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Apollo 14
Mission insignia
Mission statistics1
Mission name
Apollo 14
Command Module
CM-110
callsign Kitty Hawk
mass 29,240 kg
Service Module
SM-110
Lunar Module
LM-8
callsign Antares
mass 15,264 kg
Crew size
3
Booster
Saturn V SA-509
Launch pad
LC 39A
Kennedy Space Center
Florida, USA
Launch date
January 31, 1971
21:03:02 UTC
Lunar landing
February 5, 1971 09:18:11 UTC
Fra Mauro
3°38′43.08″S 17°28′16.90″W / 3.6453°S 17.471361°W / -3.6453; -17.471361
(based on the IAU
Mean Earth Polar Axis coordinate system)
Lunar EVA duration
First 04:47:50
Second 04:34:41
Total 09:22:31
Lunar surface time
1 d 09 h 30 m 29 s
Lunar sample mass
42.28 kg (93.21 lb)
Total CSM time in lunar orbit
2 d 18 h 35 m 39 s
Landing
February 9, 1971
21:05:00 UTC
27°1′S 172°39′W / 27.017°S 172.65°W / -27.017; -172.65
Mission duration
9 d 00 h 01 m 58 s
Crew photo
Left to right: Roosa, Shepard, Mitchell
Related missions
Previous mission
Subsequent mission
Apollo 13
Apollo 15
Apollo 14 was the eighth manned mission in the American Apollo program, the third to land on the Moon. It was the last of the "H missions", targeted landings with two-day stays on the Moon with two lunar EVA's, or moonwalks.
Commander Alan Shepard, Command Module Pilot Stuart Roosa, and Lunar Module Pilot Edgar Mitchell launched on their nine-day mission on January 31, 1971. Shepard and Mitchell made their lunar landing on February 5 in the Fra Mauro formation; this had originally been the target of the aborted Apollo 13 mission. During the two lunar EVA's, 42 kilograms (93 lb) of Moon rocks were collected and several surface experiments, including seismic studies, were carried out. Commander Alan Shepard famously hit two golf balls on the lunar surface with a make-shift club he had brought from Earth. Shepard and Mitchell spent about 33 hours on the Moon, with about 9½ hours on EVA.
More Space Anniversaries: Apollo 14 and Ham
Forty years ago today, the Apollo 14 crew launched on their Saturn V rocket, the 6th human flight to the Moon and the third that landed. Following the heart-stopping problems of Apollo 13, almost ten months elapsed before Commander Alan Shepard (the first American in space), Command Module Pilot Stuart Roosa, and Lunar Module Pilot [...]
Apollo 14
Apollo 14 Command Module "Kitty Hawk" Orbital and Surface Photography - Experiment ... The Moon Trees - Trees grown from seeds brought to the Moon by Apollo 14 ...
While Shepard and Mitchell were on the surface, Stuart Roosa remained in lunar orbit aboard the Command/Service Module, performing scientific experiments and photographing the Moon. He took several hundred seeds on the mission, many of which were germinated on return resulting in the so-called Moon trees. Shepard, Roosa, and Mitchell landed in the Pacific Ocean on February 9.
Contents
1 Crew
1.1 Backup crew
1.2 Support crew
1.3 Flight directors
2 Mission parameters
2.1 LM – CSM docking
2.2 EVAs
2.2.1 EVA 1 start: February 5, 1971, 14:42:13 UTC
2.2.2 EVA 2 start: February 6, 1971, 08:11:15 UTC
3 Mission highlights
3.1 Transfer and descent
3.2 EVAs
3.3 Return
4 Mission insignia
5 Spacecraft location
6 Depiction in popular culture
7 Gallery
8 See also
9 Notes
10 References
11 External links
//
Crew
Position
Astronaut
Commander
Alan B. Shepard, Jr
Second spaceflight
Command Module Pilot
Stuart A. Roosa
First spaceflight
Lunar Module Pilot
Edgar D. Mitchell
First spaceflight
Shepard was the oldest U.S. astronaut when he made his trip aboard Apollo 14.2 He is the only astronaut from Project Mercury (the original Mercury Seven astronauts) to reach the Moon. Another of the original seven, L. Gordon Cooper, had originally been scheduled to command the mission, but according to Chaikin, his casual attitude toward training, along with problems with NASA hierarchy (reaching all the way back to the Mercury-Atlas 9 flight) resulted in his removal.
The mission was a personal triumph for Shepard, who had battled back from Ménière’s disease which grounded him from 1964 to 1968. He and his crew were originally scheduled to fly on Apollo 13, but in 1969 NASA Administrators switched the scheduled crews for Apollo 13 and 14. This was done to place the more experienced Apollo 8 veteran Jim Lovell in command of what would have been the first lunar landing mission if both Apollo 11 and Apollo 12 had failed to successfully land.
Picture of the Day: Apollo 14's Lunar Module Reflects the Sun
Antares reflects a brilliant flare from the sun, described by NASA's astronauts as having a jewel-like appearance
Apollo 14
The Apollo 14 (AS-509) mission - manned by astronauts Alan B. Shepard, ... The Apollo 14 crew returned to Houston on February 12, where they remained in quarantine ...
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As of 2011, Mitchell is the only surviving member of the crew; Roosa died in 1994 from pancreatitis and Shepard in 1998 from leukemia.
Backup crew
Position
Astronaut
Commander
Eugene A. Cernan
Command Module Pilot
Ronald E. Evans, Jr
Lunar Module Pilot
Joseph H. Engle
James McDivitt, the commander of Apollo 9, who would have been either the prime crew Lunar Module Pilot or the backup crew commander, was unwilling to take a secondary role in the mission.
Support crew
Philip K. Chapman
Bruce McCandless, II
William R. Pogue
C. Gordon Fullerton
Flight directors
Pete Frank, Orange team
Glynn Lunney, Black team
Milton Windler, Maroon team
Gerry Griffin, Gold team
Mission parameters
Mass: CSM 29,240 kg; LM 15,264 kg
Perigee: 183.2 km
Apogee: 188.9 km
Inclination: 31.12°
Period: 88.18 min
Perilune: 108.2 km
Apolune: 314.1 km
Inclination: °
Period: 120 min
Landing Site: 3.64530° S – 17.47136° W or
3° 38' 43.08" S – 17° 28' 16.90" W
LM – CSM docking
Undocked: February 5, 1971 – 04:50:43 UTC
Docked: February 6, 1971 – 20:35:42 UTC
EVAs
EVA 1 start: February 5, 1971, 14:42:13 UTC
Shepard – EVA 1
Stepped onto moon: 14:54 UTC
LM ingress: 19:22 UTC
Mitchell – EVA 1
Stepped onto moon: 14:58 UTC
LM ingress: 19:18 UTC
EVA 1 end: February 5, 19:30:50 UTC
Duration: 4 hours, 47 minutes, 50 seconds
EVA 2 start: February 6, 1971, 08:11:15 UTC
Panoramic Assembly of Fra Mauro – Apollo 14 Landing Site
Shepard – EVA 2
Stepped onto moon: 08:16 UTC
LM ingress: 12:38 UTC
Mitchell – EVA 2
Stepped onto moon: 08:23 UTC
LM ingress: 12:28 UTC
EVA 2 end: February 6, 12:45:56 UTC
Duration: 4 hours, 34 minutes, 41 seconds
Mission highlights
Transfer and descent
Launch of Apollo 14
Exhibit celebrates Apollo 14 landing
Marking the 40th Anniversary of the Apollo 14 mission, a new exhibit at the Coos Historical & Maritime Museum, 1220 Sherman Ave., North Bend, will open Saturday, Jan. 22.
Apollo 14 Mission
The Apollo 14 mission, with a crew including Alan Shepard Jr., Stuart ... The Apollo 14 landing site was in the Fra Mauro formation, which is material ejected by ...
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At the beginning of the mission, the CSM Kitty Hawk had difficulty achieving capture and docking with the LM Antares. Repeated attempts to dock went on for 1 hour and 42 minutes, until it was suggested that pilot Roosa hold Kitty Hawk against Antares using its thrusters, then the docking probe would be retracted out of the way, hopefully triggering the docking latches. This attempt was successful, and no further docking problems were encountered during the mission.
