41 years ago today, Apollo 16 astronauts John
Young and Charlie Duke were walking on the moon on EVA 1, their first excursions
outside of the Lunar Module Orion. Young and Duke had stepped onto the lunar
surface, set up the flag, deployed the lunar rover, unloaded the ALSEP
scientific package, and then began to set up the ALSEP southwest of Orion.
I did get home in time to see Young and Duke
working at Station 1, and saw Duke pick up a medium sized rock that was
sticking out of the surface near the lunar rover. He told capcom Tony England
back at Mission Control in Houston , Texas , that if he fell in Plum crater, Mulhberger, one of the scientists back in the science support
room behind the MOCR, had “had it!”
I remember Young jumped up twice for both the
television camera on the rover, and Charlie Duke’s Hasselblad, and this was one
of the more memorable flag saluting pictures from all of Apollo.
Once at the ALSEP site, Young accidentally
tore the cable for the Heat Flow probes loose from the ALSEP central station to
the electronics box, and this was the worst loss of the mission. The rest of
the ALSEP deployment went nominally, and everything else worked.
The Heat Flow Electronics box, view looking Southwest.
The Heat Flow Electronics box, view looking Southwest.
Young and Duke then drove west south west of the LM to
sample around Flag Crater, Station 1 on their itinerary outside Orion on EVA 1.
They sampled on the Northeast corner of Plum Crater, then back near the Rover,
where Charlie Duke picked up a “Great Scott’ sized rock with white crystals on
top of it, on direction of the geologists in the Science Support Room. It was
during this part of EVA 1 that I got home, turned on the TV, and saw some
limited amount of live coverage on the networks, (ABC & CBS as I recall)
John Young's panorama at Station 1
A TV Capture image
of Charlie Duke grabbing the Great Scott rock on the rim of Plum Crater.




No comments:
Post a Comment