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Camera, Lunar Surface Ultraviolet, Apollo 16

Air and Space Museum

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  • Full view of a camera covered in gold foil sitting on a tripod. A green wire connects it to a small green box.
  • Back view of a camera covered in gold foil sitting on a tripod. There is a circle with white wires coming out of it on the back of the camera.
  • Close up of the back of a camera covered in gold foil sitting on a tripod. There are green and white wires, a clear box, and a red rectangle.

    Object Details

    Manufacturer

    Naval Research Laboratory

    Summary

    This is a reconstructed back-up engineering model (Serial Number 4) of the first astronomical telescope to observe from another planetary body. It represents a telescopic camera that was flown to the moon on Apollo 16. Built by George Carruthers at the Naval Research Laboratory, it was operated by astronaut John Young in a programmed series of studies of the Earth's outermost atmosphere, its "geocorona." It was also used to examine ultraviolet colors of stars and nebulae as well as the earth's upper atmosphere and diffuse gaseous material in the depths of space. The camera operated in dual mode: spectroscopic and direct view.
    This artifact is one of two back-up units to the flown camera that were transferred from NASA-Johnson Space Center to the Museum in June 1981. NASA variously called the device the "Lunar Surface Camera" or the "Far Ultraviolet Camera/Spectrograph." Its primary collecting system is an F/1, 3-inch Schmidt camera and it is mounted in an altitude-azimuth frame for access to the visible sky. It employed electronographic amplification of the optical signal, and recording on a roll of nuclear emulsion film that was fed by a film transport mechanism that was returned to earth after the mission. In 1992 this artifact was loaned to NRL so that Carruthers and Project SMART students could restore it prior to putting it on display next to the Lunar Lander in 1993. As part of the restoration, Carruthers attached the flown film transport mechanism at the back end of the electronographic camera and added other components, such as (from his letter of 6 March 1993):
    "1. Items which were manufactured as replicas of the missing originals were the
    camera mounting plate, corrector plate motor drive motor enclosures and
    control electronics box (simulated by solid blocks of aluminum), and
    miscellaneous small parts.
    2. Items which were replaced by similar, but not identical, hardware on hand as
    Apollo 16 prototypes or hardware for other f l i g h t experiments, include the
    camera assembly (including magnet) and high voltage power supply,
    3. The film transport assembly on the display unit is the actual flight unit
    which went to the moon and back on Apollo 16."

    Credit Line

    Transferred from the Johnson Spaceflight Center

    Inventory Number

    A19830142000

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    INSTRUMENTS-Scientific

    Materials

    Gold (Gold Plating)
    Aluminum
    Plastic
    Copper
    Ink
    Glass
    Electrical Wiring
    Synthetic Fiber Fabric
    Ferrous Alloy
    Cellulose Acetate

    Dimensions

    3-D (Overall): 49.5 × 78.7 × 53.3cm (1 ft. 7 1/2 in. × 2 ft. 7 in. × 1 ft. 9 in.)

    Country of Origin

    United States of America

    See more items in

    National Air and Space Museum Collection

    Location

    National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC

    Exhibition

    Destination Moon

    Data Source

    National Air and Space Museum

    Metadata Usage

    Not determined

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nv98a268c9a-f33f-4bbf-bdad-cfca9ebb75a1

    Record ID

    nasm_A19830142000

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