Jump to content

This Day in Spaceflight History


Recommended Posts

November 6

1918: Robert Goddard demonstrated his cartridge rockets to the US Army at a proving ground in Maryland. They were about to fund his research for the war effort. However, the next day, Germany surrendered and World War I ended, and so did his funding.

Image result for goddard cartridge rocket

1966: The US Lunar Orbiter 2 probe was launched. It was to photograph possible lunar landing spots for the Apollo landings. It was launched by an Atlas-Agena D into a parking orbit then injected itself into a 4 day drift to the Moon. A course correction on November 8 increased its speed. On November 10, a maneuver allowed the Moon's gravity to pull it in to it's initial orbit trajectory. It was placed into its final orbit on November 15. It began taking pictures of the surface on November 18 and surveyed 13 possible landing spots. It took 208 until November 25.

Image result for lunar orbiter 2 launch

1970: The 500th satellite launched from Cape Canaveral to successfully placed in orbit, IMEWS 1, was launched.

Image result for imews 1 launch

1985: STS-61-A and its crew of 8 landed back at Edwards AFB after a mission into orbit.

Image result for sts-61-a landing

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 7

1963: An Apollo LES test was conducted on the launcpad, called the Apollo Pad Abort Mission 1. The escape tower sent the capsule in a ballisitc trajectory and was brought back to the ground by drogue and pilot chutes.

Image result for apollo pad abort mission 1

1967: Surveyor 6 was launched. It was launched by the last Atlas D rocket to be launched from the Vandenburg AFB. It made a soft touchdown, took a surface sample, and lifted off the surface briefly for a propulsion test.

Image result for surveyor 6 launch

1996: The Mars Global Surveyor was launched. It entered an elliptical polar orbit of Mars on September 12, 1997. It aerobraked to lower itself into a smaller circular orbit. After the long aerobraking phase, it began to photograph and observe changes on Mars' surface in March of 1999. The last signals of the spacecraft were recieved on November 3, 2006.

Image result for mars global surveyor launch

1998: STS-95 and its crew of 7 landed back at Cape Canaveral after a mission into orbit.

Image result for sts-95 landing

2007: STS-120 and its crew of 8 landed back at Cape Canaveral after a mission to the ISS.

Image result for sts-120 landing

2013: Soyuz TMA-11M and its crew of 3 launched into orbit on a mission to the ISS. It docked with the station on the same day. After it served its purpose at the station, it undocked on May 13, 2014 and deorbited and landed on May 14.

Image result for soyuz tma-11m launch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 8

1958: Pioneer 2 lunar probe was launched by a Thor-Able booster. It failed to reach escape velocity.

Image result for pioneer 2 launch

1960: The Mercury Little Joe 5 (LJ-5) test was conducted at Wallops Island. It tested the abort system at the most severe conditions during launch. The test was nominal the first 15 seconds of flight, but the LES fired prematurely. Also, the spacecraft failed to detach from the booster. The whole thing crashed to the ground and was completely destroyed. Another identical test was then planned.

Image result for mercury little joe 5

1966: The Gemini 12 countdown was postponed because of an inefficient power supply in the secondary computer. It was originally scheduled for November 9. Maintenance on the systems postponed it until November 10.

Image result for gemini 12 before liftoff

1982: A meteorite fell into the roof of a house in Wethersfield, Connecticut, without injuring any of its occupants. It was the second meterorite to fall in Wethersfield in its short span of 11 years at that time.

Image result for wethersfield meteorite house

1984: STS-51-a and its crew of 6 was launched into orbit on an 8 day mission. It deployed the Anik D2 (November 9), a Canadian telecommunications satellite; and Syncom IV-1 (November 10), a geosynchronous civilian communications satellite. It was the first mission to retrieve two satellites in one mission, PALAPA B-2 and WESTAR V1, which were both communications satellites.

Image result for sts-51-a launch

2011: The Russain Fobos-Grunt satellite was launched. It was to land on Mars' moon Phobos and retrieve a sample of its surface. The propulsion system to boost it out of an Earth parking orbit failed to ignite.

