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Restoring History

NASA's early lunar images, in a new light, Los Angeles Times

"Rising over the battered surface of the moon, Earth loomed in a shimmering arc covered in a swirling skin of clouds. The image, taken in 1966 by NASA's robotic probe Lunar Orbiter 1, presented a stunning juxtaposition of planet and moon that no earthling had ever seen before. It was dubbed the Picture of the Century. "The most beautiful thing I'd ever seen," remembered Keith Cowing, who saw it as an 11-year-old and credited it with eventually luring him to work for NASA. But in the mad rush of discovery, even the breathtaking can get mislaid. But in the mad rush of discovery, even the breathtaking can get mislaid. NASA was so preoccupied with getting an astronaut to the moon ahead of the Soviets that little attention was paid to the mountains of scientific data that flowed back to Earth from its early space missions. The data, stored on miles of fragile tapes, grew into mountains that were packed up and sent to a government warehouse with crates of other stuff. And so they eventually came to the attention of Nancy Evans, a no-nonsense woman with flaming red hair that fit her sometimes-impatient nature."

Comments (4)

Mark Booher:

What a great discovery. This is the stuff of a science fiction movies, where further analysis of the pictures shows some significant lunar surface changes since the pictures were taken in the 1960's. Can't wait for all of the pictures to made public.

Bill Hubeny:

Great Job.
I'll bet this story would make a great book.
I'd buy it.

Marc Ducret:

My father worked on the shutter for the lunar orbiter for Bolsey in Stamford, CT. He is Swiss and knew Emily Bolsey from his work in the camera industry. The shutter for the orbiter would not work properly; his project was to fix it quickly since they were behind schedule. One problem was that the camera shutter would intermittently trigger due to a transient signal in the electronics. They had a fix for the problem, but there was no time to implement it before the launch. The interesting thing about this picture is that he was told it was taken by accident, that same shutter glitch triggered this picture. Amazing to think that they could transport these pictures to earth over the radio, no one had heard of the internet or a camera phone back then! He was given a 4' x 2' framed photo of this picture in 1966, it still hangs in his office. Great to learn about this work and to see these beautiful pictures being restored and shared!

http://history.nasa.gov/TM-3487/ch8-5.htm
By late October Lunar Orbiter management had narrowed the reason behind Eastman Kodak's failure to meet schedules to two hardware items: the shutter for the 60-mm-focal-length lens and the Velocity-over-Height (V/H) sensor. Both of these were being manufactured by a subcontractor to Eastman Kodak, Bolsey Associates, Inc.

Emil Bolsey
http://www.nyjnews.com/obituary/obit.php3?id=1364394

Rick Pittaro:

I worked a summer Job at Bolsey Associates as a QC tech in 1966 just before the first Lunar orbital shot. My late mother Theresa Pittaro who worked in the accounting department, got me the job. It was a great experience, assisting the talented engineering team that worked there. Although it was forty some years ago I remember an incident when we were leaving the lab and the camera shutter fired on it's own, possibly triggered by the lights being turned off. That generated a lot of hasty activity. I'm not sure if the cause was found, as I went back to school soon after.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on March 22, 2009 5:57 AM.

The previous post in this blog was Newly Restored "Picture of the Century": Lunar Orbiter 2's View of Copernicus.

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