Aktuális sajtó tartalmak és illusztrációs fotók

1960s space program képek

3 393 találat
  • / 85
  • kép/oldal:
RF
National Air And Space Museum Suspended X15 Rocket Plane Washington DC United States // WASHINGTON DC, United States — Visitors explore the Milestones of Flight Hall at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum beneath a suspended North American X-15 rocket plane. Bearing the tail number 66670, this specific aircraft is the X-15-1, a hypersonic research vehicle operated jointly by NASA and the U.S. Air Force to investigate the extreme aerodynamic and thermal conditions of high-altitude flight. The broader X-15 program set world speed and altitude records in the 1960s, reaching Mach 6.7 and-stock-foto
RM
A vintage black and white photo captures the intense energy flash during a hypervelocity impact test at NASA's Ames Research Center circa 1963, simulating a spacecraft hitting orbital debris at 17,000 mph.-stock-foto
RM
Yuri Gagarin during classes at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy, 1960s.-stock-foto
RM
Yuri Gagarin Always Sat at the Front Desk at the Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy, 1960s.-stock-foto
RM
Lesson on Engine Design and Durability - Class Conducted by V. Krasavtsev at Zhukovsky Air Force Engineering Academy, 1960s. Among the audience was Yuri Gagarin.-stock-foto
RM
Scientists at NASA’s Langley Research Center test a transparent plexiglass space station airlock model to study astronaut mobility in a pressurized suit. The experiment evaluates movement constraints, clearance tolerances, and operational safety during simulated entry and exit procedures—critical research for the future of long-duration space missions.-stock-foto
RM
IBM System/360 Model 91 NASA 1960 pople using computers-stock-foto
RM
Astronaut Gordon Cooper, Command Pilot for NASA's Gemini V Mission, in flight suit ready for weight and balance tests in the Pyro Installation Building.-stock-foto
RF
WASHINGTON DC — The Apollo lunar suit evolution exhibit at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum displays the development of NASA's spacesuit designs from the mid-1960s through the Apollo program. The display features the Apollo Experimental Spacesuit No. 1 (AX1-L), one of the earliest suits made by International Latex Company (ILC) in 1965, shown without its thermal cover layer to reveal the inner construction and restraint system. The second suit is an Apollo A5-L Pressure Suit, a fifth-generation ILC prototype also displayed without its cover layer to demonstrate joint mobility and-stock-foto
RF
CHANTILLY, Virginia — The Mobile Quarantine Facility (MQF) housed Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins immediately after their return from the Moon in July 1969. The converted Airstream trailer served as an isolation unit to prevent the unlikely spread of lunar pathogens, containing living and sleeping quarters, a kitchen, and bathroom with air pressure maintained lower than outside pressure. The astronauts, along with a physician and technician, remained in the facility for over 60 hours during transport from the USS Hornet aircraft carrier to Pearl Harbor Nav-stock-foto
RF
CHANTILLY, Virginia — The Mobile Quarantine Facility (MQF) housed Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins immediately after their return from the Moon in July 1969. The converted Airstream trailer served as an isolation unit to prevent the unlikely spread of lunar pathogens, containing living and sleeping quarters, a kitchen, and bathroom with air pressure maintained lower than outside pressure. The astronauts, along with a physician and technician, remained in the facility for over 60 hours during transport from the USS Hornet aircraft carrier to Pearl Harbor Nav-stock-foto
RF
CHANTILLY, Virginia — The Mobile Quarantine Facility (MQF) housed Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins immediately after their return from the Moon in July 1969. The converted Airstream trailer served as an isolation unit to prevent the unlikely spread of lunar pathogens, containing living and sleeping quarters, a kitchen, and bathroom with air pressure maintained lower than outside pressure. The astronauts, along with a physician and technician, remained in the facility for over 60 hours during transport from the USS Hornet aircraft carrier to Pearl Harbor Nav-stock-foto
RM
The Gemini Giant muffler man at South Island Park on Route 66 in Wilmington, Illinois.  The fiberglass figure is 30ft tall.-stock-foto
RM
The Gemini Giant muffler man at South Island Park on Route 66 in Wilmington, Illinois.  The fiberglass figure is 30ft tall.-stock-foto
RM
Colorful murals at South Island Park on in Wilmington, Illinois. The mural on the right depicts the Gemini Giant, a 30-ft tall muffler man.-stock-foto
RM
Colorful murals at South Island Park on in Wilmington, Illinois. The mural on the left depicts the Gemini Giant, a 30-ft tall muffler man.-stock-foto
RM
The Gemini Giant muffler man at South Island Park on Route 66 in Wilmington, Illinois.  The fiberglass figure is 30ft tall.-stock-foto
RM
The Gemini Giant muffler man at South Island Park on Route 66 in Wilmington, Illinois.  The fiberglass figure is 30ft tall.-stock-foto
RM
The Gemini Giant muffler man at South Island Park on Route 66 in Wilmington, Illinois.  The fiberglass figure is 30ft tall.-stock-foto
RF
CASTOR research rocket on its launch tower at the historic CELPA 1 base in Chamical, La Rioja, Argentina. Pioneer Argentine space program.-stock-foto
RM
President John F. Kennedy receives a briefing on the Apollo program, the ambitious project to land a man on the Moon. The first U.S. manned space missions took place during his administration, with Kennedy championing NASA and fostering public interest in space exploration. The blockhouse, a reinforced, dome-shaped bunker near the launch pad, used ceiling-mounted periscopes for safe rocket observation. In the foreground, scale models depict key Apollo components, including the Vertical Assembly Building, where Saturn rockets were assembled for their lunar missions.-stock-foto
RF
Apollo command module capsule with heat-scorched exterior on display at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex.-stock-foto
RF
View from the Moon with craters on Earth in deep space. Moon and Earth. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Earth seen from the surface of the Moon. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Moon with craters in deep space. Moon and Earth at night. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Moon surface in deep space. Moon and Earth at night. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
View from the Moon on Earth in outer space. Moon and Earth. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Earth planet from Moon surface. Moon and Earth. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Moon surface with cosmonaut in the background of Earth. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Moon surface with astronaut in the background of night Earth. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RF
Moon surface with astronaut in the background of planet Earth. Elements of this image furnished by NASA.-stock-foto
RM
Cover of the volume one DVD of animated children's TV series Wacky Races, which was first shown in 1968-stock-foto
RM
Cover of the volume one DVD of animated children's TV series Wacky Races, which was first shown in 1968-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was a Swedish electric medium-format camera used in the Apollo 11 command module in 1969 and adopted for U.S. space missions after Project Mercury. It featured motor-driven film preparation and interchangeable black and white or color magazines. The archival image documents the camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was an electric Swedish camera used in the Apollo 11 command module during the 1969 lunar mission and standardized for American space missions after Project Mercury. It employed a motor-driven shutter and interchangeable film magazines. The archival image records the camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was a medium-format electric camera employed in the Apollo 11 command module in 1969 and adopted as standard on American space missions after Project Mercury. Built in Sweden, it featured motorized film advance and interchangeable film magazines. The archival image documents the camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was a Swedish electric still camera used in the Apollo 11 command module in 1969 and standardized for U.S. space missions after Project Mercury. It incorporated a motor-driven film and shutter mechanism and detachable film magazines. The archival image records the camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was a motor-driven Swedish medium-format camera used aboard the Apollo 11 command module in 1969 and adopted for American space missions after Project Mercury. It accepted interchangeable black and white or color film magazines. The archival image documents the spaceflight camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was an electric medium-format camera employed in the Apollo 11 command module in 1969 and standardized for American space missions following Project Mercury. Manufactured in Sweden, it used a motor-driven film advance and detachable film magazines. The archival image records the camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto
RM
Hasselblad 70mm Camera, Apollo 11 was a Swedish-made electric still camera used in the Apollo 11 command module in 1969 and adopted as standard equipment on American space missions after Project Mercury. It featured a motor-driven mechanism and interchangeable film magazines. The archival image documents the spacecraft camera transferred by NASA to a museum in 1970.-stock-foto