vendredi 2 août 2013

40 Years Ago, Skylab Paved Way for International Space Station












NASA - Skylab Mission patch.

Aug. 2, 2013


Image above: As the crew of Skylab 2 departs, the gold sun shield covers the main portion of the space station. The solar array at the top was the one freed during a spacewalk. The four, windmill-like solar arrays are attached to the Apollo Telescope Mount used for solar astronomy. Image Credit: NASA.

The International Space Station has been in operation with research ongoing since Nov. 2, 2000. America's first space station, Skylab, helped pave the way for permanent operations in low-Earth orbit 40 years ago this year.

Skylab was hailed as a "bold concept" by Rocco Petrone, who served as director of launch operations at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida before becoming director of the agency's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., during 1973 and 1974.

"The program demanded innovation and ingenuity," said Petrone in Skylab, Our First Space Station, a NASA report published in 1977. "Experience and knowledge gained from earlier space programs provided a solid foundation on which to build, but the Skylab Program was truly making new pathways in the sky."


Image above: The Skylab space station is mated to a Saturn V rocket in the Vehicle Assembly Building on Sept. 29, 1972. Image Credit:
NASA.

The project began as the Apollo Applications Program in 1968 with an objective to develop science-based human space missions using hardware originally developed for the effort to land astronauts on the moon.

Skylab orbited the Earth from 1973 to 1979. The 169,950-pound space station included a workshop, a solar observatory, a multiple docking adapter and systems to allow three crews to spend up to 84 days in space. While the space station lifted off unpiloted as Skylab 1 atop a Saturn V launch vehicle, the astronaut crews were launched to orbit by Saturn 1B rockets.

Liftoff of Skylab 1 came on May 14, 1973, but within minutes it was apparent that there was trouble. NASA's Skylab Program Manager William Schneider, filled in the details at a post-launch news conference.

"At approximately 63 seconds into the launch of Skylab 1, there was an indication of premature deployment of the meteoroid protective shield," Schneider said. "If that has happened, the shield was probably torn off. The thermal indications are that it is gone, and we have some indication that our solar array on the workshop also did not fully deploy."


Image above: Prior to launch in May 1973, the Skylab space station, foreground, awaits liftoff atop a Saturn V on the Kennedy Space Center's Launch Pad 39A. To the north, is the Saturn 1B with an Apollo command-service module being prepared to launch the first crew to Skylab. Image Credit: NASA.

As a result of the uncertainty, launch of Skylab 2 with the crew of Charles Conrad, Joseph Kerwin and Paul Weitz, scheduled for the next day, was postponed.

The NASA-industry team around the country went into action to develop plans and hardware necessary to save Skylab. The astronauts practiced using special tools to remove material that jammed the remaining solar array to allow it to provide Skylab with the needed electrical power. A square thermal shield, which operated like a sunshade, also was developed to protect the station from the heat of the sun.

The crew launched May 25, 1973 aboard an Apollo command-service module and mission commander Conrad expressed confidence that their preparations would pay off right away.

"This is Skylab 2, we fix anything," he said at the moment of liftoff.


Image above: The Skylab 1-Saturn V space vehicle is lifts off from Launch Pad 39A on May 14, 1973. Image Credit: NASA.

The crew deployed the new solar shield through a small scientific experiment airlock, located in the side of the workshop normally facing the sun. Once outside, the shield popped open like a parasol, with four struts extending outward from a segmented center post. Temperatures inside the lab soon diminished to near-normal levels.

Next came the spacewalk to free the jammed solar away. After considerable work, Kerwin was able to cut the metal that had jammed the solar wing in a folded position. Using a rope sling, Conrad forced the array beam to deploy. Full extension of the solar panel occurred later, providing electrical power crucial for the three planned piloted missions.


Image above: During a spacewalk on June 7, 1973, astronaut Joseph Kerwin uses a cutting instrument to remove metal which had jammed the solar array in a partially opened position. The successful effort by Kerwin and Charles Conrad allowed the solar panels to fully deploy and provide the needed electricity for the three Skylab expeditions. Image Credit: NASA.

With the Skylab 2 mission back on track, the crew focused on the primary goals of the program -- studies in materials processing in microgravity, Earth observations, expanding knowledge of solar astronomy, and proving that humans could live and work in space for extended periods.

The longest American spaceflight at that point was the 14-day mission of Gemini 7 astronauts Frank Borman and James Lovell. Skylab 2 would double that record and show that the astronauts adapted well.


Image above: Skylab 3 science astronaut Owen Garriott operates the Apollo Telescope Mount from a console in the Skylab space station. Observations of the sun were a primary achievement of the program. Image Credit: NASA.

"Mobility around here is super," Conrad said. "Every kid in the United States would have a blast up here."

Following splashdown in the Pacific Ocean and recovery of Skylab 2 on June 22, 1973, NASA Administrator James Fletcher had high praise for the crew and the entire agency-industry team.

"For the first time, a crew of astronauts has returned from an extended tour in a space laboratory," he said. "Essentially all of the objectives for this mission have been completed."

Skylab 3 launched the second crew on July 28, 1973, with Alan Bean, Owen Garriott and Jack Lousma aboard.

Early in the mission, Garriott and Lousma performed a spacewalk to erect a new twin-pole solar shield that provided better thermal control for the remainder of the Skylab missions.


Image above: Skylab 4 commander Gerald Carr flies the astronaut maneuvering equipment experiment in the forward compartment of the Skylab space station. The jet-propelled back pack was designed to demonstrate the unit's flying qualities. The effort helped pave the way for use of the Manned Maneuvering Unit that aided spacewalkers during the space shuttle program. Image Credit: NASA.

The second crew returned to Earth Sept. 25, 1973, following 59 days in orbit.

Skylab 4 originally was planned for a mission of about the same length. When the final Skylab expedition was extended to 80 days or more, NASA's Preflight Operations Branch at Kennedy, under Raul "Ernie" Reyes, was given the challenge to squeeze another 980 pounds of food, film and equipment into the Apollo command module. Using Reyes' "a place for everything, and everything in its place" philosophy, his team succeeded in using every cubic inch of storage space.

On Nov. 16, 1973, astronauts Gerald Carr, Edward Gibson and William Pogue lifted off. During their 84-day mission, the Skylab 4 crew continued the comprehensive research programs.

All three expeditions produced a vast study of the Earth -- its crops, weather and changes in environment. They also completed a revealing study of the sun, while crews manufactured alloys, grew perfect crystals and learned to work in space.

Following splashdown and recovery on Feb. 8, 1974, Fletcher stressed the importance of Skylab's accomplishments for the future of human spaceflight.

"It has moved the space program from the realm of the spectacular, into a new phase that can be characterized possibly as almost businesslike," he said. "It has contributed to an orderly transition from the Apollo era to the space shuttle."

Skylab 3 pilot Jack Lousma recently noted that the program helped pave the way for long-duration missions in low-Earth orbit as well as to Mars and beyond.

"Flights of 28, 59 and 84 days were forerunners of what we are doing now aboard the International Space Station," he said. "The fact that we could work in space for longer periods is one of the things we were able to prove during Skylab."

Images (mentioned), Text, Credit: NASA / Bob Granath.

Cheers, Orbiter.ch