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Hasselblad "Electric Camera" (modified 500 EL) with 70 mm film; Maurer Data Acquisition Camera (DAC) with 16 mm film; Nikon F with 35 mm film; Mapping (Metric) Camera (7.6 cm focal length) with 127 mm film, on Apollo 15, 16, and 17 (see Sherman Fairchild#Lunar photography) [1] Stellar Camera (7.6 cm focal length) with 35 mm film, on Apollo 15 ...
Shuttle Remote Manipulator System (RMS) holding OBSS boom on STS-114 Astronaut Scott Parazynski at the end of the OBSS boom making repairs to the P6 solar array The Orbiter Boom Sensor System ( OBSS ) was a 50-foot (15.24 m) boom carried on board NASA 's Space Shuttles .
In 1980 [20] and 1989, Nikon delivered modified, space capable F3 [21] (big and small version) respectively F4 cameras to NASA, which were used in the Space Shuttle. Nikon's first digital camera ( still video camera , with analog storage) was the Nikon Still Video Camera (SVC) Model 1, a prototype which was first presented at photokina 1986 .
iPad 2 [17] Installed hardware/experiments (no longer active) High Definition Earth-Viewing System (HDEV) [18] 4:3 standard definition CCTV cameras [19] EHDCA [19] A Nikon D4 in special housing with motor controlled zoom from 28-300 [19] Two Raspberry Pi computers, [20] one equipped with a standard camera and one with an infrared camera.
By 17:24 UTC, Hoffman had finished replacing RSU-2 (containing Gyros 2–3 and 2–4) and then replaced RSU-3 (containing Gyros 3–5 and 3–6). The astronauts then spent about 50 minutes preparing equipment for use during the second space walk and then replaced a pair of electrical control units (ECUs) (ECU-3 and ECU-1) that control RSU-3 and ...
STS-109 (SM3B) was a Space Shuttle mission that launched from the Kennedy Space Center on 1 March 2002. It was the 108th mission of the Space Shuttle program, [1] the 27th flight of the orbiter Columbia [1] and the fourth servicing of the Hubble Space Telescope. [2]
The space shuttle flight program came to a close on July 21, 2011, when Atlantis landed at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
The Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) is the Hubble Space Telescope's last and most technologically advanced instrument to take images in the visible spectrum. It was installed as a replacement for the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 during the first spacewalk of Space Shuttle mission STS-125 (Hubble Space Telescope Servicing Mission 4) on May 14 ...