The Mammoth Book of Space Exploration and Disaster Read online




  THE MAMMOTH BOOK OF

  SPACE

  EXPLORATION

  AND DISASTERS

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  Constable & Robinson Ltd

  3 The Lanchesters

  162 Fulham Palace Road

  London W69ER

  www.constablerobinson.com

  First published in the UK by Robinson,

  an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd 2005

  Collection and editorial material

  copyright © Richard Russell Lawrence 2005

  All rights reserved. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  A copy of the British Library Cataloguing in

  Publication Data is available from the British Library

  ISBN 1-84119-963-X

  eISBN 978-1-78033-366-3

  Printed and bound in the EU

  2 4 6 8 1 0 9 7 5 3 1

  Contents

  List of Illustrations

  List of Abbreviations

  Introduction

  Chapter 1 – At Heaven’s Door – Testing the Limits

  Introduction: From the Wright brothers to the X-1

  Breaking the sound barrier

  Eugene F. May tests the Skyrocket

  Scott Crossfield’s engine explodes

  Chapter 2 – Rockets Away – Escape from Earth

  From the Second World War to the space race

  Which way to the moon?

  Project Mercury

  The first US manned space flight

  Gus Grissom’s mishap

  Glenn’s orbital flight

  Malfunctions aboard Scott Carpenter’s orbital flight

  Chapter 3 – Man in Space – The Glory Days

  Project Gemini

  Project Gemini and the bush telegraph

  Soviet test disasters

  Voskhod 2: the first space walk

  Gemini III: Grissom in trouble again

  Gemini IV: the first US space walk

  Gemini VIII has to abort

  Gemini IX and the angry alligator

  Gemini XI: asleep in a vacuum

  Gemini XII: Aldrin space walks on his first flight

  The Apollo 1 disaster

  The Soyuz 1 disaster

  The Apollo program is revised

  NASA’s plans are threatened

  Armstrong crashes in training

  Apollo 8 flies around the moon

  Apollo 9: an “all-up” test

  Apollo 10: the full-scale rehearsal

  Apollo 11: the eagle has landed

  Apollo 12 is struck by lightning

  Apollo 13’s problem – 11–17 April 1970

  Scares on Apollo 14

  Apollo 15: a scientific and technical peak

  Apollo 16’s cliff-hanger

  Apollo 17: last man on the moon

  Skylab in deep trouble

  Soviets’ 20G return to Earth

  Apollo-Soyuz shaking hands

  Chapter 4 – Retreat to Earth – Cancellations Galore

  Skylab plunges to Earth

  Salyut 7 is revived

  Report on the Challenger accident

  Mir: introduction

  Dangerous, emergency EVA aboard Mir

  Hubble’s troubles

  The depressed astronaut

  Mir’s Kurs system fails

  The fire aboard Mir

  The near miss

  Linenger’s EVA “just out there dangling”

  An unmanned Progress supply vessel crashes into Mir

  Mir loses all its power

  Cosmonaut experiences a leak in his spacesuit

  John Glenn’s shuttle flight

  The end of Mir

  First hearing on the Shuttle Columbia accident

  Chapter 5 – New Horizons – The Ongoing Quest

  Life on Mars

  Martian space race

  Smart 1: the Star Trek propulsion system

  Storm of stardust threatens satellites

  Goodbye Galileo

  Heinlein Prize

  Alt.Space

  SpaceShipOne

  Hubble: the Next Generation Space Telescope

  China joins the space race

  2014: the Rosetta space odyssey

  The oldest stars ever seen

  Appendix – Space, Fact and Fiction

  Bibliography & Sources

  Illustrations

  Soviet Semyorka boosters

  Which way to the moon?: lunar landing techniques

  Mercury capsule and escape tower

  Angles for orbit, retro-firing and re-entry

  Three orbit paths, tracking and communications stations of Project Mercury

  Sections of
the Gemini capsule

  Comparative sizes of NASA spacecraft

  Comparative sizes of NASA launchers for manned space flight

  Apollo 13’s journey 11–17 April 1970

  Repairs to Skylab

  The Mir space station

  Mir: an unmanned Progress supply vessel crashes into Mir (25 June 1997)

  The European Space Agency’s Smart 1

  Smart 1’s elliptical orbits

  Cross-section of Smart 1’s ion engine

  Timeline of the Galileo probe (1610–2003)

