NASA’s Mission Control, Houston, Celebrates 50th Anniversary

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Mission Control recognizes a half century of human spaceflight leadership from Houston on June 3, as it continues to support 24/7/365 operations in support of the International Space Station and prepares for the future of human exploration through the cosmos. The first spaceflight operated from Mission Control, Houston, was the Gemini IV mission launched on June 3, 1965, a flight that included the United States’ first spacewalk. Firsts in space became the norm for the institution, highlighted by the landing of men on the moon during the Apollo Program; the first international mission between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. during the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project; the first U.S. space station flights during Skylab; the flights of the first reusable spacecraft during the space shuttle era, and the assembly and operation of the International Space Station. The video is dedicated to the men and women of Mission Control past, present and future.
    For more about the Christopher C. Kraft Jr. Mission Control Center, visit: www.nasa.gov/ce...
    Follow the anniversary activities on social media with the hashtag #MCC50th
    High resolution download: archive.org/de...

Комментарии • 15

  • @Anonymoose
    @Anonymoose 9 лет назад +5

    Hard to believe it's been 50 years. Houston... We have a birthday. Celebrate!
    I was there once, during the rescue of Apollo 13, one of the most intense experiences of my life. If it can be done, Mission Control will find a way.

    • @tseliius
      @tseliius 4 года назад

      Anonymoose
      Were you really?

  • @brazilobsessedone
    @brazilobsessedone 9 лет назад +5

    "Failure is not an option" -Gene Kranz on Apollo 13

    • @geomodelrailroader
      @geomodelrailroader 9 лет назад

      +Chris Daley exactly if you look at the wall over the flight directors desk it shows every mission that never came home. they died because someone in Houston made a mistake and if you make a mistake people die. we lost Apollo 1, we lost Challenger, and we lost Columbia all because Houston did not do their job and warn the crew of danger. FAILURE IS NOT AN OPTION! if a crew dies their blood will be on Houston's hands it is their job to get them and the ship back alive.

    • @Habibi46611
      @Habibi46611 5 лет назад

      @@geomodelrailroader
      You don't even know the difference between Houston and KSC,
      But tear open your mouth.
      This is miserable!

    • @geomodelrailroader
      @geomodelrailroader 4 года назад

      @@Habibi46611 The Mission falls on Mission Control Houston once it leaves the pad or a test is conducted. Houston's mission is to protect the crew Kennedy's mission is just to launch the rocket. Someone in Houston did not warn the crew and lives were lost.

  • @geomodelrailroader
    @geomodelrailroader Год назад

    Happy Birthday Houston!

  • @patriciaemiliagozzi7040
    @patriciaemiliagozzi7040 4 года назад

    HERMOSISIMOS 50 AÑOS!!!! ... y por muchos 50's más! Qué bueno homenajear a Gus Grisson de esta manera tan justa y merecida, y no con dolor.

  • @saskoilersfan
    @saskoilersfan 6 лет назад

    Anybody here ? Help please...can you explain how to read NASA maps on screen?

  • @hamaki__
    @hamaki__ 9 лет назад

    Gene Kranz is a fucking legend!

    • @geomodelrailroader
      @geomodelrailroader 9 лет назад

      +Hans Marius Kittilsen every flight director fallows his orders the crew always comes first and Houston knows that.

    • @geomodelrailroader
      @geomodelrailroader 8 лет назад

      +Hans Marius Kittilsen yup and he told everyone in that control room their job. Houston does not make mistake because if they make a mistake people die. under Kranz's watch we lost Apollo 1, we almost lost Apollo 13, we lost Challenger, and we lost Columbia those 4 patches on the wall over the PAO counsel did not get there by accident they were placed here because Houston made a mistake and this is also why flowers are placed on Kranz's deck every week. If Houston loses a crew a Red Rose goes in the vase if the mission was good a White one goes in there if NASA has completed the mission without mishap a Yellow Rose goes in the vase and they get a Thank You Card this is the way it has been since Challenger.

  • @RCLaROCK1
    @RCLaROCK1 4 года назад

    just a bunch of jobs.....the earth is a horizontal plane ..
    .the Space center has most all blank screens a bunch of actors
    SPACE CADETS ...

    • @coolboombox1610
      @coolboombox1610 4 года назад

      Go watch mythbusters, they proved with SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE that the moonlanding was real. Go back to school and get yourself educated. And no, the earth isn’t flat, go back to 1470