Image result for phobos-grunt satellite launch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 9

1967: Apollo 4 was launched. It was the first in-flight test of the Saturn V and a test of the CM heat shield. It was the first use of the Saturn V. It carried with it a LM and a CSM. It was to test the structural and thermal integrity of all the rocket components. It was launched 1 second later than planned. It spent 8 and a half ours in orbit. The SM deorbited the CM and the CM landed near Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean, just 14 kilometers away from its target landing spot.

Image result for apollo 4

2005: The ESA's Venus Express was launched after a delay from October 26. It was placed into a parking orbit then boosted towards Venus. It flew by the Moon on November 10 and went on to orbit of the Sun. It reached orbit of Venus on April 11, 2006.

  Image result for venus express launch

Edited by The Raging Sandwich
Link to comment
Share on other sites

@cubinator, this is what wikipedia says:
 

Quote

'Apollo 4, (also known as AS-501), was the first, unmanned test flight of the Saturn V launch vehicle, which was used by the U.S. Apollo program to send the first astronauts to the Moon....' '....Apollo 4 was an "all-up" test, meaning all rocket stages and spacecraft were fully functional on the initial flight, a first for NASA.....'

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 10

1933: US astronaut Ronald Ellwin Evans was born. He was the CM pilot on Apollo 17.

Image result for ronald evans astronaut

1968: Zond 6 was launched. It was another test flight of the Soviet manned circumlunar spacecraft. It was launched towards the Moon and on November 12 it did a midcourse correction allowing it to loop around the Moon on November 14. While falling back to Earth, a gasket failed leading to complete depressurization in the spacecraft, which would've killed any crew onboard. It completed the first successful double-dip reentry, or coming in the atmosphere at a shallow angle and skip back out to break speed and then come back in for a landing. The parachute failed to open in time, causing the canopy to rip and the spacecraft to impact the ground.

Image result for zond 6 launch

1970: Luna 17 was launched, It achieved a parking orbit around Earth, completed a TLI burn, achieved lunar orbit, and landed the Lunokhod 1 rover. It rolled down a ramp and started exploring the lunar surface. The systems onboard Lunokhod ceased on October 14, 1971.

Image result for lunokhod 1

1997: Sputnik 40, a student-made remake of Sputnik 1, was hand-launched from the Mir space station on an EVA.

Image result for sputnik 40

2002: Soyuz TM-34 and its crew of 3 landed back at Earth after a mission to the ISS.

Image result for soyuz tm-34 landing

2009: The Poisk module for the ISS was launched. It was a research vessel docked to the zenith port of the Zvezda module on November 12.

Image result for iss poisk module

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 11

1572: Astronomer Tycho Brahe observed the Supernova 1572.

Image result for supernova 1572

1966: The Agena target vehicle for Gemini 12 was launched. The spacecraft would dock to it during its mission.

Image result for gemini 12 agena target vehicle launch

1966: Gemini 12 and its crew of Aldrin and Lovell was launched into orbit on a 4 day mission. It was the last Gemini mission. They docked numerous times to the Agena target vehicle and Aldrin proves that the EVA could be done without overloading the suit. The spacecraft first rendezvoused to the Agena 3 hours and 45 minutes after liftoff and docked at 4 hours and 13 minutes. Aldrin performed a two-hour EVA which made him do various tasks. A second EVA laster 55 minutes.

Image result for gemini 12 launch

1982: STS-5 and its crew of 4 launched into orbit on a 5 day mission. It was the first mission to deploy commerical communications satellites. It deployed the SBS 3 and the Anik C3.

Image result for sts-5 launch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1961: The launch of Mercury-Atlas 5 was postponed until November 29 due to technical difficulties.

Image result for mercury atlas 5

1965: The Soviet Venera 2 probe was launched directly at Venus. It flew by Venus on February 27, 1966 but all systems inside the spacecraft ceased to operate before it reached Venus.

Image result for venera 2 launch

1980: Voyager 1 started its flyby of the planet Saturn, the second stop in its trip.

Image result for voyager 1 saturn

1981: STS-2 and its crew of 2 was launched into orbit on a 2 day mission. It was the second Shuttle spaceflight.

