enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Skylab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skylab

    Skylab's impending demise in 1979 was an international media event, [150] with T-shirts and hats with bullseyes [9] and "Skylab Repellent" with a money-back guarantee, [151] wagering on the time and place of re-entry, and nightly news reports.

  3. Teleoperator Retrieval System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teleoperator_Retrieval_System

    NASA expected that the Shuttle would be ready by 1979, and Skylab would not re-enter until the early 1980s. Another factor was that, in 1975, it was decided not to launch a second Skylab ; this gave a boost to Skylab re-use plans. As it was, the Shuttle was not ready until the early 1980s, and Skylab's orbit decayed in 1979. [5]

  4. List of reentering space debris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_reentering_space...

    Skylab [3] USA: 69,000 kg (152,000 lb) 11 July 1979: 6 years: Partially Controlled: 14 May 1973 Salyut 7/Cosmos 1686: USSR: 40,000 kg (88,000 lb) 7 February 1991: 8 years: Uncontrolled: 13 May 1982 S-II Stage / Skylab: USA 36,200 kg (79,700 lb) 11 January 1975 18 Months Uncontrolled 14 May 1973 STS external tank (Standard Tank) USA

  5. STS-2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STS-2

    In the early planning stages of the Space Shuttle program, STS-2 was intended to be a reboost mission for the aging Skylab space station. [note 2] However, such a mission was impeded by delays with the Shuttle's development and the deteriorating orbit of Skylab. Skylab ultimately de-orbited on July 11, 1979, two years before the launch of STS-2 ...

  6. Atmospheric entry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_entry

    On July 11, 1979, the US Skylab space station (77,100 kilograms [170,000 lb]) reentered and spread debris across the Australian Outback. [76] The reentry was a major media event largely due to the Cosmos 954 incident, but not viewed as much as a potential disaster since it did not carry toxic nuclear or hydrazine fuel.

  7. Searching for Skylab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Searching_for_Skylab

    On Skylab, Steven-Boniecki said "hundreds of hours of video and audio recordings exist from it, yet it is unlikely that you've seen or heard much of it." [3] A preview of the first working version of Searching for Skylab was screened at Spacefest, Tucson, AZ on July 5, 2018 to a crowd of space experts, astronauts and their families. Following a ...

  8. Replica of Leica camera from NASA Skylab missions could sell ...

    www.aol.com/news/replica-leica-camera-nasa...

    A NASA-modified version of the peculiar-looking Leica MDa has just gone up for sale at Wetzlar Camera Auction in Germany

  9. List of space debris fall incidents - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_debris_fall...

    2020: The empty core stage of a Chinese Long March-5B rocket made an uncontrolled re-entry - the largest object to do so since the Soviet Union's 39-ton Salyut 7 space station in 1991 – over Africa and the Atlantic Ocean and a 12-meter-long pipe originating from the rocket crashed into the village of Mahounou in Côte d'Ivoire. [21] 2021: