On Eagle's Wings: The Parkes Observatory's Support of the Apollo 11 Mission

Author:

Sarkissian John M.

Abstract

AbstractAt 12:56 p.m., on Monday 21 July 1969 (AEST), six hundred million people witnessed Neil Armstrong's historic first steps on the Moon through television pictures transmitted to Earth from the lunar module, Eagle. Three tracking stations were receiving the signals simultaneously. They were the CSIRO's Parkes Radio Telescope, the Honeysuckle Creek tracking station near Canberra, and NASA's Goldstone station in California. During the first nine minutes of the broadcast, NASA alternated between the signals being received by the three stations. When they switched to the Parkes pictures, they were of such superior quality that NASA remained with them for the rest of the 2-hour moonwalk. The television pictures from Parkes were received under extremely trying and dangerous conditions. A violent squall struck the telescope on the day of the historic moonwalk. The telescope was buffeted by strong winds that swayed the support tower and threatened the integrity of the telescope structure. Fortunately, cool heads prevailed and as Aldrin activated the TV camera, the Moon rose into the field-of-view of the Parkes telescope. This report endeavours to explain the circumstances of the Parkes Observatory's support of the Apollo 11 mission, and how it came to be involved in the historic enterprise.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

Reference7 articles.

1. Parkes: Thirty Years of Radio Astronomy

2. Bolton J. G. 1973, ‘Support of the Apollo Missions to the Moon’. CSIRO Division of Radiophysics brochure on Research Activities 1973

3. Kelly H. W. 1969, ‘Apollo Mission Communications: Said the Spider in the Sky”. Electronics Australia, August 1969

4. Lindsay H. , ‘Tracks to the Moon”. Extracts from Hamish Lindsay”s unpublished book received by the author in 1998

5. Pioneering a New Astronomy: Papers in memory of John G. Bolton;Goddard;Australian Journal of Physics,1994

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