After separating from the command module in lunar orbit, the LM Antares also had two serious problems. First, the LM computer began getting an ABORT signal from a faulty switch. NASA believed that the computer might be getting erroneous readings like this if a tiny ball of solder had shaken loose and was floating between the switch and the contact, closing the circuit. The immediate solution—tapping on the panel next to the switch—did work briefly, but the circuit soon closed again. If the problem recurred after the descent engine fired, the computer would think the signal was real and would initiate an auto-abort, causing the Ascent Stage to separate from the Descent Stage and climb back into orbit. NASA and the software teams at MIT scrambled to find a solution, and determined the fix would involve reprogramming the flight software to ignore the false signal. The software modifications were transmitted to the crew via voice communication, and Mitchell manually entered the changes (amounting to over 80 keystrokes on the LM computer pad) just in time.
A second problem occurred during the powered descent, when the LM radar altimeter failed to lock automatically onto the moon's surface, depriving the navigation computer of vital information on the vehicle altitude and groundspeed. This was later determined to be an unintended consequence of the software patch. After the astronauts cycled the landing radar breaker, the unit successfully acquired a signal near 50,000 feet (15,000 m), again just in the nick of time. Shepard then manually landed the LM closer to its intended target than any of the other six moon landing missions. Mitchell believes that Shepard would have continued with the landing attempt without the radar, using the LM inertial guidance system and visual cues. But a post-flight review of the descent data showed the inertial system alone would have been inadequate, and the astronauts probably would have been forced to abort the landing as they approached the surface.
EVAs
Astronaut Edgar Mitchell's Lifelong Consciousness Research, Inspired by Apollo 14 Mission, Celebrated on 40th ...
On the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 14 lunar launch on January 31, global interconnectedness continues to redraw the map of modern civilization. The essential skills required to successfully navigate life in an increasingly global society come from more than just what we know about ourselves and our place in the world. It matters how we arrive at that knowledge, according to research at the ...
Apollo 14 Summary
The Apollo 14 Summary, by Eric M. Jones, contains an excellent discussion of the Apollo 14 mission.
Shepard and Mitchell named their landing site Fra Mauro Base, and this designation is recognized by the International Astronomical Union (depicted in Latin on lunar maps as Statio Fra Mauro).
Shepard's first words, after taking his first step onto the lunar surface, were "And it's been a long way, but we're here." Unlike Apollo 11's Neil Armstrong and Apollo 12's Pete Conrad, Shepard had already gotten off the ladder and was a few meters from the LM before he spoke.
This TV image shows Alan Shepard golfing on the Moon
Shepard's moonwalking suit was the first to utilise red bands on the arms and legs and a red stripe on the top of the lunar EVA sunshade "hood", so as to allow easy identification of the commander while on the surface; on the Apollo 12 pictures, it had been almost impossible to distinguish between the two crewmen, causing a great deal of confusion. This feature was included on Jim Lovell's Apollo 13 suit, but because of the accident on that mission, it was not used. It was used on the remaining three Apollo flights and is used on both the U.S. and Russian spacesuits on both the Space Shuttle and International Space Station.citation needed
After landing in the Fra Mauro formation—the destination for Apollo 13—Shepard and Mitchell took two moon walks, adding new seismic studies to the by now familiar Apollo experiment package, and using the Modularized Equipment Transporter (MET), a pull cart for carrying equipment and samples, referred to as a "lunar rickshaw". Roosa, meanwhile, took pictures from on board command module Kitty Hawk in lunar orbit.
The plaque left on the Moon by Apollo 14
The second moonwalk, or EVA, was intended to reach the rim of the 1,000 foot (300 m) wide Cone Crater. However, the two astronauts were not able to find the rim amid the rolling terrain of the crater's slopes. Later analysis, using the pictures that they took, determined that they had come within an estimated 65 feet (20 m) of the crater's rim. Images from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter show the tracks of the astronauts and the MET come to within 30 m of the rim.3
From the moon to Coos Bay: Apollo 14 exhibit opens Saturday
Upon their safe return to earth from the moon in 1971, Stuart Roosa, command module pilot of Apollo 14, had his hometown parade in Coos Bay, Ore. A new exhibit explores the connection.
