Browse Items (204 total) Browse All Browse by Tag Search Items Subject is exactly "Saturn Project (U.S.)" of 6 Next Page Sort by: TitleCreatorIdentifierDate Added "Saturn I: The First Generation of Heavy Launch Vehicles Designed for Peaceful Exploration of Space." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1964 "Steps to the Moon." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1967 "Science Historians Join With Research Institute." University of Alabama in Huntsville 1969-12-10 Circular announcing MSFC's involvement with the documentation of the Saturn program at the UAH Research Institute. George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1968-10-04 Marshall Space Flight Center Space Day 1961 program. George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1961-07-01 "Saturn and Noise." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center "Saturn V Apollo Flight Configuration." Boeing Aerospace Company. Space Division. Launch Systems Branch 1967-03-01 1962 Chronological History, NAA Space and Information Systems Division, Downey, California. Oakley, Ralph B. 1963-02-12 Brown Engineering Company 1964 Annual Report. Brown Engineering Co. 1965-02-03 "1965 Publications," Materials Division, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1966-01-13 "A Bibliography of Wernher von Braun, 1965." Sharpe, Mitchell R. 1965-12 1966 Chronology of Marshall Space Flight Center. Jones, L. L. 1967-01-01 Active contracts list, Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory. George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1965-12-30 Additional script information for Saturn I/IB Report no. 19. Lucier, L. 1965-03-24 "A Discussion of the Lunar Landing Problem." Digesu, Fred E. 1963-08-12 "Administrator's Statement on the Selection of a Contractor for the Saturn S-IV Stage." Glennan, Thomas Keith, 1905-1995 1960-04-28 "Advances in Pumping Technology and Rocket Engine Turbopump Applications." MacGregor, Charles A. 1964-06-02 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: June - July 1968." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1968-08-01 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: April - May 1968." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1968-06-01 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: February - March 1968." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1968-04-01 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: February - March 1967." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1967-04-01 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: December 12, 1966." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1965-12-12 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: November 2, 1965." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1965-11-02 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: December 13, 1965." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1965-12-13 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: June - July 1967." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1967-08-01 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: October - November 1968." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1968-12-01 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: October 11, 1966." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1966-10-11 Memo from William A. Fleming to Robert Seamans concerning an "Aerojet proposal for 1,000,000 pound thrust hydrogen oxygen engine." Fleming, William A. 1961-07-27 "Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: December 1968 - January 1969." George C. Marshall Space Flight Center 1969-02-01 "Aerospace Vehicle Simulation and Checkout." Mitchell, J. R. 1966-04-01 "Aerospace Welding Standards for the Minutes of the Meeting of American Ordnance Association." American Ordnance Association 1963-01-01 "After the Moon - What? Minutes of the Manned Flight Awareness Seminar." United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration 1969-09-26 "A Helium Face Seal Application In a Liquid Oxygen Pump." Cieslik, Walter 1969-05-09 "A Hybrid Simulation for Dynamic Verification of Saturn Guidance and Control Subsystems." Patray, Ronald T. 1965-07 "Saturn Radar Altimeter." Duggan, O. T. 1968-01 "Alignment Tool Aids in Large Tank Fabrication." Vardaman, W. K. 1967-03 "All Digital Simulation of Saturn I, IB, and V: Boost Vehicle and Guidance Control Systems." Carson, W. D. 1966-07-01 "Altitude Simulation in Saturn SIV Space Testing." Hofferth, D. D. 1965-01-01 "American Progress and Goals in Space," address by James E. Webb. Webb, James E. (James Edwin), 1906-1992 1964-10-30 "America's Spaceport." John F. Kennedy Space Center 1967-09-01 of 6 Next Page Output Formats atom, csv, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2 Refine search Identifier Select...Asecolookatmanmachandautotestoper_111607151040.pdfBinder1_070908082349.pdfBinder1_071708101707.pdf ALSO Binder1_071708101034Binder1_071910091943.pdfBinder1_071910110656.pdfBinder1_080108093849.pdfBinder1_080610113218.pdfBinder1_081110135224.pdfBinder3_051208093544.pdfBinder4_051208094654.pdfBoeiandapol_093010135107.pdfboeing.pdfBoeingapr1964_013108125359.pdf unmatched article "Saturn Stands Up" satustanup_062707161112 is included in metadataBoeingaug1966.pdfboeingdec1964.pdfBoeingfeb1965.pdfBoeingjan1965.pdfBoeingjan1968.pdfboeingjul1965.pdfBoeingjuly1967_040308083144.pdfBoeingjune1966.pdfBoeingmar1967.pdfBoeingmay1965.pdfBoeingnov1964.pdfBoeingnov1965.pdfBoeingoct1964.pdfBoeingoct1965.pdfboeinov63.pdfboeisept1964_071007114757.pdfBoeisubcprojapol.pdfboosinstforstatfiri.pdfbroowats.pdfbuilmoonrock.pdfCapandlimi.pdfCasecomp.pdfchallchancontrproc.pdfchemspaceboosters.pdfchillelecsyst.pdfchronairforcemaninspace.pdfchrysatustory_062707124831.pdfcleandconcon.pdfclipguidmissrangdivi_031907102312.pdfcomboscif1engimont1_041607115913.pdfexponent_19680716loc_hutc_525_526metmeawitpropeg_081707093957.pdfmgmtmatrix_071207121022.pdfmgmtsyst_071207114110.pdfmichassefacimisstestfacivolII4thedit_081307115245.pdfMichassyfacteldir_072908145639.pdfmichoudops_062607124250.pdfMilestonesincryoliqproproceng_041508144818.pdfminimax_081607145436.pdfmisandfacofinsdevbra_060508143335.pdfMissgap_120407104405.pdfMisstesttorr.pdfMonProgrep_022508111255.pdfMonprogREP_DEC_060308131535.pdfMonprogREP_FEB_062008131948.pdfMonprogREP_JAN_052908110005.pdfMonprogREP_MAR_063008122718.pdf TWO COPIESMonProgRepAUG_041108123715.pdfMonProgRepJUL_040408125935.pdfMonProgRepOCT_040208084903.pdfmonprorep_021208122316.pdfmonprorepaerastlab_082207105227.pdfmonprorepapr71966aerastlab_091907093800.pdfMontgroprepomar66_083007131545.pdf TWO 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Title Select..."1965 Publications," Materials Division, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center."A Bibliography of Wernher von Braun, 1965.""A Bibliography of Wernher von Braun, 1967.""A Bibliography of Wernher von Braun.""A Discussion of the Lunar Landing Problem.""A Helium Face Seal Application In a Liquid Oxygen Pump.""A Hybrid Simulation for Dynamic Verification of Saturn Guidance and Control Subsystems.""A Nation Goes to the Moon.""A Practical Approach to the Optimization of the Saturn V Space Vehicle Control System Under Aerodynamic Loads.""A Prime Contractor's Reliability Program for Components/Parts for the Douglas S-IVB Stage Project.""A Review of Cryogenic Technology Aspects of Space Flight.""A Second Look at Man, Machine, and Automatic Test Operations.""A Study of Saturn V and Intermediate Vehicle Improvement Programs Executive Summary Report.""Administrator's Statement on the Selection of a Contractor for the Saturn S-IV Stage.""Advances in Pumping Technology and Rocket Engine Turbopump Applications.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report, April and May 1967.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report, December 1967-January 1968.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: April - May 1968.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: December 12, 1966.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: December 13, 1965.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: December 1968 - January 1969.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: February - March 1967.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: February - March 1968.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: June - July 1967.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: June - July 1968.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: November 2, 1965.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: October - November 1968.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory Bimonthly Progress Report: October 11, 1966.