  Geocentric theory of the universe

  High-altitude man-carrying rocket as conceived by Arthur C. Clarkein 1951

  Abbreviations

  Chapter 1

  A-4 Aggregate 4, the prototype German rocket

  LOX Liquid Oxygen

  NACA National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics

  NASA National Aeronautics and Space Administration

  V-2 Vergeltungswaffe 2 (Vengeance weapon 2)

  Chapter 2

  ASCS Automatic Stabilization and Control System

  EOR Earth Orbit Rendezvous

  G Gravity, normal gravity on earth is IG

  ICBM Intercontinental Ballistic Missile

  JPL Jet Propulsion Laboratory

  LOR Lunar Orbit Rendezvous

  LOS Loss Of Signal

  LOX Liquid Oxygen

  MA Mercury-Atlas

  MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  MPT Mercury Procedures Trainer

  M-R Mercury Redstone

  Q Aerodynamic stress

  SARAH Search and Rescue and Homing

  SECO Sustainer Engine Cutoff

  V-1 Vergeltungswaffe 1 (Vengeance weapon 1)

  VfR Verein fuer Raumschiffahrt (Space Travel Association)

  USSR Union of Socialist Soviet Republics

  Chapter 3

  ALSEP Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package

  AM Airlock Module

  AMU Astronaut Manoeuvring Unit

  ATDA Augmented Target Docking Adapter

  Capcom Capsule communicator

  CONTROL Lunar Module flight control officer

  CSM Command Service Module

  DOI Descent orbit insertion

  DSKY Display & Keyboard

  EECOM Electrical & Environmental command officer

  EGIL Flight Controller for electrical and environmental systems at the launch

  EST Eastern Standard Time

  EVA Extra Vehicular Activity or spacewalking

  FDI powered descent initiation

  FIDO Flight dynamics officer

  GET Ground Elapsed Time

  GNC Guidance, Navigation and Control

  GUIDO Guidance officer

  INCO Instrument & Communications Officer

  J-2 engine of the Saturn booster S-IVB third stage

  LEM Lunar Excursion Module

  LLRV Lunar Landing Research Vehicle

  LM Lunar Module

  LOI Lunar orbit insertion

  LRL Lunar Receiving Laboratory

  MDA Multiple Docking Adapter

  MET Modularised Equipment Transporter

  PC+2 Two hours after Perycynthion (the closest point to the far side of the moon)

  PLS S portable life support system

  PTC Passive Thermal Control

  RETRO Retrofire officer

  S1C a variant of the Saturn booster (first stage)

  SII Saturn booster (second stage)

  S-IVB a variant of the Saturn booster (third stage)

  S-WB the Saturn stage which contained the LEM

  SCE Signal Condition Equipment

  SM JETT Service Module Jettison (switch)

  SPS Service Propulsion System (the CSM’s engine)

  SWS Saturn Workshop (Skylab)

  TEI TransEarth Injection

  TELMU Telemetry, electrical, EVA, mobility unit officer

  Chapter 4

  BPS Automatic docking equipment on board MIR’s unmanned supply vessels

  CCD Charged Coupled Detectors

  COSTAR Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement

  DSD a Depressurization Sensor

  FA First Aid

  HST Hubble Space Telescope

  ISS International Space Station

  IVA Intra Vehicular Activity (a spacewalk inside a depressurized space craft)

  KURS A radar/guidance system used when docking spaceships to space stations

  LiOH solid cylinders of Lithium hydroxide which filter CO2 out of the air

  MOD Missions Operations Directive

  NCS NICMOS Cooling System

  OMS Orbital Maneuvering System

  OPM Optical Properties Monitor

  PS Payload Specialist

  SAMS calibration device aboard MIR, used to study vibrations and structural stress

  SEP calibration of power levels remaining in MIR’s batteries

  SFOG Solid Fuel Oxygen Generator

  SUD MIR’s motion-control system

  TDRS Tracking and Data Relay Satellite

  TORU A remote control system for docking unmanned spaceships

  TsUP Soviet then Russian Mission Control

  WFPC Wide Field and Planetary Camera

  Chapter 5

  ESA European Space Agency

  MER Mars Exploration Rover

  SMART Small Missions for Advanced Research in Technology

  Introduction

  The quest to conquer space is packed with stories of triumph and disaster. The Mammoth Book of Space Exploration and Disasters presents over 50 of the most remarkable first-hand accounts of sub-orbital, orbital and deep space adventure, from the development of the rocket to the present day.

