The Flickr Lc17A Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

Echo1_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1960, unnumbered NASA photo) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

Echo1_v_bw_o_n (ca. 1960, unnumbered NASA photo)

A clever, well-composed photo of Thor-Delta 144 on Launch Complex 17A. If the stamped date on the verso is accurate, four days later, on May 13, 1960, the vehicle was launched with its payload, the Echo 1 satellite.

“The mission, which was also the maiden voyage of the Thor-Delta launch vehicle, failed before deployment of the payload. The Thor stage performed properly, but during the coast phase, the attitude control jets on the unproven Delta stage failed to ignite, sending the payload into the Atlantic Ocean instead of into orbit.”

Above paraphrased from the following:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Echo
Credit: Wikipedia

The follow-up attempt, Echo 1A, was successfully launched on August 12, 1960.

Inexplicable mild waviness of the photo paper along the bottom edge does not detract.

www.thisdayinaviation.com/12-august-1960-2/
Credit: “This Day In Aviation” website

Spirit Launch by NASA on The Commons

Spirit Launch

Description: A trail of smoke is all that identifies the Delta II rocket with the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit aboard as it hurtles into space. Liftoff occurred on time at 1:58 p.m. EDT June 10, 2003, from Launch Complex 17-A, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Spirit was the first of two rovers launched to Mars in the summer of 2003. Spirit and its twin, Opportunity, landed on opposite sides of the planet in January 2004. Spirit's destination was Gusev Crater, which appears to have been a crater lake.

NASA Media Usage Guidelines

Credit: NASA
Image Number: KSC-03pd1892
Date: June 10, 2003

exp06_v_bw_o_n (PL-59-18310) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

exp06_v_bw_o_n (PL-59-18310)

“CCMTA, MTN, Pad 17A
Douglas Thor-Able Missile no. 134,
Phase 3 prior to Launch from Cape Canaveral.

Photo by: C. Rogers”

A stunning photograph…solely because of Mr. Chuck Rogers. A genius of a photographer way ahead of his time. I doubt there were many/ANY NASA characters in 1959 that had the slightest clue, inkling or savvy to see or recognize the power, mystique & majesty of ‘rocket photography’. That it was legitimately an art form…IMHO. I really think that it was just for the purpose of documentation. Hell, if I remember correctly & true, it was individual Astronauts’ initiative/thinking outside the box, that got the first cameras aboard their Mercury spacecraft.
The profound, chronic & pervasive cluelessness probably contributed to the ‘slow-scan’ or whatever they’re called tapes of no less than the APOLLO 11 EXTRAVEHICULAR ACTIVITIES being ERASED. I doubt that’s even the truth. In reality, some photo department genius probably recorded “Bowling For Dollars” episodes over it. “Erased” was bad enough to ‘admit’…there’s no way they’d own up to “recorded over”. The absolute pinnacle of NASA photographic dumbassery, regardless of the circumstances.

THANK YOU Mr. Rogers.

And, thank you Jeff Quitney. I've linked to his wonderful preservation of space history footage in the past. I hope he continues his amazing, and in my world, important work, or that it at least doesn't go 'poof' at some point. It'll be our..err, my loss:

vimeo.com/331471481
Credit: Jeff Quitney/Vimeo

pio00_v_bw_o_n (PL-58-45042) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

pio00_v_bw_o_n (PL-58-45042)

“CCMTA, Pad 17A
Launching of Lunar Probe no. 1
Photo by: Rogers”

8/17/58

Besides the historical significance & bold/desperate? endeavor represented, the photograph is exquisite photographic art/artistic photography, whichever…maybe both…plain & simple. Every aspect of it. The photographer, Chuck Rogers, a humble unassuming genius of a photographer.


“Able 1, later called Pioneer 0, was the first-ever launch to the Moon — and humanity’s first attempt to send a spacecraft anywhere beyond Earth orbit. The plan was to orbit the Moon, but a malfunction doomed the spacecraft. The mission predated NASA by a few months and was launched by the U.S. Air Force.

The mission launched about six and half months after Explorer 1, America’s first satellite.

The spacecraft's booster rocket exploded 73.6 seconds after launch.

The mission later became known as Pioneer 0, the start of the historic series of Pioneer missions that included Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11.

Nation: United States of America (USA)
Objective(s): Lunar Orbit
Spacecraft: Able 1
Spacecraft Mass: 84 pounds (38 kilograms)
Mission Design and Management: Advanced Research Projects Agency and U.S. Air Force Ballistic Missile Division
Launch Date and Time: Aug. 17, 1958 / 12:18 UT
Launch Site: Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. / Launch Complex 17A
Scientific Instruments:
1. Magnetometer
2. Micrometeoroid Detector
3. Two Temperature Sensors
4. TV Camera

Firsts:
- First attempt by any nation to launch a probe into deep space.
- First attempt by any nation to send a spacecraft to the Moon.

Key Dates:
Aug. 17, 1958: Launch
Aug. 17, 1958: End of mission

In Depth:
Able 1 (Pioneer 0)

On March 27, 1958, the U.S. Department of Defense announced the launch of four to five lunar probes later in the year, all under the supervision of the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) as part of scientific investigations during the International Geophysical Year.

Of these, one or two (later confirmed as two) would be carried out by the Army’s Ballistic Missile Agency and the other three by the Air Force’s Ballistic Missile Division. This launch was the first of three Air Force attempts, and the first attempted deep space launch by any country.

