Subscribe by E-mail

Google Translate

Recent Assets

  • Romecenturionsmall.jpg
  • 19Jan2009-2973_small.jpg
  • MARS PF01 SS2 firstfiring-small.jpg
  • VGboomcam.jpg
  • VGFIRE.jpg
  • projectorion.jpg
  • 161559main_progress_kurs_diagram.jpg
  • antareslaunch-small.jpg
  • Marsonebase-small.jpg
  • asteroidcapture.jpg

PICTURE: Apollo 11 and 17 commanders help with Altair Lunar Lander

Rob Coppinger
 on December 10, 2008 4:36 PM | | Comments (4)
|

Neil and Gene Altair December 2008.jpg
credit: NASA / caption: (L-R) foreground, Neil Armstrong, Gene Cernan, background, Wayne Ottinger, Jack Schmitt  

NASA has released this image of Apollo 11 commander Neil Armstrong and Apollo 17 commander Eugene 'Gene' Cernan touring one of the agency's Altair Lunar Lander mock-ups at its Johnson Space Center on 9 December. Behind Cernan is Harrison 'Jack' Schmitt, Cernan's fellow Apollo 17 crew member and lunar module pilot 

Armstrong, the first man on the Moon, and Cernan, the last for now, were looking at concepts for Altair living quarters. Cernan is the only man to have flown the Apollo lunar module on two missions in lunar orbit. Once on a practice descent to 40,000ft above the lunar surface during the May 1969 Apollo 10 flight and again for the final Apollo mission, Apollo 17, in 1972

Armstrong and Cernan visited Johnson and talked with the Altair project office team about design concepts. In the background is Wayne Ottinger, who worked on the Apollo lunar lander training vehicle

4 Comments

I would have loved to be in on this metting..
"Seats!! They have SEATS!!!"
in all seriousness it is cool they are getting their input,. Regardless if Ares goes through or not they will need their input sooner or later on the next lander.
Love to get an autographed picture of that ..
jb

"I can let you have this whole package for $500 million, if it's cash..." Also, seriously, this is history. Rarely do we get to see it, are do we notice it, until it becomes history.

Elon Musk will be waiting for the first crew of NASA astronauts to arrive in around 2020. I sure he could sell them a room for the trip!

Kris Ringwood

"Rumours of my Death are premature" it would seem. I was very surprised to see Jack Schmitt who had been reported by the American space media to have died of Cancer in 2005! Good to see them all alive, hale and hearty; my having seen Gene and Jack take off for the moon live at the Cape: WELL worth staying up for - the launch was at night.

Leave a comment

Want a user picture? Get a Gravatar!