Monday, November 16, 2015

The Astrolabe Used on Apollo Spacecraft

Cool article, contains this image of the stars necessary for navigating to the Moon:


http://www.spaceartifactsarchive.com/2013/05/the-star-chart-of-apollo.html






The Star Charts of Apollo

Lunars-star-map
Humans have navigated by the stars, since the dawn of man. Those seemingly stationary pinpoints of light in the night sky provided mariners and aviators the direction home as mankind moved into modern times. It would only be natural to use the stars to determine the proper course of a spacecraft during a voyage into outer space.
Early Earth orbit star charts mimicked the earthbound star charts by having a circular layout with the stars and constellations arranged around the wheel as they would appear in the sky at night. The photograph of an Apollo 9 training star chart is just such an example.
During the Apollo era, stellar navigation was integrated into the digital computer and perfected through the use of a sextant. The diagram below shows how the sextant optical assembly functioned with the DSKY (Digital display and keyboard) to help program the navigation systems and determine the proper course for the Apollo spacecraft. The navigation unit was placed in the lower equipment bay against the wall of the command module for stability and to prevent vibration. The unit consisted of an optical assembly that included the sextant and scanning telescope as well as the DSKY which interfaced with the Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC).
The first major use of the Apollo Guidance Computer came with the flight of Apollo 8. The mission was to journey to the Moon for the first time in the history of mankind. It would also be a test of the MIT designed computer system. The test would be to determine if the Apollo Guidance Computer would be able to navigate the spacecraft to the Moon and back without the help of Earth based guidance assistance.
In the photograph above, taken during the Apollo 8 mission, Jim Lovell is using the scanning telescope to locate a specific star for input into the AGC. Command Module Pilot (CMP) Lovell is sighting through the eyepiece, then he will enter a two digit number that represents the particular star into the AGC via the key pad located in the upper right corner of the photograph. The digital number code for the star would tell the computer one point in space where the spacecraft was located. The triangulation of three star positions would provide an accurate state vector for the Apollo stack that consisted of the command/service module (CSM) and the lunar module (LM). The Apollo 8 mission proved that the spacecraft's navigation computer could be self sufficient on a journey to the Moon.
With the advent of the digital computer that was introduced into the Apollo spacecraft, the star charts changed to accommodate the new system. The star charts were redesigned from the circular chart type to a more rectangular chart. The constellations were aligned on the ellipse. Specific stars were highlighted, named and numbered with a two digit numerical code numbering 1 through 45. If you look closely at the above scan, you will see the stars, their names and numbers on the chart. This star chart from Apollo 10 is an early design that would change to provide ease of use during future missions.
As the missions to the moon progressed, the star charts continued their metamorphosis. Here is a lunar module (LM) chart from the next mission, Apollo 11. Although the grid system is the same, the constellations are heavily outlined and there are no background star fields to confuse the astronauts at key moments. Speed and accuracy were required since the star sightings were usually done during key events like Translunar Insertion (TLI) or Trans Earth Insertion (TEI). This star chart accompanied the crew to Man's first landing on another world.
I caught up with Buzz Aldrin, the Apollo 11 LMP, in New Jersey in 2005. Where I got a photograph with him holding the LM star chart flown on his mission.
We will look at the different charts used in both the command module and the lunar module.

Again one of the first things to understand about the star charts was how they interacted with the spacecraft and it's navigation computer, the Apollo Guidance Computer(AGC) and the inertial measurement unit (IMU) . The above diagram shows the primary components of the system. The astronaut locates the star through the optical assembly. He plugs the two digit star code located on his star chart into the DSKY, which alerts the Apollo Guidance Computer to run a program that updates the inertial measurement unit. Once the operation is complete, then the state vector or position of the spacecraft is known.
 The black star chart located above was of a type normally used in the command module (CM). I have only seen one exception to it's use in the CM. The chart is approximately 6 x 15 inches and unlike the other flat rectangular star charts is made of a plastic film. Color was used to differentiate the planets from the star field. The key stars used for navigation are numbered, highlighted and oversized. This black star chart was used as a training aid for the crew of Apollo 15. These black star charts were multi-purpose, they were used for many things including as sunshades in the CM. An Apollo 11 television broadcast on the way to the Moon shows the sunshade use during a tour of the spacecraft. Buzz Aldrin pointed the camera at the window holding the black star chart and comments about it as a sun shade. The black part of chart blocked the sun, but like being in a planetarium, the stars were brillantly illuminated.

