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Guidance, Navigation, and Control

Air and Space Museum

The functions of guidance, navigation, and control are vital to all forms of air and space flight. The Space History collections in this area attempt to reflect that significance and illustrate the breadth of the topic.

In practice these three functions blend into one another, and artifacts from this collection often perform multiple duties. For this collection, "guidance" shall refer to controlling a vehicle during acceleration or deceleration, mainly during the powered phase of flight, i.e. to align the thrust vector of a rocket or jet engine to coincide with (or deviate slightly from) the vehicle's center of mass, or to use aerodynamic controls such as fins to aim the vehicle properly during its flight. Guided missiles, which are powered for most of their flight, require continuous guidance (hence the name), but in a typical space mission, a rocket burns for only a fraction of the total time of the mission and would require guidance for only that short period of time. Once the rocket engines shut off, there follows the function of "navigation," which is to get from one position in space to another. In contrast to navigation at sea or in the air, space navigation typically consists of long periods of coasting with periodic corrections. Finally, "control" is defined as orienting the space craft in its rotational axes to perform its various operations, such as pointing a telescope, orienting an antenna toward Earth, preparing the vehicle for a rocket burn, etc. Again in contrast to aircraft and ships, in the absence of an atmosphere a spacecraft may be oriented in any direction, but it is usually not desirable to allow it to tumble with no control.

"Control" is also used in another context, namely the management of a mission from the ground (e.g. NASA?s "Mission Control" in Houston).  Passenger aircraft fly with periodic communication with air traffic controllers on the ground, but in general they fly with a great deal of autonomy. In contrast, spacecraft that carry a human crew are intensively managed from the ground, where controllers monitor the vehicle?s performance, ensure the safety of the crew, and manage the crew?s schedule and operations. Robotic spacecraft may require less control, but during critical phases of their missions they are also intensively controlled from Earth. The National Air and Space Museum?s collections in this area attempt to show the breadth and depth of this topic by a judicious selection of artifacts.


  • National Air and Space Museum 84 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Crewed spacecraft 15 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Uncrewed spacecraft 10 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • United States of America 77 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Germany 5 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Argentina 1 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • National Air and Space Museum Collection 84 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center in Chantilly, VA 11 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Human Spaceflight 7 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Rockets & Missiles 4 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC 2 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Destination Moon 1 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • One World Connected 1 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Outer space 25 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Human spaceflight 15 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Spaceflight 10 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Not determined 84 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus

Filter Settings

Included:

  • Remove Resource Type: Navigational instruments close

Autopilot, V-1

Gyro, Autopilot, V-1

Guidance System, Stellar-Inertial, XN-2

Computer, Guidance, Gemini 8

Guidance System, Stellar-Inertial, Northrop "Snark"

Indicator, Attitude Direction, Gemini

Indicator, Attitude Direction, Gemini

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo Guidance Computer, Fragment

Sextant

Sextant, Eyepiece, Apollo 4

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo Guidance Computer

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo Guidance Computer

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo, Block I

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo, Block II

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo

Computer, Apollo Guidance, Block I

Computer, Apollo, Block 1

Computer, Guidance and Navigation, Apollo

Computer, Guidance and Navigation, Apollo

Platform, Inertial, Gemini 3

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo

Accelerometer, Integrating Gyro, V-2

Abort Electronics Assembly, Apollo, Lunar Module

Instrument Unit, Saturn

Instrument Unit, S-IU 500-D-2, for Saturn V Dynamic Test Version

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo Guidance Computer

Display, Keyboard, Apollo Guidance Computer

Assembly, Optical Unit, Command Module, Apollo

Eyepiece, Sextant, Apollo 16

Filter, Sextant, Apollo 9

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo 7

Keyboard, Display (DSKY), Apollo 16

Handling Fixture, DSKY, Apollo Guidance Computer

Inertial Measurement Unit, SC101, Apollo 7


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