Apollo 11 (lost original SSTV master tape footage of moon landing; 1969): Difference between revisions

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[[File:Apollo 11 Moon Landing|thumb|right|350px|Lower quality footage of the landing.]]
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xLu0Ak9Blog|320x240|right|Lower quality footage of the landing.|frame}}
On July 20, 1969, the '''Apollo 11''' landing capsule with its crew of two astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, touched down on the moon. The footage has become world famous and will be preserved, most likely, for the entire future of human history as one of the most significant achievements of the species. Therefore it is strange, and not known generally by the public, that NASA has lost their original ''SSTV'' tapes of the event.
On July 20, 1969, the '''Apollo 11''' landing capsule with its crew of two astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, touched down on the moon. The footage has become world famous and will be preserved, most likely, for the entire future of human history as one of the most significant achievements of the species. Therefore it is strange, and not known generally by the public, that NASA has lost their original ''SSTV'' tapes of the event.



Revision as of 11:37, 11 May 2015

Lower quality footage of the landing.

On July 20, 1969, the Apollo 11 landing capsule with its crew of two astronauts, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, touched down on the moon. The footage has become world famous and will be preserved, most likely, for the entire future of human history as one of the most significant achievements of the species. Therefore it is strange, and not known generally by the public, that NASA has lost their original SSTV tapes of the event.

The journey and landing of Apollo 11 was filmed by the astronauts that went on said mission: Armstrong, Aldrin and Michael Collins. The experience was recorded on high-quality Super-8 cameras and was broadcast live back to Earth, along with other mission data via a signal encoding known as SSTV. SSTV allows for an image to be embedded into audio data and transmitted as a radio signal. This SSTV signal was picked up on multiple telescopes on earth, one in Goldstone, California, the other one in Parkes, Australia. Additionally, Australia provided a tracking station in Honeysucle Creek.

At the Goldstone facility, the incoming SSTV-signal was cloned into two branches: one branch of the signal went straight to a tape recorder capable of storing the incoming information at the telescope facility. The other image branch was designated to be shown to the public.

However, as the data coming in from the astronauts' cameras was incompatible with TV image broadcasting standards (namely NTSC), a conversion had to take place. Curiously, this occured in one of the most primitive ways imaginable; the signal was fed to a high quality screen, capable of displaying images from the astronauts' cameras. The light emissions from this screen were recorded by a camera, putting out image data compatible to contemporary television sets. The (now TV-friendly) signal was then send via microwave transmission to the Mission Control Center.

It was then only that an image signal arrived at the Mission Control Center in Houston. Here the signal was distributed further to TV stations. However, the only video from the moon landing broadcast that day was in severely worse quality than what a few technicians could witness at the ground station before any crude conversion took place. In recent years, interest in the original SSTV data recorded at Goldstone, California, has risen. However, after extensive research, no copies of the original image signal, along with mission data, has shown up.

The loss of the Apollo 11 footage has done nothing to quell persistent conspiracy theories claiming that the moon landings were an elaborate hoax and that the footage was filmed in a studio. However, footage from the subsequent missions of Apollos 12-17 have been successfully retained by NASA and as such are available in much higher quality than the Apollo 11 footage. This fact should put to rest any claims that NASA 'conveniently lost' the footage to prevent close analysis of the film, as subsequent landing footage is available for analysis in high quality.