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More than two million first orbits (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old April 21st 11, 09:27 PM posted to sci.space.news
Andrew Yee[_1_]
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Default More than two million first orbits (Forwarded)

ESA News
http://www.esa.int

18 April 2011

More than two million first orbits

Since its release on 12 April, the film recreating Yuri Gagarin's pioneering
flight has been seen almost 2.6 million times. Much of the footage was shot
aboard the Space Station by ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli.

The first human spaceflight on 12 April 1961 lasted only 108 minutes. During
this time Yuri Gagarin flew in his Vostok-1 spacecraft once around the
globe, becoming the first human to see the view from space: bright stars in
a carbon-black sky, a shiny Sun and the majestic Earth.

Seeing the home planet below his craft was perhaps the most stunning
experience of his flight. Mixing old footage and audio recordings from the
mission with fresh material shot from the International Space Station, First
Orbit recreates the views that Gagarin enjoyed as accurately as possible.

Simple idea, but difficult to realise

"When Gagarin came back from space, everyone wanted to know what it was
like," says director Christopher Riley, who conceived First Orbit.

"Part of what people meant by that question was: what did Earth look like
from up there? And that was something only Gagarin would really ever know."

He wanted to reconstruct the whole ride aboard Vostok-1 -- and ESA agreed to
help him. Together with Gerald Ziegler, Flight Dynamics Engineer working at
ESA's Space Operations Centre, they calculated when the Space Station was
exactly above the path of Gagarin's flight at the same time of day.

The lighting conditions and everything else had to be as close as possible
to what Gagarin would have seen starting from launch near the Aral Sea, at
06:07 GMT, and on into the night side of Earth over the Pacific Ocean,
before emerging into sunlight again over the Southern Atlantic and passing
across the whole African continent and the Middle East, returning to the
ground at 07:55 GMT, just north of the Caspian Sea.

With Roland Luettgens and Giovanni Gravili of ESA, Gerald and Christopher
managed to find some indications from Gagarin's notes about the viewing
angles and details he saw, and all these were sent to the Space Station
crew.

Christopher didn't want to use satellite images because the footage shot by
humans -- with errors and imperfections -- is more authentic.

Paolo as cameraman

ESA helped to fit the requests into the crew time on the Station and, after
a test shoot last November by NASA astronaut Doug Wheelock, ESA's Paolo
Nespoli filmed most of the footage for the project in early January.

Paolo never appears in the film himself, but as the Space Station flies into
the night side of Earth over the north Pacific you can catch a glimpse of
him reflected in the window as he floats towards the camera.

There is one difference between First Orbit and Gagarin's actual flight: the
Moon.

"When Gagarin flew into the night side of Earth on 12 April 1961, it was a
crescent Moon," explained Christopher.

"According to his autobiography Road to the Stars, he tried to look for the
Moon out of curiosity, but unfortunately it was not in his field of view.
'Never mind,' he wrote, 'I'll see it next time.'"

For Gagarin, there was unfortunately no next time, but Christopher added the
Moon to the film.

"Paolo has not yet seen the film, but is more than curious to see as soon as
he returns," says Roland Luettgens, who is working as ESA Mission Director
at the Columbus Control Centre and has told Paolo all about the film's
success.

"He is happy having been able to participate and sends many greetings to all
who supported making the film."

The film is freely viewable on www.firstorbit.org and on YouTube. During the
first week since it went online, it has been seen almost 2.6 million times.

[NOTE: Images and weblinks supporting this release are available at
http://www.esa.int/export/esaCP/SEMN...G_index_1.html ]

 




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