Image result for sts-2 launch

1995: STS-74 and its crew of 5 was launched into orbit on an 8 day mission to the Mir space station. It docked with the station on November 15. It delivered the Russian-built Shuttle Docking Module among other equipment.

Image result for sts-74 launch

2005: The Japanese Hayabusa probe released the Minerva nano-lander to land on the asteroid Itokawa. The lander missed the asteroid and the probe was placed 5 kilometers from the asteroid.

Image result for hayabusa probe lander

2014: The Rosetta probe's Philae lander landed on the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko. The thrusters on the lander were barely working and the harpoon to connect it with the comet failed to deploy. The lander bounced twice to another location with one of its three legs sticking up off of the surface. It landed under a crater cliff where it could not recieve enough solar power to keep functioning. [November 12 is not the day to be landing on stuff...]

Image result for philae lander

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 13

2006: Blue Origins launched the first prototype New Shepard spacecraft. It was an 84% subscale of the actual spacecraft. It was nicknamed the Goddard. It launched to an altitude of 285 feet and landed vertically.

Image result for blue origin goddard test

November 14

1930: The first American astronaut to go EVA Edward 'Ed' White was born. He flew on Gemini 4 where he did the EVA. He was one of the three crewmembers to die in the Apollo 1 fire.

Image result for ed white spacewalk

1933: US astronaut Fred Haise was born. He flew on Apollo 13.

Image result for fred haise

1956: One of the most famous Shuttle era astronauts Kenneth 'Ken' Bowersox was born. He flew on STS-50, 61, 73, 82, and ISS Expedition 6.

Image result for ken bowersox

1961: Egypt launched its first rocket.

1963: The X-20 Dynasoar program cancellation was proposed in favor of a Gemini space station.

Image result for x-20

1969: Apollo 12, the second manned mission to the surface of the Moon, and its crew of Alan Bean, Pete Conrad, and Richard Gordon was launched. During its launch in stormy weather, the Saturn V rocket was struck twice by lightning. The Earth orbit, TLI burn, and the translunar coast went as planned. It entered lunar orbit on November 17. One day later, the lander Intrepid and its crew of Bean and Conrad separated from the CM Yankee-Clipper and headed towards the lunar surface and landed on November 19 at 1:55 am at the Suveyor 3 landing sight where they recovered the lander's TV camera. The went back inside the lunar module after a 4 hour excursion on the surface and returned outside the same day. During another 4 hour EVA, they got back inside as the day changed to November 20. It launched off of the lunar surface on the same day after resting. It started its return journey to Earth on November 21.

 Image result for apollo 12 launch

1981: STS-2 and its crew of 2 landed back at Edwards AFB after a mission into orbit.

Image result for sts-2 landing

1994: STS-66 and its crew of 6 landed back at Edwards AFB after a mission into orbit.

Image result for sts-66 landing

2011: Soyuz TMA-22 and its crew of 3 launched into orbit on a mission to the ISS after a two-month launch delay. It docked to the station on November 16 and undocked and landed back at Earth on April 27, 2012.

Image result for soyuz tma-22 launch

Edited by The Raging Sandwich
Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 15

1630: German astronomer Johannes Kepler died.

Image result for johannes kepler

1966: Gemini 12 and its crew of Aldrin and Lovell landed back at Earth after the last Gemini mission.

Image result for gemini 12 landing

1967: Michael Adams, an X-15 test pilot, crashed an X-15 at Edwards AFB when he lost control during reentry.

Image result for x-15 crash

1988: The unmanned Russian Space Shuttle Buran was launched. The windspeed was 20 m/s, faster than the abort-worthy 15 m/s, but the launch pressed on anyways. It was placed perfectly into orbit. It retrofired 140 minutes into the flight. It landed at the Jubilee runway.

Image result for buran launch

1990: STS-38 and its crew of 5 was launched into orbit on a 5 day mission. It deployed the USA 67 probe, a Navy intelligence satellite, on the same day. It was placed into geostationary orbit by its own fuel source.

Image result for sts-38 launch

2008: STS-126 and its crew of 7 launched into orbit on a 16 day mission to the ISS. It docked to the station on November 16 and delivered the Leonardo module on November 17 to deliver supplies to the station that couldn't be lifted by a Progress ship. It undocked the Leonardo on November 26. It undocked from the station on November 28. It deployed a small satellite and deorbited and landed on November 29.

