. And it looks like the Rocky Mountains are orange colored to me. The rest of U.S., Baja California, that really stands out as all brownish, and the oceans are blue; but there are so many clouds out to the northeast of the United States, you can’t believe it. Covers the Far East over to Europe as far as you can see. [...] 005:10:05 Duke (Mission Control): Okay, this has got to be the greatest sight ever. 005:10:08 Stafford: You ought to see it up here. [...] 005:10:57 Cernan: Charlie, this is - It’s so hard to describe. You can go right up past Alaska, and you can see the polar caps. It’s incredible. [...] 005:11:12 Cernan: That’s great. And the blackest black that you ever could conceive is the setting for all this. [...] 005:11:53 Cernan: Charlie, you know, you blink your eyes and you look out there and you know it’s three dimensional, but it is just sitting out there in the middle of nowhere and it’s unbelievable.
Condition
Testen Sie LotSearch und seine Premium-Features 7 Tage - ohne Kosten!
Lassen Sie sich automatisch über neue Objekte in kommenden Auktionen benachrichtigen.
Suchauftrag anlegen