Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pioneer 1, television camera; Pioneer 2, television camera; Lunar Orbiter program, Lunar Orbiter 1–5, 1966–1967; The camera used two lenses to simultaneously expose a wide-angle and a high-resolution image on the same film. The wide-angle, medium resolution mode used an 80 mm F 2.8 Xenotar lens manufactured by Schneider Kreuznach, Germany ...
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 ...
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 .
iPad 2 [17] Installed hardware/experiments (no longer active) High Definition Earth-Viewing System (HDEV) [18] 4:3 standard definition CCTV cameras [19] EHDCA [19] A Nikon D4 in special housing with motor controlled zoom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.
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.
NICMOS was installed on Hubble during its second servicing mission in 1997 along with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, replacing two earlier instruments.. NICMOS in turn has been largely superseded by the Wide Field Camera 3, which has a much larger field of view (135 by 127 arcsec, or 2.3 by 2.1 arcminutes), and reaches almost as far into the in
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]
STS-51-C (formerly STS-10) was the 15th flight of NASA's Space Shuttle program, and the third flight of Space Shuttle Discovery.It launched on January 24, 1985, and made the fourth shuttle landing at the Shuttle Landing Facility at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on January 27, 1985.