(1962). He worked as an engineer in the field of nuclear physics at the Weapons Laboratory at Kirtland Air Force Base. In October 1963 he became a member of the group of astronauts of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration of the USA. Along with F. Borman and J. Lovell, he ...
Photographed on Christmas Eve 1968 as Anders, Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman and Jim Lovell orbited the moon, the image is known today simply as "Earthrise," a first-of-its-kind look at planet Earth suspended in the immensity of space that quickly became a symbol of the environmental...
Anders, Borman and Lovell were the first humans to leave Earth orbit, completing 10 trips around the moon in a Christmas-season flight that helped set the stage for the Apollo 11 moon landing the following year. Many space insiders and historians view Apollo 8 as the most daring of all the...
Lovell, D.B. Parkinson, and B.T. Weber. Their contemplated systems used summing networks, potentiometer cards for functions, and an integra- tor using an amplifier and a capacitor.2' In November 1940 Western Electric received a contract to develop a model of a DC analog gun director, the ...
William Alison Anders (born October 17, 1933) is an engineer, former United States Air Force officer and NASA astronaut. He is, along with Apollo 8 crewmates Frank Borman and Jim Lovell, one of the first three persons to have left Earth orbit and traveled to the Moon (of only 24 ...
Burroughs (6:131); "Some Aspects of W's Art," Oscar Lovell Triggs (6:137) 1896: "WW and His Boston Publishers," II, T. Harned ... G Schmidgall 被引量: 3发表: 2006年 Organosulphur–transition-metal chemistry. Part 6. Reactions of cyclo-octatetraenyl and cycloheptatrienyl thioether...
The Apollo 8 Mission’s ‘Earthrise” as photographed by NASA astronaut, William Anders. Credit: NASA Thefamous “Earthrise” imageof a gibbous, marble-like Earth rising over the Moon’s horizon was taken on Christmas Eve 1968 by Anders during the Apollo 8 mission. “To see th...
Anders, Borman and Lovell were the first humans to leave Earth orbit, completing 10 trips around the moon in a Christmas-season flight that helped set the stage for the Apollo 11 moon landing the following year. Many space insiders and historians view Apollo 8 as the most daring of ...
The astronauts, including Anders, Frank Borman, and James Lovell, remained in an orbit about 70 miles (112 km) above the surface of the Moon for about 20 hours, transmitting television pictures back to Earth and verifying that lunar landmarks could be used for navigation to lunar landing ...
Photographed on Christmas Eve 1968 as Anders, Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman and Jim Lovell orbited the moon, the image is known today simply as "Earthrise," a first-of-its-kind look at planet Earth suspended in the immensity of space that quickly became a symbol of the environmental move...