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory monthly progress report : April 7, 1966.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory monthly progress report : January 12, 1966.""Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory monthly progress report : March 8, 1966.""Aerospace Vehicle Simulation and Checkout.""Aerospace Welding Standards for the Minutes of the Meeting of American Ordnance Association.""After the Moon - What? Minutes of the Manned Flight Awareness Seminar.""Alignment Tool Aids in Large Tank Fabrication.""All Digital Simulation of Saturn I, IB, and V: Boost Vehicle and Guidance Control Systems.""Altitude Simulation in Saturn SIV Space Testing.""America's Spaceport.""American Progress and Goals in Space," address by James E. Webb."Analog Simulation of Saturn S-IB Stage Propulsion System Dynamic Characteristics.""Analysis and Projections of Space Vehicle Automatic Checkout and Launch.""Annual Report of Brown Engineering Company, Inc. For the Year Ended December 31, 1965.""Apollo - LEM Docking Drogue Assembly Static Structural Test.""Apollo 11 Mission Profile.""Apollo 4 Pre-Launch Press Conference.""Apollo 4 Spurs Lunar Landing Program.""Apollo 5 Post-Launch Press Conference.""Apollo 5 Pre-Launch Press Conference.""Apollo 6 Pre-Launch Press Conference.""Apollo 7 Mission Commentary.""Apollo Documentation Administration Instruction.""Apollo Logistic Support Systems.""Apollo Logistics Support System (ALSS) Payloads Summary Report.""Apollo Program Management Volume 3.""Apollo Program: Glossary of Acronyms and Abbreviations.""Apollo Saturn LIEF Operations Plan.""Apollo Vehicle Propulsion Systems.""Apollo-LEM Docking Combined Probe and Drogue Assemblies Static Structural Test.""Apollo/Saturn Guide for the Preparation of Specifications: Volume I of II Volumes.""Appendix to Chapter II of a Survey of Various Vehicle Systems for the Manned Lunar Landing Mission.""Application of Data to Design: Design of Space Vehicle Structures for Vibration and Acoustic Environments.""Application of Nuclear Propulsion to the Mars Manned Landing Mission.""Application of Saturn Systems to Orbit Launch Operations.""Application of the Saturn V Launch Vehicle to Unmanned Scientific Exploration of the Solar System.""Approach in Achieving High Reliability for Saturn Class Vehicles.""Army Participation in the National Satellite and Space Program.""AS-203 Technical Information Summary.""Assessment of Risk for Engineering Change Decisions.""Assurance and Measurement of Space Vehicle Alignment.""Astronautics and Aeronautics April 1968: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics August 1969: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics December 1968: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics February 1969: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics July 1968: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics July 1969: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics November 1968: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics October 1968: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Astronautics and Aeronautics September 1969: A Chronology on Science, Technology, and Policy (HHR-23).""Automated PCM Data Processor Theory of Operation.""Automatic Pressure Transducer Calibration System.""Automatic Saturn V Page Test System.""Brooks Watson and Saturn's Steel Mountain.""Capabilities and Limitations of Space Communication Systems.""Chemistry in Space Boosters" presentation given at Huntsville High School."Chilldown Electrical System for S-IVB Space Vehicle.""Chronology of early Air Force man-in-space activity: 1955 - 1960.""Cleaning and Contamination Control.""General Electric/MTSD's First Five Years as Prime NASA Support Contractor at Mississippi Test Facility, Bay St. Louis, Miss.""Management matrix integrating logistics support planning events.""Management system""Meteoroid measurements with Project Pegasus.""Michoud assembly facility and Mississippi test facility : volume II. 4th edition.""Michoud Assembly facility telephone directory : Boeing Launch Systems Branch, Chrysler Space Division, LTV Range System Div., Mason-Rust Engineering Company.""Michoud operations : historical operations: July 1, 1963 - December 31, 1963.""Milestones in cryogenic liquid propellant rocket engines.""Minimax control of large launch boosters.""Mission and facilities of Instrument Development Branch.""Mississippi test - torrents of flame.""Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : August, 1967.""Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory Monthly progress report : December, 1967.""Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : Febuary, 1968.""Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : January, 1968.""Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : July, 1967."Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : June, 1967.""Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : March, 1968."Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory monthly progress report : October, 1967."Saturn and Noise.""Saturn I: The First Generation of Heavy Launch Vehicles Designed for Peaceful Exploration of Space.""Saturn Radar Altimeter.""Saturn V Apollo Flight Configuration.""Saturn V First Stage Annual Progress Report: Fiscal Year 1968.""Science Historians Join With Research Institute.""Steps to the Moon.""Test Laboratory monthly progress report : May, 1967.""The Case for Compatibility.""The Challenge of Change vs the Control of the Process.""The Missile gap : a study of the formulation of military and public policy.""This is Your Chrysler Saturn Story."Guided Missiles Range Division Clipper, vol. 2, no. 3, October 1961.1962 Chronological History, NAA Space and Information Systems Division, Downey, California.1966 Chronology of Marshall Space Flight Center.Active contracts list, Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory.Additional script information for Saturn I/IB Report no. 19.Apollo 10 press kit.Apollo 10/AS-505 mission chart.Apollo 5 press kit.Apollo 8 Mission Operation Report.Apollo Support Program: Phase 1: Apollo Terminology Standards Final Study Report.Apollo/Saturn Lunar Landing Program.Bibliography of RIFT documentation, 1968.Boeing and Apollo 11.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIII, no. 11, November 1963.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 10, October 1964.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 11, November 1964.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 12, December 1964.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 4, April 1964.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXIV, no. 9, September 1964.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 1, January 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 10, October 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 11, November 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 12, December 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 2, February 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 5, May 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXV, no. 7, July 1965.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXVI, no. 1, January 1966.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXVI, no. 6, June 1966.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXVI, no. 8, August 1966.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXVII, no. 3, March 1967.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXVII, no. 7, July 1967.Boeing Magazine, vol. XXXVIII, no. 1, January 1968.Boeing Subcontractors on Project Apollo.Booster instrumentation for static firing.Briefing for Apollo 10.Brown Engineering Company 1964 Annual Report.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 1.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 10.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 11.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 12.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 13.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 14.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 15.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 16.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 17.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 18.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 19.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 2.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 20.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 3.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 4.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 5.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 6.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 7.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 8.Catalog of launch vehicle tests Saturn V : Apollo/Saturn 502 : Volume 1, Section 9.Circular announcing MSFC's involvement with the documentation of the Saturn program at the UAH Research Institute.Combustion oscillations in the F-1 engine, monthly report.Contractor Program Procedures: Contract NAS8-5608; DRL 067, Line Item 7; DRL 007, Line Item 7.Draft of "Building the Moon Rocket."Draft of "Concepts of the Iterative Guidance Law for Saturn Launch Vehicles."Final Apollo 11 Lunar Surface Operations Plan.Marshall Space Flight Center Space Day 1961 program.Memo from William A. Fleming to Robert Seamans concerning an "Aerojet proposal for 1,000,000 pound thrust hydrogen oxygen engine."Memorandum for Dr. Mueller from Robert C. Seamans.Memorandum to update the "Apollo/Saturn Logistics Support Requirements Plan."Postflight Analysis of Saturn Telemetry Systems.Propulsion and Vehicle Engineering Laboratory Monthly Progress Report for Period April 1, 1968 Through April 30, 1968.Publication listing.Reproduction of "Apollo Interface Control Document Log."Saturn Launch Vehicles Astrionics System Handbook, 2nd revised edition.Saturn Launch Vehicles Astrionics System Handbook.Space Stations/Platforms/Workshop (U): A Report Bibliography.Spaco, Inc. Annual Report, 1965.Survey of Automatic Checkout Systems for Saturn V Stages.System Safety Plan, Industrial Operations, Marshall Space Flight Center.Technical information Summary Apollo-11 (AS-506) Apollo Saturn V Space Vehicle.Technical information summary of the Apollo Saturn 1B flight vehicle.Telegraphic message containing an Apollo Program Flash Report.Test laboratory Monthly Progress Report: November 1, 1967 through November 30, 1967.The "Apollo/Saturn Data Handbook."The "Apollo/Saturn Guide for the Preparations of Specifications: Volume II of II Volumes."The Post-Apollo Space Program: Directions for the Future.Unofficial Directory: Government, Industry, and University Contacts in Management Research and Engineering.Volume II Appendices for the Saturn V Derivative Launch Vehicle System Study. Alternative Title Select...CTR 02332015AFSC Historical Publications Series 65-21-1AIAA Paper No. 65-303.Contract NAS8-5608Control no. 022102CTR 02332077D2-83001-1D5-12601-5Document No. D%-17009-2.Douglas Paper No. 3184Douglas Paper No. 3431Douglas Paper No. 3431.Douglas Paper No. 3794.Douglas Paper No. 3941Douglas Paper No. 4054FICFS Preprint 24GP-267H-9058IBM No: 65-825-1430IBM No. 66-894-0008IBM No. 67-460-0003IBM No. 68-U60-0013IN-MS-I-64-1K-AM-02K-AM-030/4KSC-601M-932-68-08M-C L 4300.110MPR-P&VE-68-4.NASA TM X-53378NASA TM X-53678NASA TM X-53698NASA TM X-53723NASA TMX 59133NASA-CR 71607NASw 410-20-13-1.No. 63-352AIAAPreprint number 5AS64R-ASTR-S-67-63R-ASTR-S-85-66.R67-ASD-104Release No: 68-6KREON Report RN-S-0068Report # I-MO-23-68S&E-ASTR-S-101-69SID 67-317SID 67-318TM X-59409TR 332015ATR 332077X66-94268X67-10694X67-81656X67-81658 Description Select...For release Thursday P.M., January 11, 1968."Building the Moon Rocket" was presented at the National Machine Tool Builders Association Meeting, Doral Beach Hotel, Miami, Florida on November 3, 1965 by Dr. Mathias P.L. Siebel, the Deputy Director, Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory. There are handwritten notes throughout."Monthly progress report : April 7, 1966.""Monthly progress report : March 8, 1966.""The Case for Compatibility" is a paper by Robert L. Smith, Jr., who worked in Quality and Reliability Assurance Laboratory at George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. The summary states, "Ever since the use of missiles and space launch vehicles began, questions have existed in every program regarding the similarity between upstream (e.g., manufacturing, static firing ) and launch site checkout equipment. Programs have existed which utilized nearly identical equipment for both uses; other programs have existed in which any resemblance of the equipment was probably coincidental. Many factors have entered the final decisions, not the least of which were economic and schedule considerations, and, in some instances, the organizational structure of the developer.""This report outlines, through a series of sketches with accompanying text, the general features of the SA-203 Launch Vehicle and information on launch preparation, the launch facility and mission peculiar experiments."A handwritten note on the title page notes that the document was received from Earl F. Rodriguez, General Electric Co., MTSD in Bay St. Louis. Includes a chronology of General Electric activity in south Mississippi.A summary found following the errata page reads: "This paper presents a second look at the subject of the man-machine relationship in automatic test operations. 'Man, Machine, and Automatic Test Operations' was presented by the writer at Battelle Memorial Institute in November of 1963...It is the purpose of this second look at the man-machine interface to pinpoint those concepts which have proven their worth with time and those concepts which have proven to be weak, and as a result modified with time." This paper was prepared by George F. Meister, Jr.A thesis presented to the faculty of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy.; This document is only the abstract of the thesis.; Document includes biographical note and table of contents.; aArchive copy is a photocopy.According to an abstract found on the page following the title page, this paper includes "one possible conceptual definition of an early Apollo Logistics Support Systems (ALSS) is presented and various payloads for the system are briefly discussed. " It also discusses the Lunar Mobile Laboratory (MOLAB) and other considerations for a lunar scientific mission.According to the abstract, this paper discusses the need for a uniform design approach throughout the aerospace industry for space vehicle structural vibrations in order to keep pace with improvements in environment definition and testing.According to the foreword found on page i, this document includes instructions on "procedures, methods and practices...necessary for the effective management of a program documentation system."According to the foreword, "This paper presents the results of a twelve-week mission and systems analysis of a combined Jupiter orbiter/solar probe mission utilizing the Saturn V launch vehicle."According to the introduction found on page ii, this document was created to detail the "MSFC segment of the total Apollo Management process and to describe the methodologies and techniques currently being implemented."According to the preface, "This handbook provides KSC management personnel with general information relative to the Apollo-Saturn program. Emphasis is placed on Saturn launch facilities and related support equipment. Saturn vehicle parameters are included for general information.According to the purpose found in section 1.1, "Volume I provides a guide for the preparation of specifications for existing equipment in the Apollo/Saturn Program."According to the summary found on page 1, this document "presents a brief and concise description of the AS-204/LM-1 Apollo Saturn Space Vehicle." The information within the document allows readers to follow the timeline of the space vehicle's lift-off and journey to space.According to the table of contents, this volume of appendices contain various charts, graphs, and diagrams related to the S-IC stage data, instrument unit data, and vehicle data.Article noted in the table of contents : Guidelines for administrators by William Sheil. Pages 6 and 7.Clipping from the UAH Exponent, Wednesday, December 10, 1969, vol. 2, no. 10, page 3. The article highlights the work of Barton C. Hacker and John S. Beltz to collect historical documents from the Saturn program. The documentation they collected is available at UAH Archives and Special Collections in the Saturn V Collection.Comment draft. Text drafted by Science and Technology Division, Library of Congress.Describes the purpose and goes of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Instrumental development branch.Description of a photograph of a rocket static test firing.Digesu worked in the Astrionics Division of MSFC. This paper was presented at the AIAA Guidance & Control Conference, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, August 12-14, 1963.Drawn by Don Sprague at the Huntsville Engineering section of Boeing.From the abstract: "This report concludes the Phase 1 study activities of the requirements for terminology standardization of the Apollo Integration Support Program. A review is made of the studies conducted