GEMINI 11

'Gemini 11'
Mission insignia
Gemini 11 insignia
Mission statistics
'Mission name:'Gemini 11
'Call sign:'''Gemini 11''
'Number of
crew:'
2
'Launch:'September 12, 1966
14:42:26.546 UTC
Cape Canaveral
LC 19
'Landing:'September 15, 1966
13:59:35 UTC
'Duration:'2 days, 23 hours
17 minutes
8 seconds
'Distance traveled:'~1,983,565 km
'Orbits:'44
'Apogee:
(1st orbit)'
279.1 km
'Perigee:
(1st orbit)'
160.5 km
'Period:
(1st orbit)'
88.89 min
'Inclination:'28.83 deg
'Mass:'3,798.4 kg
Crew picture
Gemini 11 crew portrait (L-R: Gordon, Conrad)

Gemini 11 crew portrait
(L-R: Gordon, Conrad)
Gemini 11 Crew

'Gemini 11' (officially 'Gemini XI') was a 1966 manned spaceflight in NASA's Gemini program. It was the 9th manned Gemini flight, the 17th manned American flight and the 25th spaceflight of all time (includes X-15 flights over 100 km).

Contents
Crew
Mission parameters
Docking
Space walk
See also
Objectives
Experiments
Reentry
Insignia
Capsule location
External links

Crew



Pete Conrad (2), Command Pilot

Richard Gordon (1), Pilot
'Backup crew'

Neil A. Armstrong, Command Pilot

William A. Anders, Pilot

Mission parameters



★ 'Mass:' 3,798.4 kg
Highest orbit (followed twice):

★ 'Perigee:' 289.7 km

★ 'Apogee:' 1374.1 km (a record; apart from the missions to the Moon this has, as of 2007, never been surpassed)

★ 'Inclination:' 28.85°

★ 'Period:' 101.52 min
Docking


★ 'Docked': September 12, 1966 - 16:16:00 UTC

★ 'Undocked': September 14, 1966 - 16:55:00 UTC
Space walk


★ Gordon - EVA 1


★ 'Start': September 13, 1966, 14:44:00 UTC


★ 'End': September 13, 1966, 15:17:00 UTC


★ 'Duration': 0 hours, 33 minutes

★ Gordon - EVA 2 (stand up)


★ 'Start': September 14, 1966, 12:49:00 UTC


★ 'End': September 14, 1966, 14:57:00 UTC


★ 'Duration': 2 hours, 08 minutes
See also


Agena Target Vehicle

Extra-vehicular activity

List of spacewalks

Splashdown

Objectives


With Apollo looming on the horizon, Gemini project managers wanted to accomplish a rendezvous immediately after reaching orbit, just as it would have to be done around the Moon. Only 85 minutes after launch, Conrad and Gordon matched orbits with their Agena target stage and docked several times. Conrad had originally hoped for a Gemini flight around the Moon, but had to settle for the highest Earth orbit ever reached by an American manned spacecraft (1374 kilometer altitude). Gordon's first space-walk once again proved more difficult than ground simulations, and had to be cut short when he became overtired. A second, two-hour "stand-up" space walk went more smoothly: Gordon even fell asleep while floating halfway out the hatch. An experiment to link the Agena and Gemini vehicles with a 15 meter tether (which Gordon had attached during his space-walk) and rotate the joined pair was troublesome. Conrad had problems keeping the tether taut, but was able to generate a modicum of "artificial gravity." The mission ended with the first totally automatic, computer-controlled reentry, which brought Gemini XI down only 4.5 kilometers from its recovery ship.


'Gemini 11''Agena info'
AgenaGATV-5006
NSSDC ID:1966-080A
Mass3,175 kg
Launch siteLC-19
Launch dateSeptember 12, 1966
Launch time13:05:01 UTC
1st perigee289.7 km
1st apogee307.1 km
Period90.56 min
Inclination28.84
ReenteredDecember 30, 1966



Experiments

An Atlas launch vehicle launches GATV-5006 into orbit for the Gemini 11 mission.

The 12 scientific experiments were (1) synergistic effect of zero-g and radiation on white blood cells, (2) synoptic terrain photography, (3) synoptic weather photography, (4) nuclear emulsions, (5) airglow horizon photography, (6) UV astronomical photography, (7) Gemini ion wake measurement, and (8) dim sky photography.
Reentry

The reentry was the first computer-controlled reentry in the US space program. They landed only 4.5 km away from the intended landing site and were recovered by USS ''Guam''.
The Gemini 11 mission was supported by the following U.S. Department of Defense resources; 9,054 personnel, 73 aircraft and 13 ships.

Insignia


On the Gemini 11 crew insigina, stars are used to mark the major milestones of the mission. The first orbit Agena rendezvous is marked by a small gold star just above the earth, to the left. The Agena docking is marked by a large star on the left. The star at the top marks the record high apogee (1,374 km) reached by Gemini 11. Finally the star on right marks Dick Gordon's spacewalk. The docking, record apogee and spacewalk are also shown on the patch by the Agena, orbital apogee path and spacewalking astronaut. The patch is done in US Navy colors, blue and gold. Conrad and Gordon were both members of the US Navy.

Capsule location


The capsule is on display at the California Science Center in Los Angeles, California.


External links



On The Shoulders of Titans: A History of Project Gemini

Spaceflight Mission Patches

★ http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/database/MasterCatalog?sc=1966-081A

★ U.S. Space Objects Registry http://usspaceobjectsregistry.state.gov/search/index.cfm

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