The Able 1 spacecraft, a squat conical fiberglass structure built by Space Technology Laboratories (STL), carried a crude infrared TV scanner. The simple thermal radiation device carried a small parabolic mirror for focusing reflected light from the lunar surface onto a cell that would transmit voltage proportional to the light it received. Engineers painted a pattern of dark and light stripes on the spacecraft’s outer surface to regulate internal temperature. The spacecraft was also disinfected with ultraviolet light prior to launch.

The launch vehicle was a three-stage variant of the Thor intermediate-range ballistic missile (IRBM) with elements appropriated from the Vanguard rocket used on its second and third stages.

The entire project involved 3,000 people from 52 scientific and industrial firms, all but six of which firms were located in Southern California.

According to the ideal mission profile, Able 1 was designed to reach the Moon’s vicinity 2.6 days after launch following which the TX-8-6 solid-propellant motor would fire to insert the payload into orbit around the Moon. Orbital altitude would have been 18,000 miles (29,000 kilometers) with an optimal lifetime of about two weeks.

The actual mission, however, lasted only 73.6 seconds, the Thor first stage having exploded at an altitude of about 9 miles (15 kilometers) altitude. Telemetry was received from the payload for at least 123 seconds after the explosion, probably until impact in the Atlantic. Investigators concluded that the accident had been caused by a turbopump gearbox failure.

The mission was not named at the time but has been retroactively known as Pioneer 0.

Key Source:

“Beyond Earth: A Chronicle of Deep Space Exploration, 1958-2016.’ NASA History Program Office, 2018, Siddiqi, Asif A.”

The above, shockingly well-written & informative, from/at:

solarsystem.nasa.gov/missions/pioneer-0/in-depth/

Also:

nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/nmc/spacecraft/display.action?id=ABLE1

08_002095 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58 by San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

08_002095 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58

----Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

08_002093 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58 by San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

08_002093 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58

----Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

08_002105 Thor Able launch from Patrick AFB 1958 by San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

08_002105 Thor Able launch from Patrick AFB 1958

----Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

08_002080 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58 by San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

08_002080 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58

----Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

08_002096 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58 by San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

08_002096 TRW satellite launch with Thor Able rocket 12Apr58

----Note: This material may be protected by Copyright Law (Title 17 U.S.C.)--Repository: San Diego Air and Space Museum

pio01/Thor130_v_bw_o_n (Thor-DM18 Able-1, official USAF photo, no. +160329 A.C.) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

pio01/Thor130_v_bw_o_n (Thor-DM18 Able-1, official USAF photo, no. +160329 A.C.)

“The Air Force Thor-Able lunar probe missile was launched at 4:42 a.m., 11 October 1958, in an effort to reach the near vicinity of the moon. The three-stage rocket left the earth successfully, carrying a small instrumented vehicle, the “Pioneer”. The “Pioneer” reached more than 79,900 miles into space before falling back to earth.”

Pioneer 1 info:

space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/pioneer-012.htm
Credit: Gunter’s Space Page

en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pioneer_1
Credit: Wikipedia

Thor136_v_bw_o_n (AFMTC photo PL-59-19857) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

Thor136_v_bw_o_n (AFMTC photo PL-59-19857)

"CCMTA, MTN, Pad 17A
Prelaunch Douglas Thor-Able
Missile #136,
Photo by Westberg"

Transit 1A launch preparations.

"Transit spacecraft were developed for updating the inertial navigation systems onboard US Navy Polaris submarines, and later for civilian use. The receivers used the known characteristics of the satellite's orbit, measured the Doppler shift of the satellite's radio signal, and thereby calculated the receiver's position on the earth.

Transit 1A was launched on a Thor-DM18 Able-2 (mod),
space.skyrocket.de/doc_lau_det/thor-dm18_able-2m.htm
but failed to reach orbit. The signals received from the satellite during the suborbital flight were used to verify the concept."

Above credit the wonderful "Gunter's Space Page", at:

space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/transit-1.htm

syncomc_v_c_o_AKP (102-KSC-64C-3032, 8-19-64) by Mike Acs

© Mike Acs, all rights reserved.

syncomc_v_c_o_AKP (102-KSC-64C-3032, 8-19-64)

"View of T.A.D. 25 missile with Syncom-C (A-27) on launcher pad 17A. Really really nice composition - the first geostationary satellite, Syncom C/A-27 (aka Syncom 3 upon reaching orbit).

Superb information - per usual - at:

www.spacelaunchreport.com/thorflew.html

Specifically:

www.spacelaunchreport.com/Delta-D-Card.jpg
Credit: Space Launch Report website

And of course:

space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/syncom-1.htm
Credit: Gunter's Space Page

Thor-able launch July 1958 Mice in space by BLTP Photo

© BLTP Photo, all rights reserved.

Thor-able launch July 1958 Mice in space

1958 July 10 - 02:30 GMT - Cape Canaveral LC17A. Thor Able 118 Able RTV re-entry vehicle test flight Agency: USAF 6555ATW. Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi). Mouse 'Mia II' reached 1600 km altitude, flew 9600 km range, but re-entry vehicle not recovered. No picture credit

Thor-able launch caption by BLTP Photo

© BLTP Photo, all rights reserved.

Thor-able launch caption

I think this is the launch shame about the mouse! "1958 July 10 - 02:30 GMT - Cape Canaveral LC17A. Thor Able 118 Able RTV re-entry vehicle test flight Agency: USAF 6555ATW. Apogee: 1,600 km (900 mi). Mouse 'Mia II' reached 1600 km altitude, flew 9600 km range, but re-entry vehicle not recovered."