and the findings resulting from these activities. Conclusions are drawn and recommendations are made for a proposed Apollo Terminology Handbook. An implementation plan for producing and maintaining an Apollo Terminology Handbook is included. A sample of such a terminology handbook is produced as Part 2 of this report."Guide to John F. Kennedy Space Center, including an introduction from Center director Kurt Debus.Historical report from July 1st to December 31st.Included are a copy of page 7 of the December 1963 publication of Pan Am (GMRD) Clipper magazine and a letter from Pan American World Airways to David Christensen. The magazine article briefly describes the gantry that surrounded Saturn-V and Pan American's Saturn complex Supervisor, Brooks Watson.Includes a blueprint of DDAS System Block Diagram.Includes Advanced Studies Office, Aerospace Environment Division, Astrodynamics and Guidance Theory Division, Projects Office, Aerophysics Division, Dynamics and Flight Mechanics Division, Flight Test Analysis Division.Includes change pages. Contract NAS8-14000. Second revised edition. V66-15610. NASA-CR71607. The introduction notes, "This second revised edition of the Astrionics System Handbook has been developed under the direction and overall supervision of Dr. Rudolf Decher of the Astrionics Systems Engineering Office. This description of the Saturn Astrionics System has been generated by personnel of the Astrionics Laboratory, the staff of the Astrionics Systems Engineering Office, and by personnel of the International Business Machines Corporation working under Contract NAS8- 14000. The handbook will be updated and expanded as it becomes necessary due to changes or refinements in the system concept and hardware. Sections not contained in the first release of this document will be made available within three months." Signed by Ludie G. Richard, Chief, Systems Engineering Office, Astrionics Laboratory. The document is missing pages in the following locations: Chapters 8, 9, 12. Sections 15.2, 15.3, 15.4-1 thru 15.4-16, 15.5-1 thru 15.5-2, 15.5-5 thru 15.5-8.Includes Technical and Scientific Staff; Advanced Studies Office; Projects Office; Aerospace Environment Division; Aerophysics Division; Astrodynamics and Guidance Theory Division; Dynamics and Flight Mechanics Division; Flight Test Analysis Division.Design News, September 4, 1963, written by Margaret A. Maas." data-url="/digitalcollections/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=49&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=Saturn+Project+%28U.S.%29&advanced%5B1%5D%5Belement_id%5D=41&advanced%5B1%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B1%5D%5Bterms%5D=Includes+the+clipping+%22Clamping+Tool+Aligns+Odd-Shaped+Sections+for+Welding%22+from+%3Ci%3EDesign+News%3C%2Fi%3E%2C+September+4%2C+1963%2C+written+by+Margaret+A.+Maas.">Includes the clipping "Clamping Tool Aligns Odd-Shaped Sections for Welding" from Design News, September 4, 1963, written by Margaret A. Maas.Keith D. Graham is principal mathematician, Systems and Research Center, Honeywell, Inc., 2345 Walnut Street, St. Paul, Minnesota.; Work done under NASA contract NAS 8-11206 from the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center.; ABSTRACT: A method of specifying the gains of a linear controller for a large launch booster using a new application of optimal control theory is described in this paper. Results for a specific example are included. An important control requirement is to maintain cost variables (such as bending moment, engine gimbal deflection, and lateral deviation from desired trajectory) within specified limits in the presence of load disturbances. This requirement is met by using a performance index which depends explicitly on maximum achievable values of the cost variables in a finite time interval.Monthly progress report for January 12, 1966.Paper by J. W. Moore and J. R. Mitchell, Quality & Reliability Assurance Laboratory, Marshall Space Flight Center, and H. H. Trauboth, Computation Laboratory, Marshall Space Flight Center. The paper summary notes, "The advancement of the space age into increasingly complex and ambitious missions requiring the development and operation of more sophisticated and intricate launch vehicles has generated numerous problem areas. The purpose of this paper is to define the Aerospace Vehicle Simulation; discuss the relationship of this simulation to the major problem areas of checkout; describe the development and implementation of this simulation system; indicate multidiscipline applications to present and future programs."Paper given at the AIAA Guidance and Control Conference, August 12-14, 1963, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Prepared by A. W. Dryden, Quality Engineer, Quality Engineering, Reliability Assurance, Space Systems Center, Douglas Aircraft Company, Inc., Huntington Beach, California. Presented to the 21st Annual Technical Conference for the American Society for Quality Control, Chicago, Illinois. 30 May to 2 June 1967.Prepared by the Lunar Surface Operations Office, Mission Operations Branch, Flight Crew Support Division.Presentation at the Northeast Electronics Research and Engineering Meeting, Boston, Massachusetts, November 4, 1965. Ernest Stuhlinger, Director, Research Projects Laboratory, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (NASA), Huntsville, Alabama.; INTRODUCTION: The prime objective of Project Pegasus is to measure, in the vicinity of the earth, the meteoroid penetration frequency in aluminum sheets of thicknesses which approach those of space capsule walls. Plans for the project were initiated at NASA in 1962 by the Office of Advanced Research and Technology and the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Throughout the project, members of the Langley Research Centers supported the project with experiments and advice.Presented at the AIAA/AAS Stepping Stones to Mars Meeting, this paper compares the "payload velocity spectrum for existing and future missions" with Saturn V capabilities.Presented at the Fourth International Conference on Fluid Sealing held in conjunction with the 24th annual meeting in Philadelphia, May 5-9, 1969.Presented by Charles A. MacGregor, Supervisor, Advanced Turbomachinery during Workshop D, Royce Hall, Room 160 at UCLA on 2 June 1964, as a part of the NASA-UCLA Symposium and Workshop on the Transformation of Knowledge and Its Utilization. The introduction notes, "This report is divided into two general parts. The first part is a description of turbopumps for liquid rocket engines as they exist today. For completeness and understanding, some background information is included on why turbopumps have evolved to their present configurations. The second part suggest portions of this effort that may have some applicability to the general economy."Progress report for August, 1967.Progress report for July, 1967.Progress report for May, 1967.Progress report for October, 1967.Progress report for the month of December, 1967.Progress report for the month of Febuary, 1968.Progress report for the month of January, 1968.Progress report for the month of June, 1967.Progress report for the month of March, 1968.Telephone directory displaying available channels and how to access them.The Clipper is a Guided Missiles Range Division, Pan American World Airlines, Inc., internal publication. This issue includes the articles "News at a Glance," "The Big One," "New Ships on the Horizon," "Civic Responsibility," "Picture Highlights," "Service Awards," "September Service Pins," and "Recognizing Credit Union." "The Big One" includes details about Pan Am's role in developing the Saturn booster.The abstract notes, "The development of an automatic pressure transducer calibration system is discussed in this report. Evolution from past practices and systems into an automatic calibration system with computerized data handling is described."The abstract notes, "The purpose of this report is to summarize the results of three companion studies designed to investigate both the performance growth potential of the Saturn V and the utilization of Saturn V equipment to fill the performance gap in the intermediate payload range between the Saturn IB and the Saturn V. This report includes significant data which is intended to aid the planning of future missions. This data reflects some of the various vehicle configurations which can be used by mission planners to satisfy payload desires in excess of the Saturn IB and Saturn V."The abstract notes, "This paper describes the Automatic Saturn V Page Test System. The system is used to evaluate microminiature Unit Logic Device (ULD) circuits. A page is an assembly consisting of a magnesium- lithium