Image result for sts-126 launch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I propose a rarer photograph for the Buran, Energiya and the "grasshopper" transporter-erector:

gub3-29.jpg

On ‎15‎.‎11‎.‎2016 at 2:04 AM, The Raging Sandwich said:

2006: Blue Origins launched the first prototype New Shepard spacecraft. It was an 84% subscale of the actual spacecraft. It was nicknamed the Goddard. It launched to a 90 mile altitude and landed vertically.

Image result for blue origin new shepard first test flight

When you thought the undertones could not get any more obscene...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 16

1962: The third test of the Saturn C-1 (Later called the Saturn 1) was conducted. It was a suborbital flight used to test the first stage. The upper stages were filled with water to simulate a fully-loaded payload. It reached its apogee of 104 miles it exploded on command to send the water into the ionosphere. It froze into an ice crystal cloud several miles in diameter as part of "Project Highwater."

Image result for saturn c-1 test 3

1965: The Soviet Venus probe Venera 3 was launched. It was to make a soft touchdown on the surface of Venus. It impacted the surface on March 1, 1966, but the radio communications systems failed before any data could be transmitted.

Image result for venera 3 launch

1969: China launched their first satellite. It ended in failure. It was a Communist propoganda device like Sputnik. It was to play a song in orbit "The East is Red," China's national anthem. They launched an identical one that worked soon after. [When this information was released in 2001, China gave little information, only that it failed.]

Image result for china first satellite

1973: Skylab 4 and its crew of 3 was launched into orbit. It was the final mission to Skylab. It was an Apollo CSM launched by a Saturn 1-B. After 2 failed docking attempts, it managed to dock to the station on the same day as launch. The crew completed 4 EVAs during their stay. The mission was originally planned to last 56 days but was extended to 84.

Image result for skylab 4 launch

1982: STS-5 and its crew of 4 landed back at Earth after a mission into orbit.

Image result for sts-5 landing

1984: STS-51-A and its crew of 6 landed back at Cape Canaveral after a mission into orbit.

Image result for sts-51-a landing

2009: STS-129 and its crew of 6 was launched into orbit on an 11 day mission to the ISS. It was to replace spare components on the outside of the station.

Image result for sts-129 launch

Edited by The Raging Sandwich
1984 onward
Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 17

1970: Luna 17 and Lunokhod 1 landed on the Moon.

Image result for luna 17 and lunokhod on the moon

1975: Soyuz 20, an unmanned spacecraft, was launched into orbit. It was a 90 day test in orbit docked to the Salyut 4. It was to test various in-space systems during different conditions. It carried a biological payload. It was recovered on February 16, 1976.

1982: The last launch of a Titan IIID rocket was conducted at Vandenburg AFB.

Image result for last titan iiid launch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/14/2016 at 4:04 PM, The Raging Sandwich said:

November 13

2006: Blue Origins launched the first prototype New Shepard spacecraft. It was an 84% subscale of the actual spacecraft. It was nicknamed the Goddard. It launched to a 90 mile altitude and landed vertically.

Image result for blue origin new shepard first test flight

That's not Goddard, and the Goddard craft flew to an altitude of 285 ft, not 90 miles.

This is Goddard:

070103_blueorigin_lnch_02.grid-6x2.jpg

Edited by tater
Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 18

1923: Astronaut Alan Shepard was born. He became the first American in space on the Freedom 7 Mercury mission. He also flew on Apollo 14 taking role of Commander. 

Image result for alan shepard

1968: The Zond 6 Soviet lunar test spacecraft landed back at Earth. It landed nearly 1,800 km away from its target location and was found the next day.

1969: The Apollo 12 spacecraft entered lunar orbit. A 6-minute burn was conducted to enter an elliptical orbit and a minor course-correction later on circularized it.

Image result for apollo 12 spacecraft lunar orbit

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 19

1969: Apollo 12 landed on the lunar surface. It was a precision touchdown as it needed to be to land at the Surveyor 3. The first EVA was made to explore the area around the LM and set up small experiments.