One other story is related to the star chart design. Gus Grissom was working with the designers of the star charts for the Apollo Program. During the decision making process of choosing which stars to use on the chart and their number code for use in the Apollo Guidance Computer, Gus Grissom made up the names of three stars for use on the charts. Virgil Ivan Grissom, Edward White II and Roger Chaffee were to be the first Apollo crew to fly in space on Apollo 1. Gus took a section of his name as well as White's and Chaffee's names, spelled them backwards and added them to stars on the star chart initial design for their flight. When the crew of Apollo 1 perished in "The Fire." NASA maintained those star names on the star charts in honor of the fallen crew. If you click on the black star chart and look for star #3, star #20 and star #17, then you find the stars named after the Apollo 1 crew. "Navi" is Grissom's middle name of Ivan. "Dnoces" stands for Ed White, the Second and "Regor" is for Roger Chaffee. A small honor for a heroic crew.
The lunar module also carried a computer called the Primary Navigation and Guidance System (PNGS). The PNGS also used star charts for navigation purposes while on the Moon.
The above diagram shows how the Primary Navigation and Guidance System worked inside the LM. The key components were the LM Guidance Computer, the Alignment Optical Telescope (AOT), the Inertial Measurement Unit, the DSKY and landing radar. The CM and LM used the same guidance computer, but the main difference between the two spacecraft was the optical unit. While the CM sextant and scanning telescope could determine both the spacecraft position and orientation. The AOT could only determine the LM's orientation. The AOT used a three position rotated prizm to cover the lunar sky. The LGC could read the AOT's position and by aiming the eyepiece at different stars in the lunar sky, the LGC could determine the LM's orientation.

The LM carried several checklists or Flight Data Files (FDF) onboard the spacecraft during a lunar mission. One of the FDF's was the G&N (Guidance & Navigation) Dictionary. The G&N Dictionary was the manual and checklist for the operation of the LM PNGS system. After the first few pages of the checklist, there is the star chart for use in the LM. The above star chart flew on Apollo 9 and is part of the complete FDF. The star charts of later missions used a complete grid system over the star field for ease of use.
Also included in the G&N Dictionary FDF along with the star chart is the star key. The star key listed the stars used in the LGC in both alphabetic and numeric order. Although this star key flew on Apollo 9 with the above star chart, the star key also flew in the LM G&N Dictionary.

The DSKY has been discussed, but not shown during this study of the star charts. Here is one of the production models. The numbers would be typed into the guidance computer via the key pad. The numbers would appear in the screen on the right. The astronaut would confirm the number and press enter to input the code into the guidance computer. The computer would process the information to determine the position and/or the orientation of the spacecraft.
The above photograph show the AOT and the DSKY at the LM console. Unlike the command module navigation station, the navigation equipment in the LM is located in different areas of the LM console. The AOT is located on the ceiling of the LM at the top of the photograph. The DSKY is located on the console at the bottom of the picture. The guidance computer is located inside the aft wall and the IMU is located in the ceiling in the front of the LM.