frame, an input-output connector, test points, and multilateral printed circuit boards that interconnect the IUDs into logic circuits. The test system automatically performs tests for shorted voltages and shorted diodes, static logic function, and pulse function."The abstract states "A telemetry system is a device to transfer information from an inaccessible to an accessible location. A constant input to a telemetry system yields outputs that are distributed according to some density function. A linear change in this constant input may yield a nonlinear change in output. The theory of statistics and experimental design may be applied to the data received from a flight to evaluate the inflight accuracy, linearity, and precision of various telemetry systems. This paper explains the analytical concepts used in postflight analysis of Instrument Unit telemetry systems. It also presents the method for interpreting the results of these analytical techniques."The Abstract states "The four checkout systems developed and utilized by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) for acceptance checkout of the Saturn V launch vehicle stages and instrument unit are described. The vehicle's characteristics, test policies, equipment design criteria, and operational factors are reviewed. Following a general description of each checkout system, this paper presents a brief definitive description of each major subsystem test station. These test systems are used for post-manufacturing and post-static firing acceptance checkout. The section related to the S-II stage includes several representative flow diagrams and descriptions of automatic tests. To present in detail the large volume of information describing these four checkout systems would require the writing of four papers."The chart includes diagrams, mission statistics, crew, and notes. There is an additional copy in the David Christensen Collection.The document describes the Apollo modules, launch vehicles, Apollo chronology, Apollo briefs.The document is a Boeing manual. It contains operating procedures and directives specifically for the Launch Sytems Branch.The document is a booklet created as part of the NASA/Chrysler Corporation Space Division manned flight awareness program. It discusses Chrysler's role in manufacturing and testing the Saturn and includes photographs and diagrams of Saturn stages, operations at Michoud, testing, and future missions. The section headings included in this booklet are "Chrysler and the Saturn," "Saturn at Michoud," "The Voyage of Saturn," "Saturn Firings," and "Saturn's Missions."The document is a draft of the presentation "Chemistry in Space" by Harold Perkins, who explains the role of chemists in developing space launch vehicles. The document Includes references to charts and other presentation supports. The document is marked in the upper left hand corner "Huntsville High School Science Organization (the JETS), October 1962."The document is a list of Boeing subcontractors on Project Apollo including contractor locations, projects, and funding.The document is a list of tools from the Manufacturing Engineering Laboratory at MSFC. Included in the list are the tool numbers, titles, and stages of development. Prior to the list the document includes a handwritten note from Bill Vardaman. Issue April 1968. Office R-ME-TDP.The document is a paper describing contamination cleaning methods and advocating for further developments in the field. Tables and figures are included at the end of the paper. The figures include a comparison of Saturn V with Saturn I and Saturn IB and cross-sections of the Saturn C-5, S-IC stage fuel tank assembly and oxidizer tank assembly.The document is a Space Task Group report to the president. Pages 8, 18, 26, 27 of the document are missing.The document is an annotated bibliography of reports from Requested by D. L. Christiensen. 2The document is an Instrument Society of America Symposium Preprint of the "Booster Instrumentation for Static Firing" by Marin A. Ferrario. "Booster Instrumentation for Static Firing" was included in the 10th National Aerospace Instrumentation Symposium which occured from May 4th - 6th at the Hotel Biltmore in New York, NY.The document is designated for internal use only.The document is Volume 1, Section 1 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 10 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 11 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 12 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 13 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 14 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 15 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 16 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 17 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 18 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 19 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 2 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 20 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 3 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 4 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 5 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 6 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 7 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 8 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document is Volume 1, Section 9 of a list of Saturn V launch tests including but not limited to test titles, test numbers, test objectives, and test descriptions related to AS-502.The document's mission summary states "This documet is perpared jointly by the Marshall Sapce Fligh Center Laboratories S&E-ASTR-S, S&E-AERO-P, and S&E-ASTN-ESD. The document presents a brief and concise description of the AS-506 Apollo Saturn Space Vehicle and the AS-506 mission. Where necessary, for clarification, additional related information has been included. It is not intended that this document completely define the Space Vehicle, its sytems or subsystems in detail. The information presented herein by text and sketches, describe launch preparation, ground support activities, and the space vehicle. This information permits the reader to follow the sequence of events beginning a few hours before liftoff to mission completion."The documentation noted in the circular is available at UAH Archives and Special Collections in the Saturn V Collection.The foreword states "In this chronology, Air Force manned space flight activity is viewed from the perspective of the ballistic missile development agency - the Air Research and Development Command's Western Development Division, later re-named the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division. Due to resource limitations at the Space Systems Division historical office, research for this chronology has been generally limited to materials available in the files of that office. All documents cite in the notes which follow each entry are located in the archives of the Historical Division, Office of Information, Space Systems Division, in Los Angeles California." There are handwritten notes throughout.The introduction notes, "The Saturn V launch vehicle is being developed by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's George C. Marshall Space Flight Center for Project Apollo; Saturn I and Saturn IB vehicles are providing the early testing and support for Project Apollo. The nerve center of the Saturn is its guidance and control system. An airborne digital computer provides the link which closes both the guidance and control loops,making verification of the flight computer program of vital importance. During a powered flight this onboard digital computer program can be divided into four major parts:a) guidance, including navigation, b) control, c) vehicle sequencing, and d) computer telemetry."The introduction states, "This paper is designed to present the Rocketdyne engine program as it applies to the Saturn launch vehicles and will apply to the Apollo program of manned flight to the moon (Fig. 1). The vehicle that will launch this flight is the Saturn V, the largest and most powerful of the Saturn family. This vehicle, 362 feet tall and 33 feet in diameter, will be capable of sending a 45-ton payload to the moon or placing a 120-ton payload in earth orbit. Five F-1 engines power the first stage of the Saturn V; five J-2 engines, the second stage; and one J-2 engine, the third stage. The thrust of the first-stage engines alone will be equivalent to 160 million horsepower. Both of these engines, the F-1 and the J-2, were designed at, and are currently being produced by Rocketdyne."The leaflet outlines the history of Saturn launches and gives a physical description of the rocket. The description includes a diagram of each stage; specifications of each stage's thrust, propellants, liftoff weight, and burning time; and engine specifications.The magazine contains the articles "Aidr Cargo Jets Ahead", "Saturn Stands Up", "Tunnel of Flame", "Where the Air Is Really Hot", "Spaghetti to the Rescue", "B-52 Bombers Undergo Tests", "sports-Minded Magician", "Skipper Regan", and "Road to the Stars". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine contains the articles "Classics from the Classroom", "The Iron Maiden", "Shake Well Before Using", "Old Yaller is White Again", "Tucumcari", "In the Family Tradition", and "The Flying Cloud". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine contains the articles "From Computer to Picture Tube", "Moon Rocket Service Station", "These Are Possible on the 747", "Earthquake Predictor", "Speeders Everyone Likes", "Minuteman Through the Looking Glass", "Air Pilot, Water Pilot", "Leader of the Band", and "Come Home Safe". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine contains the articles "In the Spirit of Magellan", "Engine No. 551", "Try This on for Size", "A Carriage for Big Brother", "Grease the Wheels inSpace", "Orbiting Eye", "Big Enough", "Man Toward Mars", and "Blue-Ribbon Bomber". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine contains the articles "Manned Orbital Laboratory", "Big Wheels Carry Big Bird", "Good Turner", "Tokyo Tours", "Purity Surety", "The Ships Had Wings", "Taylored Talent", "Airplane Engineer", and "Synthetic Sunshine". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine contains the articles "The Spout of the Funnel", "Titanium for the SST", "Jobs, Anyone", "Burner II Heads for Growth", "Exact Temperature Control", "Nuclear Shock Tests", Holidays With or Without Haggis", "Gunboat Man", and "Scientific Shakeup". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the article "Saddle the Dragon", "The 100 Secondsof 27 Charlie", "Which Alloy is Best?", "How to Knock Out an ICBM", "Inner Test for Outer Space", "Air Guards Get More 97s", "New Beauty Salon for Jets", "Builder Blue", "A Feel for the Wind", and "Instant Money". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the artciles "Forward Edge of Research", "727s to Florida", "39 More Passengers", "Breadboards and D-Birds", "The Artful Imitators", "Instinct for Achievement", "Pointer", and "Don't Touch". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "'A Pleasure to Our Eyes'", "New Paint Job", "Six-year Gasp", "Wings on the Nose", "How is SRAM Doing", "Flying Carpet", "A Citizen's Debt", and "Investment in Bonds". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "Cut-stone Castles and Opal Fields", "Fast and Loose", "The Barefoot Flyer", "This Is Your Life, Paul Jones", "Boat in a Bottle", "Making the Right Thing Happen", and "The Guard Goes Global". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "Dipole Near the South Pole", "Migration to Huntsville", "Psychology of Stress", "Red Question Mark in Space", "Every Delivery Is Special", "Moon and Money Man", and "Tanks for Saturn". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "Ground Testing a Moon Bird", "By Air to Athens", "Twinjet Twins", "On the Beam", "15,000 Hours Before Overhaul", "Minuteman Modernization", "Miller in Motion", and "Texas Champ". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "Long Stride for Logistics", "Tests Prove Special Landing Gear", "School Days at Cape Kennedy", "Costs Cut by Fiberglass", "Rockets to Fire Soon", "Boomerang Booster", "Tested Tester", and "Non-Stop Titanium Milling". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "MATS Mappers Will Get Jets", "Hitching Posts for Saturn", "Pods Shell Out Rockets", "One Cigar to Freedom", "Lab-Locked Seahorse", "Flying Gas Station", "Huntsville's Hybrid", "The Horse Who Hated Boeing", and "Soldier Sniffer". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "Next Stop: Mars", "Up the river to the Moon", "Air Force Tests New Missile", "Shake Well Before Using", "Quick Cargo Cash", "New Heart for the B-52", "What-Next Man", "Mostly on Time", and "Faster Inspector". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "Riddle of the Red Planet", "Flying Professors", "Big Balus Over New Guinea", "Helicopter Swimming Pool", "How to Cool a Hot Spot", "Curves Cured to Order", "Higher Flyer", "Team Worker", and "Harpooned for HiBEX". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The magazine includes the articles "The Soft Splash", "Frontierland, U.S.A.", "Her Name is Miss Magnolia", "Alignment for Tall Tools", "Better and 9 Times Smaller", "Instant Jet Tankers", "Broad-Field Man", and "New Turbine-Powered Vehicles". Also included is a briefing of events in the Boeing Company.The pamphlet uses a cartoon character named "D. B. Noyes" to explain to the public "the nature and effects of the noise which Saturn makes during static firing tests."The paper "Capabilities and Limitations of Space Communication Systems" is part of a General Electric Technical Information Series prepared for the Apollo Support Department. The abstract states "A survey and study of the basic parameters of information transfer systems for space communications is presented in this paper, to familiarize systems checkout and on communication engineers with the state-of-the-art and trends in this field. Both current and anticipated requirements for space communication systems are briefly considered. Some of the problems that exist in space communication are presented, along with a general review of current communication systems, their capabilities, and limitations as well as possible improvements in the areas of spacecraft directional antennas, ground stations and antennas, spacecraft transmitter power, and telemetry systems. It is concluded that the increased capabilities expected by the end of this decade should make adequate and reliable space communication possible for most predicted communication needs of future space missions at lunar and near-planet ranges."The paper is marked, "To be presented at the IEEE 1965 Aerospace Conference featuring Flight Vehicle Electrical/Electronics Systems, Houston, Texas, June 20-24, 1965." The abstract states "This paper presents the electrical system used to drive the chilldown motor pumps on the S-IVB space vehicle. This system consists of a 56 volt battery supplying power to the two three-phase solid state inverters which in turn drive two cryogenic motor pumps. Included in this paper is a short description of the overall chilldown system requirements. The advantages of the a-c system over the d-c system are discussed with emphasis on weight and reliability. Two functionally identical 1.5kva inverters were designed. One inverter uses germanium transistors in the output stage while the other uses silicon transistors. Both inverters were designed to have a quasi-square wave output. The inverter circuitry is described and the advantages of each is discussed including a comparison of weight, size, operating temperature, efficiency and voltage rating." Includes diagrams.The phamplet is address to members of the press who are at Cape Kennedy for the Apollo 11 launch. The pamphlet provides information on Boeing's contribution to the Apollo mission.The Preface states "This is a directory of industry, University, and Federal contacts who are involved in the areas of Management Science, Behavioral Science, Operations Research , Cybernetics, and Organizational Structure and Behavior. The listing represents a variety of disciplines -- Sociology, Psychology, Social Psychology, Psychiatry, Anthropology, Statistics, History, Public Administration, Political Science, Economics, Systems Analysis, Ecology,and General Systems Theory."The press conference was given at Cape Royal News Center in Cocoa Beach, Florida, on Wednesday, April 3, 1968, at 3:30 PM. Participants: William C. Schneider, Apollo Mission Director, NASA; George M. Low, Apollo Spacecraft Manager, NASA; Clifford Charlesworth, Apollo 6 Flight Director, Manned Spacecraft Center, NASA; Dr. Arthur Rudolph, Saturn V Program Office, Marshall Space Flight Center, NASA; Rocco A. Petrone, Apollo 6 Launch Director, Kennedy Space Center, NASA; Col. Royce Olson, USAF, Director DOD Manned Spaceflight Support Office, Patrick AFB; Chris Kraft, Director of Flight Operations, Manned Spacecraft Center.The press kit includes documentation on the Command and Service Module, Lunar Module, Saturn V launch vehicle, astronauts, and mission descriptions. Release No. 69-68.The program includes "Marshall Center Highlights" from the Center's first year, a message from director Wernher von Braun, a photograph of the Space Queen and Princesses, and a guide to the Center's buildings.The report covers June 30, 1967 through June 27, 1968: Contract NAS8-5608, Schedules 1 and 1A, July 27, 1968. Prepared by J. P. Delaloye, Management Reporting and Analysis; Supervised by D. G. Valentine, Management Reporting and Analysis; Approved by R. F. Terry, Program Reports; D. H. Creim, Michoud, Program Planning and Reporting Manager; E. K. Cooper, S-IC Program Executive.The report includes the Systems Test Division; Components and Subsystems Division; Technical Support Division; and the Advanced Facilities Planning Office.The seminar was held at the Manned Spacecraft Center, September 25-26, 1969.The set of documents includes an introductory letter written by D. Brainerd Holmes and Tischler's report with the subject "F-1 Combustion Instability Report for Associate Administrator; Period June-July 1963."The summary notes, "In 1960, research work was begun to develop new guidance concepts for the Saturn space vehicles. [...] This paper presents the basics of the Iterative Guidance Law developed for Saturn launch vehicles to meet these new requirements of space age guidance. The development of the Iterative Guidance Law and the results and ideas presented in this paper are due primarily to Mr. Helmut J. Horn and his associates in the Dynamics Analysis and Flight Mechanics Division of the Aero-Astrodynamics Laboratory." Marked "Research Review, OK" in the upper right corner of the first page. The document includes corrections and additions to the text in red pencil.The title has been cut off of document. This was placed inside the document Configuration Management. An organizational chart of plans and critical events related to those plans.This address was given by James E. Webb, Administrator, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, at the Inventors' Congress and Space Symposium, Little Rock, Arkansas.This appendix includes various diagrams of orbital launch vehicles, graphs of propellant and tankweight, returnpayload, and lift-off requirements, velocity requirements for a manned lunar mission, multiple drawings for the Saturn C-3 vehicles, lunar mission payloads, information of vehicle size, and a summary of the Saturn C-3 lunar mission.This bibliography appears to be an excerpt of a larger publication. The scan is very poor.This copy has handwritten notes that change the title to read, "Analog Simulation of Uprated Saturn I Stage Propulsion System Dynamic Characteristics." The abstract notes, "The purpose of this paper is to present the techniques and logic employed in the development of an analog computer model to simulate Saturn IV first stage propulsion system dynamic characteristics. Restraints, problem areas, and major assumptions are included."This copy is a reproduction of a document held by the NASA Scientific and Technical Information Facility .This document contains a transcript of the briefing meeting for the launch of Apollo 10. Participants include George H. Hage, Colonel Thomas McMullen, and William J. O'Donnell.This document contains a transcript of the pre-launch conference, including the questions asked and the answers given by participants William C. Schneider, Rocco A. Petrone, George M. Low, Col. William Teir, Col. Royce Olson, Christopher C. Kraft, Jr., and Eugene F. Kranz.This document contains a transcription of the pre-launch press conference for Apollo 4. It includes the questions asked and answers given by participants Dr. Robert C. Seamans, Dr. George E. Mueller, Major General Samuel C. Phillips, Dr. Kurt H. Debus, and Dr. Wernher von Braun.This document contains the test technical report and results for the LEM docking probe and drogue assemblies to demonstrate that the assemblies would sustain enough load to capture latch. The document contains various graphs, diagrams, and images from testing. The final page contains a note that page no. A-139 is missing from the report.This document contains the tests and test results from structural tests performed on the Apollo LEM docking drogue assembly between January 11, 1967 and February 15, 1967. The document contains various graphs, diagrams, and images pertaining to the tests.This document contains the transcript from the Apollo 7 mission. This transcript contains the communication from the first seven days of the ten day mission.This document contains the transcription from the Apollo 5 post-launch press conference, including all the questions asked and answers given by participants Major General Samuel C. Phillips, Rocco A. Petrone, and Colonel William Teir.This document includes the current basis for approval of ECPs, fatigue life after stress reduction, and other probability and comparative risk assessments. On the first page there is an inscription, "By E.L. Bombara NASA-MSFC."This document is a compilation of abstracts of NASA Technical Memorandums and MSFC Internal Notes, written by personnel of the Materials Division and released during 1965.This document is the fourth edition of the management charts and photographs maintained in the Management Information Office of the Executive Staff on Michoud Assembly Facility and Mississippi Test Facility. Information on other MSFC activities and facilities will be published in separate volumes.This draft copy of the chronology includes a memorandum from Marshall Historian L. L. Jones of the Historical Office.This flier highlights Marshall Space Flight Center's role in the lunar landing and illustrates each step of a successful mission, from liftoff at Kennedy Space Center to splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.This glossary contains acronyms and abbreviations commonly found in documentation from the Apollo Program. This glossary is meant to be a tool for historians and other researchers.This memorandum contains the pages to be changed in the logistics program for the Apollo/Saturn Project. The logistics plan includes the design, procuring, manufacturing, and production processes. This plan formalizes the program, improves logistic support, and implements management and action plans.This memorandum details changes or changes to be considered in Apollo-Saturn nomenclature. It also contains the matter of the Apollo and AAP missions designs and changes Seamans wishes to see.This message for the Apollo Program Director contains a report of the Apollo launch vehicles, problem that occurred, and actions required. The photocopy is difficult to read.This official bibliography includes English- and foreign-language books, articles, and interviews.This paper discusses the propulsion requirements for various stages of the Apollo vehicles and the development of these engines.This paper focuses on an approach for achieving high reliability within the Navigation, Guidance, and Control systems of the Saturn class launch vehicles.This paper identifies the support functions performed by MSFC through the Launch Information Exchange Facility (LIEF) during the Apollo Saturn Mission Operations and other facilities required to carry out these functions. It also identifies mission specific documents required for operation. Note that page 20 is missing.This paper includes the equations for the bending moment of a launch vehicle with the effects of bending and sloshing dynamics. It also includes a comparison between the bending moment response envelope of the measure winds and the bending moment response of the MSFC synthetic wind profile.This paper presents a discussion of a hybrid simulation used to dynamically verify the Saturn Guidance and Control subsystems. First, the Saturn vehicle is briefly described to provide background information. The Instrument Unit (IU) is considered in more detail to give a proper setting for the Guidance and Flight Control (G and FC) discussion that follows. After a brief description of the actual G and FC System operation, simulation models of the G and FC components are considered in detail. This is followed by a discussion of the model assignment to a particular computer (digital or analog) and justification for making that assignment. Finally, results of the AS-204/LM1 hybrid simulation studies are briefly considered with mention of the actual flight data.This paper reviews the milestones achieved with cryogenic liquid propellant rocket engines, discusses current technology improvement programs, and projects future engine designs. During the last two decades, these cryogenic rocket engines have played a major role in rocketry and achieved numerous important milestones. These engines power the Vanguard, Redstone, Thor, Atlas, and Titan I vehicles , the Saturn I and Uprated Saturn I vehicles, and will soon be employed in the Saturn V for the Apollo missions. The requirements dictated by these