S72-53472

S72-53472 (November 1972) — An artist’s concept illustrating how radar beams of the Apollo 17 lunar sounder experiment will probe three-quarters of a mile below the moon’s surface from the orbiting spacecraft. The Lunar Sounder will be mounted in the SIM bay of the Apollo 17 Service Module. Electronic data recorded on film will be retrieved by the crew during trans-Earth EVA. Geologic information on the lunar interior obtained by the sounder will permit scientific investigation of underground rock layers, lava flow patterns, rille (canyon) structures, mascon properties, and any areas containing water. A prototype lunar sounder has been flight tested in aircraft over selected Earth sites to confirm the equipment design and develop scientific analysis techniques. The Lunar Sounder Experiment (S-209) was developed by North American Rockwell’s (NR) Space Division for NASA’s Manned Spacecraft Center to provide data for a scientific investigation team with representatives from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, University of Utah, University of Michigan, U.S. Geological Survey, and NASA Ames Research Center.

Image credit: NASA JSC
Image source: NASA Images

RIFT

Image credit: Lockheed
Image source: Mike Acs

Lockheed Space Station

Image credit: Lockheed
Image source: Mike Acs

Apollo 8 Coming Home

Oil on panel by Robert McCall. The Apollo 8 spacecraft fires it’s engines to propel it out of lunar orbit and the return trip to Earth.

This is NASA, EP 22, 1971

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Numbers Station

We Land On The Moon

NASA artwork as it appeared in We Land On The Moon by John Raymond in 1963.

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Beautiful scan of an original NASA issued lithograph.

and also:

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Mike Acs, Drew Granston, Numbers Station

Apollo 17 Experiments

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Numbers Station

Deep Space EVA

Image credit: NASA
Image source: Mike Acs

Worden’s EVA

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It took me a few, but the lower version is either an earlier or later version of the same painting. The figure representing James B. Irwin is a repaint. My guess is the image on NASA’s site is later, reworked to give the figure a slightly more dramatic pose. The painting is by a North American Rockwell artist.

Image credit: NASA JSC
Images: NASA Images, Numbers Station