  The accounts tell exactly what it was like to be “a man in a can” – in the astronauts’ and the cosmonauts’ own words. Share Alan Shepard’s exhilaration at being the first astronaut in space. Ride with Scott Carpenter as he describes how he had to correct instrument malfunctions which would have prevented his re-entry into the Earth’s atmosphere.

  The collection is divided into five chapters. Chapter 1, entitled “At Heaven’s Door – Testing the Limits”, covers the development of jet and rocket propulsion from the end of the Second World War to the penetration of the upper atmosphere. These early accounts include Chuck Yeager breaking the sound barrier with a broken arm, and the test pilots’ own explanations of the dangerous new technology of rocket-propelled craft.

  Chapter 2 is called “Rockets Away – Escape from Earth”. It relives the early days of space flight, including the US Mercury program, with the astronauts revealing just how much they had to do. Among their accounts, John Glenn’s first American orbital flight stands out for its memorable description of “Zero G and I feel fine”.

  Chapter 3 (“Man in Space – The Glory Days”) spans the period from 1963 until 1974, including the US Gemini and Apollo and the Soviet Soyuz programs. The vivid descriptions here include Alexei Leonov’s fight for his life as the first man to space walk when he found himself unable to get back into the spacecraft without taking the risk of deflating his space suit. Later he and his fellow cosmonaut crash-landed and had to spend the night sheltering from wild wolves.

  The triumph of Apollo 11 is followed by the mishap of Apollo 12 and the famous “problem” of Apollo 13. You can only admire the resourcefulness of the ground team who brought them home safely. The chapter concludes with the memorable moment of “Apollo-Soyuz shaking hands” during the final Apollo mission.

  Chapter 4 is entitled “Retreat to Earth – Cancellations Galore”. Its accounts record the cancellations and setbacks during the period after 1974, including the Shuttle disasters (1986 and 2003) plus the endless crises aboard the space station Mir in 1997. The US-Russian crew suffered from depression, a near miss, fire, loss of power and a collision. In addition, they had to make a succession of perilous space walks; not all of them went back for more.

  Chapter 5, entitled “New Horizons – The Ongoing Q
uest”, continues the story up to the present day. It brings home the trials and tribulations of scientists involved in the search for life and the origins of the universe. In 2003 several new competitors joined the space race and “the Star Trek propulsion drive” began driving the European Space Agency’s Smart 1 probe to the moon. Despite the human cost over the decades, it is clear the urge to explore space remains undiminished.

  As Wernher von Braun, rocket scientist, put it, “I have learned to use the word ‘impossible’ with the greatest caution . . . Don’t tell me that man doesn’t belong out there. Man belongs wherever he wants to go.”

  Chapter 1

  At Heaven’s Door – Testing the Limits

  Introduction: from the Wright brothers to the X-1

  The first successful powered flight took place in the United States. On 17 December 1903, Wilbur and Orville Wright made the first sustained, controlled flight in a powered aircraft, but by 1915 the US government realised that the United States had fallen behind Europe in terms of military aircraft development and set up the National Advisory Council on Aeronautics (NACA). From 1917 NACA produced technical reports on aircraft and engine development and by 1939 it was investigating rotary wing aircraft. In 1941 the Chairman of NACA appointed a Special Committee on Jet Propulsion. Germany had flown turbojets, and her researchers were working intensively on the development of an operational jet-propelled interceptor. In Britain the propulsion scientist Frank Whittle had designed and built a gas-turbine engine and had flown a turbojet-powered aircraft.

  By the end of the Second World War the United States had a considerable advantage in terms of long-range strategic bombers. The superiority of the B-29 Superfortress was not challenged in combat until the Korean War (1950–3) but by 1945 Germany had developed jet fighters and rocket-powered interceptors that could fly at 590 miles per hour and climb to 40,000 feet in two and a half minutes. The German jets and rocket planes came into the Second World War too late to have any effect on its outcome, although the new aircraft caused consternation among American aeronautical scientists and military planners. As the rivalry between the former Allies increased, the United States naturally concentrated on developing jet and rocket engines.

  Neville Duke was a British test pilot who in 1953 set the record for highest speed in level flight of 727.6 m.p.h. In 1954 he described rocket propulsion: