Forty three years ago, Charles J. Byrne, a Bellcomm, Inc.
engineer, became concerned about NASA's plans to archive the data to be sent
from a series of Moon mapping precursor missions to the Apollo lunar landings.
The Lunar Orbiter telemetry, which just two years and five unmanned missions
later would account for imagery of 99 percent of the Moon, was originally
planned by the space agency to be recorded on photographic film only. The five
orbiters themselves would carry the equipment to develop their film and then
scan it for transmission back to Earth. Once there, it would then be reprinted
in strip form to then be manually re-assembled and re-photographed for study.
Anyone who has used a copy machine to make a copy of a copy knows that
resolution is lost in the process. The same was true for Lunar Orbiter, though
for NASA, which needed quicker access to the data than computers of that day
were able to provide, the resulting images would be what they needed to
evaluate landing locations for Apollo.
Still, thought Byrne, there would be value
to having a tape back-up, so he outlined his idea for a Lunar Orbiter DVR-
like system in a July 1965 memo.
"It is concluded that the ability to fully optimize the later site survey
missions on the basis of early Lunar Orbiter data depends on an immediate
decision to provide tape recorders," wrote Byrne.
NASA agreed and AMPEX FR-900 2-inch analog tape recorders were positioned at
the Goldstone, California, Madrid, Spain and Castle Island (Woomera), Australia tracking stations to record all the images from the Lunar Orbiter spacecraft.
Byrne had referenced "later site survey missions" in his memo. What
he didn't know -- what he couldn't know then -- was how much later those tapes
would come back into use.
Earthrise and the sun sets on Lunar Orbiter
Though Lunar Orbiter was quickly overshadowed by the manned Apollo missions,
they did accomplish a number of firsts. The spacecraft captured the first high
resolution global map of the Moon, the first stereo imagery of the surface, and
the first images of the Earth from the Moon.
The latter was particularly noteworthy as it amounted to the spacecraft's
controllers turning Lunar Orbiter 1 away from the surface to take what was
essentially an artistic shot. The black and white image was quick to capture
the public's attention.
"And the other one of course, is earthrise, Earth rising above the surface
of the Moon," continued Cowing in an interview with collectSPACE.com.
"At the time, all the photos were either television or photographs that
had been sent back and they were murky."
"Very
shortly thereafter, we landed on the Moon and there were the ghostly images of
people walking on the Moon."
That astronauts landed safely and explored the surface meant that the Lunar
Orbiters had done their job. With the Apollo program coming to a close and
without a pressing need for the Lunar Orbiter data, NASA put the tapes into
storage, first in Maryland and then in the mid-1980s they were moved to the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in California.
That's where they came under the care of Nancy Evans, co-founder of the NASA
Planetary Data System (PDS).
Evans, working with Mark Nelson of Caltech, began a project to obtain surplus
FR-900 tape drives, refurbish them, and digitize the Lunar Orbiter analog data
on the tapes. They were successful in so much that they were able to obtain the
tape drives and get them running, but without funding the project folded.
By the early 1990s, Evans had retired from JPL, taking with her the
government-surplused drives in the hope of finding private funding to continue
the project she began...
Continue reading
about NASA's Lunar Orbiter Image Recovery Project and view the newly released images
of the Moon at collectSPACE.com.
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