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I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene
Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? |
#2
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On Oct 22, 11:13 am, wrote:
I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? All such fly-by-rocket mission related physics information or of whatever scientific data has been lost forever. Sorry about that. - Brad Guth - |
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On Oct 22, 11:13 am, wrote:
I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? All such fly-by-rocket mission related physics information or of whatever scientific data has been lost forever. Sorry about that. - Brad Guth - |
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writes:
I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? We can reason it out, given that the couches have to be holding the astronauts pretty much like a mass on a spring in equilibrium and we know shortly before engine cutoff the force is about four times the force of gravity on the surface of the earth, which is rather abruptly reduced. But the direct experience is probably more convincing. From Frank Borman, describing Apollo 8: http://history.nasa.gov/ap08fj/01launch_ascent.htm [Borman, from the 1969 Technical Debrief - "The S-IC/S-II separation was nominal; the crew was thrown forward in their seat, as you would expect in a staging. Then the g load was shifted from 4 to about 1. Consequently, you noticed the change in thrust quite distinctly.] And from David Scott in Apollo 15: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/Hi...arth_orbit.htm [Scott, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "The staging was as we expected, I guess. It was what I'd call violent when the S-IC shuts down and everything recoils there, and that was almost identical to Apollo 9. It was really just a big bang. We saw the fireball come up to the BPC [Boost Protective Cover]; I saw it in my left side window. I saw the fireball out the front window, too."] ... though there's room for different expectations: [Worden, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "After being briefed several times of what to expect at separation, it didn't seem as violent as I was really expecting it to be."] [Scott, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - [speaking to Worden] "Which one?"] [Worden, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "The first one."] [Scott, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "I thought you agreed that it was pretty violent."] [Worden, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "It was pretty violent, but I guess I was expecting something even more than that."] [Irwin, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - [speaking to Scott] "You had us so well briefed, Dave, that we were expecting it."] For the other staging event: [Scott, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "The S-II to S-IVB staging was about a quarter to a fifth the force of the S-IC staging. It was again a positive kind of feeling, but it wasn't a violent crash like we felt on the S-IC; I didn't think. We had the same light 10- to 12-cps vibration on the S-IVB all the way into orbit. The shutdown was smooth. All the sequences throughout the launch were nominal and as expected. All the lights worked good; controls and displays were good; comfortable."] [Irwin, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "The noise and the vibration were less than I was expecting; it was much less. I was impressed about the lateral vibration on launch. It was much greater on the S-IC than it was on the S-II. Just a shaking, back and forth, lateral vibration all the way through the launch. It was a pretty smooth ride."] -- Joseph Nebus ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
#5
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![]() "Joseph Nebus" Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. You can find cabin video of Soyuz launches. The cosmonauts get a definite jolt on staging. I think this link has some videos from time to time, else Google. http://www.spacemultimedia.nl.eu.org/ -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#6
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On Oct 22, 11:13 am, wrote:
I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? That was for dramatic effect. In reality, the astronauts were strapped into their couches and would not have been thrown forward as depicted in the movie. |
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In article .com,
" wrote: On Oct 22, 11:13 am, wrote: I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? That was for dramatic effect. In reality, the astronauts were strapped into their couches and would not have been thrown forward as depicted in the movie. There might have been some structural resonance from the sudden loss of thrust from one stage and the subsequent application of thrust from the following stage, but I would not expect any aft G to cause the astronauts to be thrown into their straps. |
#8
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![]() "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() In article .com, " wrote: On Oct 22, 11:13 am, wrote: I was just watching the DVD of Apollo 17. During launch, I heard Gene Cernan tell the other two guys to get ready for staging and to hold on. shortly after, Evans and/or Schmidt was saying how rough the event was. How violent was it, really? Was it shown accurately in the movie Apollo 13? Did they really get thrown out of the seat then slammed back into it? That was for dramatic effect. In reality, the astronauts were strapped into their couches and would not have been thrown forward as depicted in the movie. There might have been some structural resonance from the sudden loss of thrust from one stage and the subsequent application of thrust from the following stage, but I would not expect any aft G to cause the astronauts to be thrown into their straps. What happens is you've got the first stage near the end of its burn putting the *entire stack* into compression like a giant spring. Off the top of my head, I don't know the G loading on the vehicle near the end of the first stage burn, but with those big, honking F-1 engines, and nearly empty first stage tanks, it's got to be pretty significant. Now, you've got the F-1 engines at one end of this giant spring and the astronauts are at the other end of the spring. Now cut off the engines and what happens? The compressed spring relaxes, pushing the F-1 engines backwards and pushing the CM forwards. Once the spring expands completely, it stops, but the astronauts are only held in by their straps, so their forward motion has to be stopped by those straps. What the astronauts feel is that they're being pressed into their couches by several G's, then they literally are thrown forward and stopped by their seat straps. Jeff -- "When transportation is cheap, frequent, reliable, and flexible, everything else becomes easier." - Jon Goff |
#9
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![]() Jeff Findley wrote: What happens is you've got the first stage near the end of its burn putting the *entire stack* into compression like a giant spring. Off the top of my head, I don't know the G loading on the vehicle near the end of the first stage burn, but with those big, honking F-1 engines, and nearly empty first stage tanks, it's got to be pretty significant. One of the astronaut's reports cited by Joseph Nebus said around 4 g's: "But the direct experience is probably more convincing. From Frank Borman, describing Apollo 8: http://history.nasa.gov/ap08fj/01launch_ascent.htm [Borman, from the 1969 Technical Debrief - "The S-IC/S-II separation was nominal; the crew was thrown forward in their seat, as you would expect in a staging. Then the g load was shifted from 4 to about 1. Consequently, you noticed the change in thrust quite distinctly.] And from David Scott in Apollo 15: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/Hi...arth_orbit.htm [Scott, from the 1971 Technical Debrief - "The staging was as we expected, I guess. It was what I'd call violent when the S-IC shuts down and everything recoils there, and that was almost identical to Apollo 9. It was really just a big bang. We saw the fireball come up to the BPC [Boost Protective Cover]; I saw it in my left side window. I saw the fireball out the front window, too."]" Now, you've got the F-1 engines at one end of this giant spring and the astronauts are at the other end of the spring. Now cut off the engines and what happens? The compressed spring relaxes, pushing the F-1 engines backwards and pushing the CM forwards. Once the spring expands completely, it stops, but the astronauts are only held in by their straps, so their forward motion has to be stopped by those straps. What the astronauts feel is that they're being pressed into their couches by several G's, then they literally are thrown forward and stopped by their seat straps. There's also still some deceleration via air drag at the altitude where the first stage separates. Pat |
#10
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![]() "Pat Flannery" wrote in message ... There's also still some deceleration via air drag at the altitude where the first stage separates. True. Jeff -- "When transportation is cheap, frequent, reliable, and flexible, everything else becomes easier." - Jon Goff |
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