Tag: apollo 11

Remembering Apollo 11

Members of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics are sharing their experiences and memories of Apollo 11 on AIAA’s Engage platform. Some excerpts are below.

Apollo sets the bar for technical, managerial, and societal achievement. It showed us that we could take on challenges with little or no idea how we would accomplish the goal, suffer through painful accidents, and still achieve the goal. – Dan Dumbacher

I was astounded that we actually made it to the Moon in the summer of 1969.  Not because all our calculations came true, but mainly that we were so lucky with all the hardware.  – Michael Helton

50 years ago I was a student, sitting in a aerodynamics class at Pakistan Air Force College of Aeronautical Engineering Korangi Creek. Our beloved professor Colonel William C Whicher (USAF) brought a big radio into the classroom. We all went hush before Neil Armstrong’s famous words came out of that radio. – Aslam Halim

Collins won the contract for the communications system and I was handed the job of designing the Antenna assembly. I don’t remember the details now, but I do know that my contribution to Apollo made it to the moon and back home. – Robert Reynolds

So my task was to measure the conductivities of samples of RP-1 containing various commercially-available anti-static additives, and determine the additive providing the highest conductivity to the rocket fuel. – Ronald I. Miller

Watching a friend [Neil Armstrong] be the first to step onto the Moon’s surface was an unbelievable experience. I wrote him a letter congratulating him on his execution of the mission and received a wonderful letter back which is my treasure from the Apollo 11 mission. – Lloyd Hackman

The most remarkable thing about the Apollo program to me is that it was accomplished without desktop or handheld computers, on the schedule that all are familiar with. – Lou Cassel

One of my first tasks after coming to Houston from Brooklyn Poly, my boss, George Strouhal, asked me to run an aerodynamic heating computer program for the aft shingle on the Gemini assuming the vehicle oscillated during reentry. Using a crude computer, probably an IBM 709 or 7094, the results came out in about 4 minutes. George then asked me to see if the results were correct and to do this by hand.  It took me about two long days to get results within a 100 degrees Fahrenheit for a simple reentry. – Paul Murad

I am just barely old enough to remember sitting in front of the television, waiting for a rocket to launch. It seemed like forever. My father was a commercial airline pilot. He died when I was very young. But he imprinted his love of airplanes and space travel on our family. – Jolie Elder

I certainly recall the 1st moonwalk, since I was away at summer camp and they woke us all up to go see it in the middle of the night. – Wayne Lundberg

Everything changed in May 1961, when JFK made his famous “Man on the Moon” speech.  Not long after, I met with a fellow from the newly-formed Space Task Group.  He asked what I’d been working on, and I said, “lunar trajectories.”  He said, “Oh, you mean Apollo.”  It was the first time that I’d heard the word. – Jack Crenshaw

On the evening of 18 July 1969, the second full day of the [Boy Scout] Jamboree, we went to the amphitheater for our regular nightly meeting and program. The announcement was made that a special message had been sent to us… You can imagine how we reacted when a moment later we heard Neil Armstrong speaking to us while he was flying toward the Moon. – Russell Cummings

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50 Journal Papers To Celebrate Apollo 11

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Michele McDonald
703.264.7542
[email protected]

July 8, 2019 – Reston, Va. – Want to learn about the technology that allowed the Apollo program to succeed? From launch-vehicle design to reentry flight dynamics and more, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) has it covered with 50 Papers for 50 Years as part of its 50th anniversary celebration of the first lunar landing.

“AIAA members have played crucial roles in every major aerospace milestone,” said Dan Dumbacher, AIAA executive director. “As the world’s largest professional society dedicated to aerospace, AIAA is proud to celebrate the technical achievements of the dedicated innovators whose work put us on the moon.”

Current editors of AIAA journals selected representative papers with publication dates ranging from 1947 through 2008 from the AIAA journal archives found at AIAA’s Aerospace Research Central (ARC). The papers are available for free and represent a range of technical topics, time periods, and historical perspectives, including pre-Apollo work and events, ground-support development, communication, landing-on-Earth challenges, flight simulations for astronauts, supporting human flight, launch-vehicle design, flight-control development, orbital dynamics, reentry flight dynamics, science, and historical perspectives.

ARC, AIAA’s electronic library, contains titles from AIAA and its predecessor organizations dating back to the 1930s, including eight technical journals, three book series, conference meeting papers, national and international standards documents, a growing number of eBooks and other electronic products.

Please visit https://aiaa.org/resources/apollo-50th/ for more ways AIAA is celebrating the Apollo 50th. For information about the industry’s only conference that encompasses aeronautics, space propulsion and energy technologies, please click on AIAA Propulsion and Energy Forum and Exposition to learn more about the forum held 19-22 August in Indianapolis, Indiana.

About AIAA

The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 85 countries, and 98 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, aiaa.org, or follow us on Twitter @AIAA.

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American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
12700 Sunrise Valley Drive, Suite 200, Reston, VA 20191-5807
Phone: 703.264.7558 Fax: 703.264.7551  aiaa.org

AIAA Mourns the Passing of Michael Collins

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 28, 2021 – Reston, Va. – The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) mourns the passing of Michael Collins, Apollo 11 astronaut and AIAA Fellow. AIAA Executive Director Dan Dumbacher made the following statement:

“Michael Collins was a space pioneer. As a U.S. Air Force test pilot and NASA astronaut, he pushed the boundaries of our knowledge about flight and the human spirit. We especially remember him and his crewmates, Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, for their bravery and courage in twice traversing the wine-dark sea of space to successfully complete the historic Apollo 11 mission. As an AIAA Fellow since 1976, he was recognized for his distinction in aeronautics and astronautics, having made valuable contributions to the field.

Collins’ advocacy and enthusiasm for space, as well as for STEM education before it had a name, are examples for us all to follow. We are grateful for what he showed us about how to explore our universe when he said, ‘I think a future flight should include a poet, a priest and a philosopher… we might get a much better idea of what we saw.’ Ad Astra, Michael Collins.”

AIAA Media Contact: Rebecca B. Gray, [email protected], 804-397-5270.

About AIAA
The American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) is the world’s largest aerospace technical society. With nearly 30,000 individual members from 91 countries, and 100 corporate members, AIAA brings together industry, academia, and government to advance engineering and science in aviation, space, and defense. For more information, visit aiaa.org, or follow AIAA on TwitterFacebook, or LinkedIn.