Image result for apollo 12 lunar landing

1996: STS-80 and its crew of 5 launched into orbit on an 18-day mission. It deployed the Orfeus X-ray satellite on November 20 and the Wake Shield Facility materials science satellite on November 22. Four EVAs were planned but cancelled after the shuttle airlock hatch wouldn't open. The WSF was recovered on November 26 and the Orfeus on December 4. The landing was delayed for two days for bad weather at the KSC. It landed on December 7.

Image result for sts-80 launch

1997: STS-87 and its crew of 7 launched into orbit on a 16-day mission. It deployed the Spartan 201 X-ray satellite on November 21. The crew failed to send its maneuver commands. It was recovered by hand on an EVA on November 25 and it was decided not to redeploy it. The Sprint sub-satellite was set into a free-flight inside the payload bay.

Image result for sts-87 launch

1999: The first test flight of the Chinese Shenzhou spacecraft was launched. The spacecraft didn't maneuver at all during the flight because it could not receive any signals from the Beijing control center. On orbit 12, the first attempt at retrofire was made but failed. Another try during the next orbit also failed. It was finally picked up by a ship in the Pacific and commanded its retrofire and it landed.

Image result for shenzhou first launch

2005: The Japanese probe Hayabusa landed on the asteroid Itokawa. Its actual lander failed to land. It bounced once then made a firm landing 20 seconds later.

Image result for hayabusa landing

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1969: The second and third EVAs of the Apollo 12 lunar landing were conducted. The first one of the day was to recovery Surveyor 3's TV camera. Earth bacteria was found on it which showed some sorts of life could survive in space. The second one of the day and the final one of the mission was to remove excess equipment from the LM (they literally just threw stuff out of the hatch) before liftoff.

Image result for apollo 12 surveyor 3

1990: STS-38 and its crew of 5 landed back at Cape Canaveral after a mission into orbit. It missed its touchdown point by 430 meters.

Image result for sts-38 landing

1995: STS-74 and its crew of 5 landed back at Cape Canaveral after a mission to the Mir space station.

Image result for sts-74 landing

1998: The production of the International Space Station (ISS) was started with the launch of the Russian Zarya module. It was the first module of the space station. The next component of the station, the American Unity module would arrive via STS-88.

Image result for iss zarya launch

2005: The Japanese Hayabusa probe which landed on the asteroid Itokawa a day before failed to retrieve its surface sample.

Image result for hayabusa itokawa

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 21

1960: The launch of the first Mercury Redstone, MR-1, was attempted. After only getting 1 inch off the pad, a premature cutoff caused the LES to fire, completely separating itself from the capsule.

Image result for mercury redstone 1

1969: Apollo 12 fired its SM engine and burned into a transearth trajectory.

1985: Soyuz T-14 and its crew of 3 landed back at Earth after a mission to the Salyut 7 space station.

Image result for soyuz t-14 landing

Edited by The Raging Sandwich
Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 22

1967: The unmanned Soyuz 7K-L1 s/n 5L spacecraft launch was attempted. Three seconds after the second stage of the Proton rocket was activated, the SAS abort tower pulled the spacecraft away from the rocket because engine 4 failed to fire. The spacecraft was detected 250 km from the launch site.

Image result for Soyuz 7K-L1 s/n 5L launch

1998: The Galileo Jupiter spacecraft did a flyby of the moon Europa.

Image result for galileo europa 18 flyby

Link to comment
Share on other sites

November 23

1970: Lunokhod was released and was ready for its first drive on the Moon.

Image result for lunokhod 1

1983: Soyuz T-9 and its crew of 2 landed back at Earth after a mission at the Salyut 7 space station.

Image result for soyuz t-9 landing

1989: STS-33 and its crew of 5 launched into orbit on a 5 day mission. It deployed a classified satellite on the same day. Orbited Earth 78 times.

Image result for sts-33 launch

2014: Soyuz TMA-15M and its crew of 3 launched into orbit on a mission to the ISS. It docked to the station on November 24. It undocked on June 11, 2015 a month after schedule because of the explosion of a Progress vehicle on the launchpad.

Image result for soyuz tma-15 launch

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...