Apollo 14 Lunar Surface Journal
Paul Fjeld - Apollo 14 Abort Discrete. Bill Wood - Apollo TV Essay. TV ... Apollo 14 5-Day Report ( 1Mb PDF ) DPS Final Flight Eval. ( 3Mb PDF ) ...
Apollo 14 Bronze U.S. Mint Medal
Only $20.0
Shepard and Mitchell deployed and activated various scientific instruments and experiments and collected almost 100 pounds (45 kg) of lunar samples for return to earth. Other Apollo 14 achievements included: the only use of MET; longest distance traversed by foot on the lunar surface; first use of shortened lunar orbit rendezvous techniques; first use of color TV with new vidicon tube on lunar surface and the first extensive orbital science period conducted during CSM solo operations.
Command Module Kitty Hawk on display at the Saturn V Center at Kennedy Space Center
The astronauts also engaged in less serious activities. Shepard brought a makeshift six iron golf club and two golf balls to the Moon, and took several swings (one-handed, due to the limited flexibility of the EVA suit). He exuberantly, and somewhat whimsically, exclaimed that the second ball went "miles and miles and miles" in the lunar gravity, but later estimated it actually went 200 to 400 yards (180 to 370 m). Mitchell then used a lunar scoop handle as a javelin, creating the first 'Lunar Olympics'. Before the flight, backup crew members Cernan, Evans and Engle played a joke on the astronauts by stashing their own crew patches in every single locker and compartment in the spacecraft. Whenever one of the patches would float out of a locker during the mission, Shepard would say "Tell Cernan, BEEP-BEEP my ass!"
Return
On the way back to Earth, the crew conducted the first U.S. materials processing experiments in space. The Apollo 14 astronauts were the last lunar explorers to be quarantined on their return from the Moon.
Roosa, who worked in forestry in his youth, took several hundred tree seeds on the flight. These were germinated after the return to Earth, and widely distributed around the world as commemorative Moon Trees.
Mission insignia
Robbins Medallion flown on Apollo 14
From the moon to CB
He was no Buzz Aldrin, but astronaut Stuart Roosa was a big deal in the Bay Area.
Apollo 14 Landing Site Overview
Apollo 14 site: Enlargement of high-resolution view. Cone Crater (the ... The Apollo 14 landing site (green cross) is located on the rugged Fra ...
The oval insignia shows a gold NASA Astronaut Pin, given to U.S. astronauts upon completing their first space flight, traveling from the Earth to the Moon. A gold band around the edge includes the mission and astronaut names. The designer was Jean Beaulieu.
The backup crew spoofed the patch with its own version, with revised artwork showing the Road Runner cartoon character on the moon, holding a U.S. flag and a flag labeled "1st Team," as a gray-bearded (for Shepard, who was 47 at the time of the mission and the oldest man on the Moon), pot bellied (for Mitchell, who had a pudgy appearance), red furred (for Roosa's red hair) Wile E. Coyote flies in place of the astronaut pin. The flight name is replaced by "BEEP BEEP" and the backup crew's names are given. Several were left as "gotchas" on the Kitty Hawk.4
Spacecraft location
The Apollo 14 Command Module Kitty Hawk is on display at the Saturn V Center building at KSC after being on display at the Astronaut Hall of Fame, Titusville, Florida for several years.
The ascent stage of Lunar Module Antares impacted the Moon 7 February 1971 at 00:45:25.7 UT (6 February, 7:45 PM EST) 3°25′S 19°40′W / 3.42°S 19.67°W / -3.42; -19.67 (Apollo 14 LM ascent stage). Antares' descent stage and the mission's other equipment remain at Fra Mauro at 3°39′S 17°28′W / 3.65°S 17.47°W / -3.65; -17.47 (Apollo 14 LM descent stage); they are, by far, the most visible Apollo hardware in the photographs from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter released on 17 July 2009, owing to particularly good lighting conditions when the images were captured.
Depiction in popular culture
Portions of the Apollo 14 mission are dramatized in the miniseries From the Earth to the Moon episode entitled "For Miles and Miles".
