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Gemini/Apollo astronaut Jim McDivitt passes away at 93 |
2022-10-20 |
[BehindTheBlack] R.I.P. Jim McDivitt, who was the commander of both the Gemini 4 and Apollo 9 missions in the 1960s, passed away on October 13, 2022 at the age of 93.He first flew in space as commander of the Gemini IV mission in June 1965. McDivitt was joined by fellow Air Force pilot Ed White on the program’s most ambitious flight to date. During Gemini IV, White would become the first American to venture outside his spacecraft for what officially is known as an extravehicular activity (EVA) or as the world has come to know it, a spacewalk. ... The mission’s four-day duration nearly doubled NASA astronauts’ previous time in space to that point, with the longest American spaceflight previously being Gordon Cooper’s 34-hour Mercury 9 mission. To me, McDivitt’s most important discovery occurred early in his Gemini mission. After launch he was tasked with an attempt to approach and rendezvous with the upper stage, shortly after deployment. He was surprised to find that his intuition about doing so was utterly wrong. Whenever he tried to close the distance by applying thrust in the direction implied by his earthbound instincts, the distance actually increased. McDivitt’s experience showed that rendezvous and docking in orbit was not going to be simple. In fact, it took almost the entire Gemini program in 1965 and 1966 to figure it out. McDivitt never went to the Moon, but he was like all the first generation of American astronauts, professional, careful, dedicated, and remarkably good at what he did. May he rest in peace. |
Posted by:The Walking Unvaxed |
#2 Nice sendoff Mike. |
Posted by: Skidmark 2022-10-20 18:03 |
#1 ...The Apollo 9 crew gets lost in the shuffle - 8's flight around the Moon, 10's magnificent performance proving that it all worked when and where it where it was supposed to, and 11 pulling it off. But Jim McDivitt and his team proved you could get all the components into the air, make them work, and then finished the mission with a textbook landing. The Right Stuff indeed. Mike |
Posted by: MikeKozlowski 2022-10-20 08:25 |