Mission Control during the eight-day Gemini V mission
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Mission Control during the eight-day Gemini V mission
The second stage of Gemini-Titan 5 (GT-5) Launch Vehicle being hoisted to the top of the vertical test facility at Martin Company's Baltimore facility in Maryland. This facility allowed engineers to do comprehensive system checks before sending them to launch complex 19 at Cape Canaveral, Florida.
Date: February 8, 1965
NASA ID: S65-2867
April 21, 1965 - Launched from Cape Kennedy’s Launch Complex 19, astronauts “Gordo” Cooper and “Pete” Conrad aboard a Titan II GLV begin the third manned Gemini mission, Gemini V - an 8-day trek in Earth orbit.
Mission objectives included evaluating the feasibility of long(er) duration spaceflight and its effects on the human body, as Gemini V would stay in orbit as long as a trip to the moon and back would take. A rendezvous with a Radar Evaluation Pod was scheduled, but not achieved due to issues with the fuel cells aboard the spacecraft. Gemini V was the first craft to run fuel cells, a necessary change from the chemical batteries of past flights to ensure the craft could stay powered for the duration of a moon mission. Despite the issues with the fuel cells, the flight continued for its planned duration.
Cooper and Conrad took photos of celestial objects while in orbit, photos of Earth were taken for the Department of Defense.
Splashdown occurred on August 29th, with the spacecraft being controlled by the astronauts during reentry. Due to a calculating error on the ground, Gemini V landed about 80 miles, or 130 kilometers short of its intended landing zone in the Atlantic Ocean. The programmer inputting the data for the reentry calculations had incorrectly set earth’s rotation rate in the computer.
Gemini V would be the first NASA mission to feature an insignia patch. Now a staple of spaceflight operations, the insignia for Gemini V featured a covered wagon to emphasize the pioneering spirit of the mission. Cooper suggested and designed the insignia and included the phrase ‘8 Days or Bust!’, but this was removed by NASA who felt it drew attention to the length of the mission, assuming they were going to be able to stay in orbit for eight days, and not the experiments to be performed.
Gemini V doubled the length of the longest mission to date for NASA (Gemini 4), and beat the Soviet record for duration in orbit, which was set by Vostok 5 in 1963 with 4 days and 23 hours.
Blurry Earth, photographed during the Gemini V mission, August 25, 1965.
Baja California, Gemini V
Losing it apparently I'm in someone's space coast travel YouTube video
This was me describing the Titan II segment we have that flew the Gemini V mission. It's the only artifact we have in Hangar C that actually launched, and was part of the incredibly important long-haul eight-day Gemini V. Probably my favorite artifact that we have in Hangar C, and my second favorite overall behind the Gemini II capsule. Behind me we also have an Apollo and Gemini boilerplate, which are thought to have been used in Navy recovery training.
Astronauts Gordo Cooper and Pete Conrad egress from spacecraft after splashdown, Gemini V
"Overall view of Pad 19 showing Gemini-5 spacecraft atop the Gemini Launch Vehicle 5 during a wet mock simulation exercise."
Date: July 22, 1965
NASA ID: S65-43447