vehicles have necessitated growth from the 27,000-pound-thrust Vanguard engine to the 7,600,000-pound-thrust booster cluster for the Saturn V. Gains in specific impulse have also been significant. The successful application of liquid hydrogen in the Centaur and Saturn upper-stage rocket engines was a major achievement.This paper was presented at the International Cryogenic Engineering Conference in Kyoto, Japan. It details the use of cryogenic technology in rocketry and how its usage created "many new techniques and deeply stimulated many fields of cryogenic technology."This paper was presented to the Society of Automotive Engineers. The abstract reads, "The Douglas Aircraft Company has been involved in testing the Saturn SIV stage at the Sacramento Test Center for the past two years. The propulsion system for the SIV stage consists of six (6) Pratt & Whitney Aircraft Company rocket engines which are designed specifically for high altitude start and operation. During static firing tests of this engine at sea level, a steam jet ejector in combination with a diffuser, are used to simulate altitude conditions. The intent of this paper is to examine the performance of this altitude simulation system, and to discuss problems encountered in making it operational."This paper, presented at the fifth annual Reliability and Maintainability Conference in New York City, contains a "prime contractor's reliability program for components/parts for the Douglas S-IVB stage project." These parts include special flight critical items and their complementary reliability engineering program plan is outlined in this paper.This paper, which was presented at a Semi-Annual Meeting of the American Rocket Society, traces the role of the United States Army in national space activities. Incorporated in the report are photographs illustrating the evolution of the satellite and space program.This report has been prepared to provide Aerojet management and the interested NASA offices with nuclear propulsion decision aid data. The primary intent of these analyses is to evaluate potential space missions which may utilize nuclear propulsion in an effort to determine the most desirable characteristics of a nuclear propulsion system.This report includes a summary of the major tasks performed by the Apollo Logistics Support System Payloads with an emphasis on the Lunar Mobile Laboratory (MOLAB).This report is meant to provide NASA Senior Management with information on flight plans, mission objectives, and the basis for assessment of mission accomplishment. Note that page 61 is missing from the report.This reproduced copy contains 43 pages of "general instructions for the uniform preparation of Project, System, and Contract End Items Specifications for Apollo/Saturn new equipment and major refurbishment."This updated edition of the Astrionics System Handbook instructs, "The enclosed pages change, delete, or supplement the information in the Astrionics System Handbook (1 August 1965). Insert these pages and destroy the pages they replace."This was found folded inside Configuration Management. Taken from Defense Industry Bulletin, June 1968. Includes an organizational chart and an accompanying bibliography.Written by NASA Office of Manned Space Flight Associate Administrator George E. Mueller, this is an article from G. E. Challenge, Fall 1966, page 26 to 32. Creator Select...Advanced Concepts, Reon Division, Aerojet-General Corporation.Advanced Studies OfficeAero-Astrodynamics LaboratoryAmerican Ordnance AssociationAmerican Society of Lubrication EngineersApollo News Center.Astrionics LaboratoryBelew, Leland F.Belew, Leland.Bendix Field Engineering CorporationBoeing Aerospace Company. Space Division. Launch Systems BranchBoeing Company.Boeing Company. Aero-Space Division.Boeing Company. Space Division.Bombara, E. L.Bottome, Edgar M.Brennan, William J.Brown Engineering Co.Brown, B. G.Calkins, Kenneth L. [editor]Carson, W. D.Chatfield, Chester [editor]Chatfield, Chester [editor].Chrysler CorporationChrysler Corporation. Space DivisionCieslik, WalterClark, RossClarke, William W.; Calkins, Kenneth L. [editor]Dabul, AmadeoDavies, RobertDecher, RudolfDefense Documentation Center.Delaloye, J. P.Digesu, Fred E.Dill, GeorgeDouglas Aircraft Company, Inc. Missile and Space Systems Division.Douglas Aircraft Company. Missile and Space Systems DivisionDryden, A. W.Duggan, O. T.Ertel, Ivan D.Eubank, F. W.Ferrario, Martin A.Fleming, William A.Franklin, D. B.General Electric Company. Defense Systems Department.General Electric CorporationGeorge C. Marshall Space Flight CenterGeorge C. Marshall Space Flight Center.George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Aero-Astrodynamics LaboratoryGeorge C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Instrumental development branchGeorge C. Marshall Space Flight Center. MSFC SupportGeorge C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Propulsion & Vehicle Engineering LaboratoryGeorge C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Test Laboratory.George C. Marshall Space Flight Center. Test Laboratory. Systems Test Division.George C.Marshall Space Flight Center. Management Information OfficeGlennan, Thomas Keith, 1905-1995Graham, Keith D.Hage, George H.Hill, A. S.Hofferth, D. D.Holmes, D. BrainerdHug, N.L.International Business Machines Corporation. Federal Systems DivisionInternational Business Machines Corporation. Space Systems CenterJohn F. Kennedy Space CenterJohn F. Kennedy Space Center.Jones, L. L.Lanaman, John H.Lehner, J. W.Library of Congress. Science and Technology DivisionLifer, C. E.Lucier, L.MacGregor, Charles A.MacKenzie, C. M.Manned Spacecraft Center (U.S.)Materials DivisionMcMullen, ThomasMeister, George F., Jr.Mitchell, J. R.Moore, J. W.Morrow, Ralph J.Mueller, G. E. (George Edwin), 1918-2015NASA Historical Division (U.S.)National Aeronautic and Space Administration. Scientific and Technical Information Facility.National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationNational Aeronautics and Space Administration.Naumcheff, M.North American Aviation, Incorporated. Space and Information Systems Division.North American Aviation, Incorporated. Structures Test Group of Laboratories and Test.North American Aviation. Rocketdyne DivisionNorth American Aviation. Space and Information Systems DivisionNorth American Rockwell Corporation. Space Division.O'Connor , Edmund F.O'Donnell, William J.Oakley, Ralph B.Odom, P. R.Pan American World Airways, Inc. Guided Missiles Range DivisionPatray, Ronald T.Patterson, Wayne H.Paul, H. G.Perkins, HaroldPolansky, A. L.Poupard, R. E.Propulsion DivisionPublic Relations, ASD, Pan American World AirwaysRees, EberhardRuppe, Harry O.Ryan, Robert S. (Robert Samuel), 1925-S&E-AERO-PS&E-ASTN-ESDS&E-ASTR-SSapp, T. P.Schaefer, Herbert, 1911-1999Schmidt, D. MorrisSchuler, Albert E.Seamans, Robert C.Sharpe, Mitchell R.Shinkle, John G., 1912-Siebel, Mathias P. L.Smith, Robert A.Smith, Robert L., Jr.Space Systems Center, Douglas Missile & Space Systems Division.Space Task Group.Spaco, Inc.Steele, T. D.Stovall, John R.Structures DivisionStuhlinger, ErnstStuhlinger, Ernst, 1913-2008Tesdall, Darrell W.Teuber, DieterThadani, M. C.The Boeing Company Space Division Launch System Branch.The Boeing Company, Southeast Division.Thomas Jr., James W.Tischler, A. O.Toney, J.Trauboth, H. H.United States. Air Force. Space Division. Office of HistoryUnited States. National Aeronautics and Space AdministrationUnited States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Office of Public AffairsUniversity of Alabama in HuntsvilleVardaman, W. K.Vedane, C. R.Vehicle Systems DivisionWebb, James E. (James Edwin), 1906-1992Wilson, E. L.Wilson, R. B.Wood, Charles C.Wood, William H., Jr.Wylie, W. D.Yarbrough, Leonard Temporal Coverage Select...1950-19591960-1969 Subject Remove filter...Saturn Project (U.S.) Type Select...Administrative reportsAnnotated bibliographiesAnnual reportsBibliographiesBooksChronologies (list)CircularsClippingsCorrespondenceDescriptionsDesign reviewsDiagramsDocumentsEssaysFliersGlossariesHandbooksHistorical ReportsHistories (literary works)International Business Machine CorporationLeafletsLogs (records)MemorandumsMinutes (administrative records)NewspapersOperating manualsOrganizational ChartsPamphletPamphletsPeriodicalsPlans (reports)PresentationsPress conferencesPress kitsPress releasesProgramsProgress reportsReportsSpace vehicle checkout program.SpeechesStill ImageStill imagesTechnical reportsTelegraphsTelephone directoriesTextThesesTranscripts Provenance Select...This collection is digital only. The heirs of Eleanor Hutchens retain the originals.This item was digitized for the Apollo 11 50th anniversary celebration. Language Select...enfr