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🇵🇱 To niesamowite uczucie stanąć obok modułu dowodzenia Apollo 14 w Centrum Kosmicznym im. Johna F. Kennedy'ego (KSC). Ten sprzęt w 1971 r. okrążał 🌕 Księżyc, czekając w orbicie lunarnej na powrót dwóch astronautów z powierzchni Księżyca, by bezpiecznie sprowadzić ich z powrotem na Ziemię 🌎Apollo 14 była trzecią załogową 🚀 misją, w czasie której dwaj astronauci - Alan Shepard i Edgar Mitchell - wylądowali na powierzchni Księżyca. Podczas wyjść zebrali ponad 42 kg próbek gruntu księżycowego w rejonie Fra Mauro, a poruszając się po Księżycu po raz pierwszy użyli specjalnie skonstruowanego wózka na kółkach MET, dzięki któremu przewozili http://m.in. sprzęt do badań naukowych. Całkowity czas pracy astronautów poza lądownikiem był najdłuższy ze wszystkich - 9 godz. 23 min ⏱Wszystkie cele misji zostały osiągnięte, w tym również ustawienie aparatury naukowej ALSEP oraz wykonanie 📷 fotografii potencjalnych przyszłych miejsc lądowania. Dodatkowo, podczas drogi powrotnej, astronauci przeprowadzili cztery eksperymenty, testujące przebieg procesów technologicznych w stanie nieważkości 👩🚀
🇬🇧 It's an incredible feeling to stand next to the Apollo 14 Command Module at the John F. Kennedy Space Center (KSC). In 1971, this hardware orbited 🌕 the Moon, waiting in lunar orbit for the return of two astronauts from the Moon surface to safely bring them back to Earth 🌎Apollo 14 was the third crewed 🚀 mission during which astronauts - Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell - landed on the Moon. During their walks on the surface, they collected over 42 kg of lunar rocks samples in the Fra Mauro formation and, for the first time, used a specially designed Modular Equipment Transporter (MET) - a wheeled handcart allowing them to haul, among other things, the equipment for scientific research. Interestingly, the total working time of astronauts outside the lander was the longest of all - 9 hours and 23 minutes ⏱All mission objectives were achieved, including placing of the ALSEP scientific instruments and capturing 📷 the photographs of potential future landing sites. Additionally, during their return, the astronauts conducted four experiments to test technological processes in weightlessness 👩🚀
During their 1st at Fra Mauro, OTD in 1971, Al Shepard & Ed Mitchell deployed the 2nd ALSEP array. Surface instruments included 5 experiments, a mortar package & three geophone sensors linked to the central station plus the LR3. Deployment site was about 180m WNW from LM Antares
#TDIH in 1971: Apollo 14 launched on the third successful crewed lunar landing mission. The space vehicle took flight with commander Alan Shepard, command module pilot Stuart Roosa, and lunar module pilot Edgar Mitchell on board. More on the mission: http://s.si.edu/3KS6Q6t
Catch you on the flippity flip!Apollo 14 Command Module Pilot Stu Roosa bids farewell to Shepard and Mitchell as the "Antares" LM undocks and prepares to descend to the lunar surface #OTD in 1971.📘 The events preceding the Apollo 14 Moon landing https://go.nasa.gov/4bgiDsp
5 February 1971. 09.18.11 UTC/GMT. Mission Commander Alan Shepard and Lunar Module Pilot Edgar Mitchell aboard Apollo 14 Lunar Module 'Antares' landed on the Moon at Fra Mauro.
6 February 1971. Alan Shepard and Edgar Mitchell completed their second and final lunar EVA followed by lift-off at 18.48.42 UTC/GMT.
9 February 1971. 21.05.00 UTC/GMT. Spashdown of Apollo 14 in the South Pacific Ocean after completing the third successful manned moon landing mission. The Command Module 'Kitty Hawk' and crew were recovered by USS New Orleans.
3 astronauts, 94 pounds of lunar samples, and hundreds of tree seeds #OTD in 1971, the Apollo 14 command module Kitty Hawk splashed down in the South Pacific, returning astronauts Al Shepard, Stu Roosa, and Ed Mitchell, after a successful mission to the Moon. The tree seeds Roosa brought on the flight joined the crew in the Mobile Quarantine Facility before they were germinated and planted around the United States and the world as "Moon Trees." https://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/lunar/moon_tree.html