The final star chart to be displayed in this series is a circular star chart used to determine the proper orientation of the LM while on the lunar surface. The two piece chart consists of a black base disk with the star field and a semi-transparent disk with circular ring displays on it that are attached to each other by a metal rivet. The circular rings on the transparent disk are actually viewfinder displays showing what stars would appear in the AOT at certain times on the lunar surface during a mission. This star chart was flown on the Apollo 17 mission to the Taurus Littrow region. This star chart was used prior to lift off. The transparent disk section is folded over. Gene Cernan states that he used this chart to orient the ship just prior to launch back into lunar orbit. The fold was done with his gloved hand, so he could align the star chart properly during the events just before lunar surface lift off.
The Apollo 17 LM carried two such star charts. The first chart for use in the event of an emergency abort lift off immediately after the initial landing. The second chart for use during a normal lift off at the end of the mission on the lunar surface. The second chart was used, at that time, due to the fact that the planets and stars had precessed across the sky during the astronauts time of the Moon.
Gene Cernan is pictured with the same star chart shown above. Gene was a guest of Novaspace Galleries and I was able to get the chart certified and photographed during the Burbank show at their booth in 2004. The star chart and star key were part of Gene's collection.
The star charts have universal aura about them. They are beautiful, elegant artifacts of the space age and easily understood by the layperson here on Earth. At the same time, they were precise instruments used by the astronauts as part of the Apollo guidance system to navigate their way to and from the Moon.

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Tevye as Galileo, script by Brecht

What a surprise to find this movie from 1974!  Topol, the actor who played Tevya in the film version of "Fiddler on the Roof", plays Galileo in this wonderfully accurate account starting from the events of 1609.  If you've read "The Starry Messenger" you will be delighted with how well this adheres to the specific details.


Galileo (1974) by Bertolt Brecht, starring Topol


Of course I didn't mind the first dramatic license one bit, as the film opens with the delivery of an Armillary Sphere to Galileo's household and proceeds to give us the only explanation of these device I have ever seen in a dramatic film:


And naturally, Galileo has an Astrolabe hanging on his wall:



It is free for streaming if you have Amazon Prime.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009UGN1CE

I'm about halfway through this 2-hour production.  So far, the amount of detail it goes into about the handful of observations from those first nights in 1609 can only be due to the writer expecting an astronomically literate audience (Brecht was German).

Font is the same as other 1970s television programs dealing with science:


Inevitably, even Brecht cannot resist overplaying the "stodgy old teachers who are afraid of new truths" angle.  Yet interspersed is faithfulness to the real history:
The Papal Astronomer confirms Galileo's discoveries.
I'm finding that the cliches about stodgy old philosophers beholden to Aristotle are met with at least equal emphasis on Galileo's own character flaws.  He could have stayed safe in Venice and done his science there, but he wanted the financial rewards offered in Florence.  And his personal integrity is not at all consistent. He has no problems sucking up to the Medici.

Thursday, April 16, 2015

Galileo

While there are a lot of bad histories of Galileo out there, which love to focus on the (overhyped, in my opinion) run-in with the Catholic Church, I found this one to be excellent. What strikes me is how much it resonates with the things I thought when I first read Siderius Nuncius myself.

By the way, the music in the background is by Galileo's father! Yes, his dad was a composer (and lutist, and luthier).

Here is some more of his father's music:

And here is the Wikipedia page on his father, Vincenzo Galilei

Ignite Phoenix #4 - The Astrolabe: The First Computer (or Hello World! on the Astrolabe)

You can find the video of the presentation here:

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Marjorie Webster of the Adler Planetarium

Marjorie Kelly Webster, age 95, died on May 8, 2011 in Santa Barbara, CA. Born on June 9th, 1915 to Carl and Marjorie (nee McCurdy) Kelly, she grew up in Winnetka, IL, where she attended North Shore Country Day School. Her lifetime of intellectual pursuits began during college, when she spent a year at Pueblo Santo Domingo in New Mexico working with Native American schoolchildren and exploring archeological sites of the local tribes. She then completed her degree at Sarah Lawrence College and attended the University of California at Berkeley. When World War II broke out, Mrs. Webster went to work for Douglas Aircraft Company.