Image: The glare of the sun
This view of Antares, the Apollo 14 Lunar Module as it sat on the moon's Fra Mauro Highlands, reflects a circular flare caused by the brilliant sun.
Apollo 14
Apollo 14 was the third mission in which humans walked on the lunar ... On 5 February 1971 two astronauts (Apollo 14 Commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr. and LM pilot ...
A few months before the first Moon landing, a fictional Apollo 14 lunar orbit mission was portrayed in the 24 March 1969 I Dream of Jeannie TV series episode entitled "Around the Moon in 80 Blinks".
In 2010, Edgar Mitchell's nametag from this mission was offered in a Heritage auction, where it sold for $59,750.5
Gallery
Apollo 14 landing site, photograph by LRO.
Later photo of landing site taken by LRO.
Shepard and Mitchell erect flag on lunar surface.
Alan Shepard on lunar surface.
See also
Spaceflight portal
Moon trees, taken from seeds brought to the Moon on Apollo 14.
Extra-vehicular activity
List of spacewalks
Splashdown
List of artificial objects on the Moon
Google Moon
Notes
^ Richard W. Orloff. "Apollo by the Numbers: A Statistical Reference (SP-4029)". NASA. http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4029/Apollo_00g_Table_of_Contents.htm.
^ "Apollo 14: 1971 Year in Review". UPI.com. 1971. http://www.upi.com/Audio/Year_in_Review/Events-of-1971/12295509436546-1/#title. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
^ Samuel Lawrence (August 19, 2009). "Trail of Discovery at Fra Mauro". Featured Images. Tempe, Arizona: LROC News System. http://lroc.sese.asu.edu/news/index.php?/archives/91-Trail-of-Discovery-at-Fra-Mauro.html.
^ http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a14/a14beep-beep.html
^ http://historical.ha.com/common/view_item.php?Sale_No=6037&Lot_No=41133
References
NASA NSSDC Master Catalog
APOLLO BY THE NUMBERS: A Statistical Reference by Richard W. Orloff (NASA)
The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology
Apollo Program Summary Report
Apollo 14 Lunar Launch Video
Apollo 14 Characteristics – SP-4012 NASA HISTORICAL DATA BOOK
Lattimer, Dick (1985). 'All We Did was Fly to the Moon. Whispering Eagle Press. ISBN 0-9611228-0-3.
NASA Manned Spacecraft Center (1971), 'Apollo 14 Technical Air-To-Ground Voice Transcription'
Back-up-Crew Patch
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Apollo 14
NASA Apollo 14 press kit – Jan 21, 1971
Map of surface activities for Apollo 14
Apollo 14 entry in Encyclopedia Astronautica
Apollo 14 Science Experiments
Interview with the Apollo 14 Astronauts (March 31, 1971) from the Commonwealth Club of California Records at the Hoover Institution Archives.
Detailed technical article describing the ABORT signal problem and its solution
v · d · eMissions of the Apollo program
Rocket tests
SA-1 · SA-2 · SA-3 · SA-4 · SA-5 · AS-203 (Apollo 2)
Abort tests
QTV · Pad Abort Test-1 · A-001 · A-002 · A-003 · Pad Abort Test-2 · A-004
Boilerplate tests
A-101 · A-102 · A-103 · A-104 · A-105
Unmanned missions
AS-201 · AS-202 (Apollo 3) · Apollo 4 · Apollo 5 · Apollo 6 · Skylab 1
LEO missions
Apollo 7 · Apollo 9 · Skylab 2 · Skylab 3 · Skylab 4 · Apollo-Soyuz Test Project
Lunar missions
Apollo 8 · Apollo 10 · Apollo 11 · Apollo 12 · Apollo 13 · Apollo 14 · Apollo 15 · Apollo 16 · Apollo 17
Apollo 1 (AS-204) · List of missions · Mission Types · Canceled missions
Olney back atop the Apollo
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Bravettes thump Apollo for ninth straight win
Madison Dayberry scored 18 points to lead the Union County Bravettes to their ninth straight victory, 47-28 over Apollo on Friday night.










