Shop at the MoonViews Store
Shop at the MoonViews Store

Main

Lunar Orbiter Camera Archives

September 20, 2009

Lunar Orbiter's Kodak Camera Profiled

The Kodak Lunar Orbiter Camera, American Society of Cinematographers Blog

"The recent media attention given to the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 mission to the moon, with its dramatic restored video of Neil Armstrong’s first steps onto the lunar surface, has re-ignited our nation’s interest in extra-terrestrial exploration. But this mission would not have been possible had it not been for a series of lunar surface mapping missions that were made several years before.  It is a story that is not as dramatic as that of the first humans to walk on the moon. But it is a fascinating story, nonetheless, of the way that the entire Apollo program pushed beyond the then perceived limits of technology. And the Eastman Kodak Company was a major player."

"The recent AMIA (Association of Moving Image Archivists) symposium held at the Dunn Theater of the AMPAS Pickford Center in Hollywood featured jaw-dropping presentations by Al Sturm and Ralph Sargent of the history of this program as well as the forensic-like work to find and restore its lost images. It is this latter theme I will take up soon along with the recent new photos also taken by a high resolution Kodak digital camera."

July 22, 2009

Lunar Orbiter In The News

Kodak has played big role in space program, Democrat and Chronicle

"Kodak designed and built the cameras and film processing used in the five lunar orbiters sent to photograph the moon’s surface in 1966 and 1967 in preparation for the manned landing. Those orbiters shot panoramic strips of the lunar surface and transmitted them back to Earth before the orbiters crashed into the moon, said Todd Gustavson, curator of technology at the George Eastman House."

To the Moon - with extreme engineering - Spontaneous, improvised - would it be allowed to happen now?, The Register

"It's a temptation, watching many of the 40th Anniversary retrospectives, to think of the Apollo space program as a triumph of power and industrial might. The superpowers' space programs were, of course, political and chauvinistic, designed to showcase national wealth. But there's a better way of looking at the program, Dennis Wingo reminded me recently. Masses of money helped put man on the Moon of course, but the Moon program is really a tale of engineering improvisation and human organisation. ... The Lunar Orbiter astonishes even today. It had to take pictures, scan and develop the film on board, and broadcast it successfully back to earth. Naturally, the orbiter had to provide its own power, orient itself without intervention from ground control, and maintain precise temperature conditions and air pressure for the film processing, and protect itself from solar radiation and cosmic rays - all within severe size and weight constraints. This was far beyond the capabilities of the newest spy satellites, which back then returned the film to earth in a canister, retrieved by a specially kitted-out plane. The Orbiter challenge was the Apollo challenge in miniature."

Space News
- Moontoday.net
- OnOrbit.com
- SpaceRef.com
- ColabSpace

About Lunar Orbiter Camera

This page contains an archive of all entries posted to MoonViews - Providing Imagery and Data For Lunar Exploration in the Lunar Orbiter Camera category. They are listed from oldest to newest.

Lunar Orbiter is the previous category.

Maps is the next category.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

PARTICIPANTS
- NASA ESMD
- NASA IPP
- NASA ARC
- NASA LSI
- ACES
- SpaceRef Interactive
- SkyCorp
- Odyssey Moon
- USGS
- LPI
- PDS

LUNAR ORBITER
- Overview
- Images
- Documents

LUNAR MISSIONS
Scientific
- Apollo
- Chandrayaan-1
- Chang'e-1
- Clementine
- Kaguya
- Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
- LCROSS
- Luna
- Lunakhod
- Lunar Prospector
- Ranger
- SMART-1
- Surveyor
- Zond

Commercial
- Google Lunar X Prize

 

Copyright 2008
MoonViews LLC