In 1953 she wed high school classmate Roderick Sheldon Webster, to whom she was married for forty-four years until he passed away in 1997. Early in their marriage, with Roderick's engineering background and Marjorie's interest in art and archeology, they discovered and nurtured a mutual lifelong passion for antique astronomical instruments through the Adler Planetarium. From 1962-1969 they served as volunteer caretakers of Adler's antique instrument collection. In 1970 they were named Co-Curators, still as volunteers, retiring from that position in 1991. In the intervening almost half a century, Roderick and Marjorie helped build the collection and prestige of the Planetarium in a number of ways. They were involved in acquiring more than half of all the current collections. In the words of Kenneth Nebenzahl, an expert and dealer in rare maps and books in Chicago and an Adler Board member, "their enthusiasm has made the crucial difference between this institution being a great, nationally respected sky show venue, and its position as a world-renowned science museum…one of the three most important in the world, along with Oxford and Florence."

The Websters developed the Adler's library of astronomy and navigation, now one of the world's greatest collections of historic scientific instruments, rare books, maps, works on paper, and materials documenting our exploration and understanding of the universe. Their research in museums and private collections throughout North America and Europe resulted in a database of more than 15,000 scientific instrument makers over the past five centuries. The database is accessed daily by scholars and citizens around the globe. In 1998, Marjorie and Roderick published the definitive Western Astrolabes on historical, scientific instruments of the Adler Planetarium and Astronomy Museum, Volume I, which inspired the creation of another volume on eastern astrolabes. In the process of the research, they met and befriended museum curators, instrument dealers and scholars around the world. Adler Vice President for Collections, Marvin Bolt, said that their "passion and vision have touched the lives and shaped the experiences of tens of millions of people who have walked through these doors and tens of millions who will visit the Adler in decades to come."

Marjorie and her husband developed lasting relationships with Adler staff, often providing scholarships for graduate school. To continue their legacy, in 2006 the Planetarium created the Webster Institute for the History of Astronomy and in 2008 launched a new Adler support group, the Webster Club, to strengthen and preserve its collections. Marjorie was a Life Trustee on Adler's Board of Trustees and served on the Visiting Committee of the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago. She also served on the Woman's Board and the Library Committee of the Art Institute and was active in the Antiquarian Society of the Art Institute. For decades she was a Board member of Penobscot Marine Museum, Penobscot, Maine. Her great grandfather, Captain Jonathan Dow, had sailed the ship Clarissa B. Carver out of Penobscot, plying the China spice trade during the 1800s and employing nautical instruments not unlike those she amassed for the Adler.

Marjorie leaves one niece, Deirdre (Derry) Healy Henderson, two nephews, Hall (Anne) Healy and Duncan (Carrie) Healy; three grand nieces, Aleya Dao (Doug) Noll, Katherine Healy (Dan) Darnell and Caroline Healy, two grand nephews, Dylan (Forest) Henderson and Charles Healy; two great grand nephews, August Henderson and Ethan Darnell; and three great grand nieces, Maren Darnell, Skye Henderson and Avery Darnell. She also leaves her sister-in-law Janet Ingram Kelly and dear friends and companions, including Karin Fridlund.

Services will be held in Santa Barbara at Casa Dorinda, 300 Hot Springs Road, Santa Barbara, CA 93108, 805-969-8011, on Saturday, May 28 at 4:00 pm; and at Christ Church, 784 Sheridan Road, Winnetka, IL 60093, 847-446-2850 on Monday June 27 at 5:00 pm. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Adler Planetarium, 1300 South Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605 | (312) 922 7827, or online at: https://adlerplanetarium.wufoo.com/forms/give-to-the-adler/.

Published in Chicago Tribune on May 25, 2011 - See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/chicagotribune/obituary.aspx?n=marjorie-kelly-webster&pid=151274723#sthash.te59jTeH.dpuf