66
One Amateur’s Adventures in The The Canadian Canadian Space Space Program Program

One Amateur’s Adventures in The Canadian Space Program

  • Upload
    varick

  • View
    25

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

One Amateur’s Adventures in The Canadian Space Program. Rockets 1960 - 1965. The Velvet Glove Missile 1951 - 1956. The Black Brant Upper Atmosphere Rocket. 27 ft. long, 17 inches diameter Weight 2000 lb. Thrust: 20,000 lb. a Black Brant. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

One Amateur’s Adventures in

The The Canadian Canadian

Space Space Program Program

Page 2: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Rockets1960 - 1965

Page 3: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

The Velvet Glove Missile1951 - 1956

Page 4: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

27 ft. long, 17 inches diameterWeight 2000 lb.

Thrust: 20,000 lb.

The Black Brant Upper Atmosphere Rocket

Page 5: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

a Black Brant

Page 6: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 7: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 8: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

The first Bristol Black Brant II was

launched from ChurchillManitoba

in October 1960

Page 9: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

A daylight launch

at Churchill

1960’s

Page 10: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Black Brant IIISmallerLess expensive

18 feet long, 10 inches diameter

First Launched: June 1962 at Wallops Island Virginia

Page 11: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

1960 - solid state telemetry transmitter for Black Brant III

Page 12: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 13: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Amplifier - Quadrupler

Page 14: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Wallops Island Virginia, June 1962

Page 15: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Aerial view of the NASA range at Wallops Island on the Atlantic Coast of Virginia USA

Page 16: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 17: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Mounting a Black Brant III on one of the Wallops rail launchers

Page 18: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Bristol Engineer Ralph BullockChecking out a BBIII payload

Page 19: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

NRC Engineer Ken Pulfer waiting for launch

Page 20: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Four Black Brant III test firings were

launched at Wallops in

June 1962

Page 21: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

More BB IIIsSummer 1963 California

Page 22: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Goldstone receiving station Mojave desert California

Page 23: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Guns1963 - 1967

Page 24: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

McGill University Professor

Dr Gerry Bull

and his16 inchsmooth

boregun

Page 25: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Barbadostest firing

of the16 inch gun.

Length 120 feet,

Acceleration5,000 to20,000 g

Gerry Bull was assassinated in 1990 after selling super guns to Saddam Hussein

Page 26: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Satellites 1970 - 1985

Page 27: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 28: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Designed and built at CRC, for about $50 million, CTS was launched 17 Jan 1976.

Page 29: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Also at CRC, in 1976, Canada demonstratedthe first satellite Search and Rescue

System, using Amateur satellite Oscar VI

Page 30: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 31: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Started in 1980 and launched in 1995,Radarsat-1 shows ice floes off Ellesmere Island

Page 32: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Manned Space Program1975-1989

Page 33: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

The Canadarm

In 1969, Canada received an invitation from NASA to join the U.S. Space Shuttle Program.

In July 1975, an agreement was signed committing Canada to provide NASA with a robotic arm called the "Remote Manipulator System," (RMS) for the shuttle’s cargo bay.

Page 34: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

•The National Research Council developed the Manipulator System, Dr. Garry Lindberg was the first project manager. Work began on the program in 1975. SPAR Aerospace was selected as prime contractor.

•Canada built the first arm, paying for its design, construction and testing and in April 1981 April 1981 it was delivered to NASA.

•NASA bought three more arms at $75 million each.

Page 35: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Jim Abrahamson

In 1981 he wasdeputy head of

the Shuttle program

Later he headed upReagan’s

“Star Wars” anti ballistic missile

program

Page 36: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

First Canadarm Flight• In the fall of 1981, the second manned flight of

the Space Shuttle carried a Canadarm

• The Shuttle was piloted by US astronaut Joe Engle, and the ARM was operated by US astronaut Dick Truly

• I went to Florida for the launch and then to Mission Control in Houston for the week of the flight

Page 37: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Shuttle STS-2 on the launch pad

at Cape Kennedy

December 1981

Page 38: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Mission Control , Houston Texas

Page 39: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Saturn V at Johnson Space Centre, Houston Texas

Page 40: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 41: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

My son Jim at age 17 at Mission Control Houston, admiring the business end of a Saturn V Moon Rocket

December 1981

Page 42: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

The Canadarmin space aboard

the Shuttle

Page 43: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 44: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Back in Ottawa after the Shuttle flight

Page 45: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Cross Canada Tour - Winter of 1981 / 1982

Page 46: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

The Canadian Astronaut Program• In September 1982 Canada was invited by

NASA to put a Canadian astronaut aboard the Space Shuttle

• At NRC we started a minimum program with 6 astronauts

• In 1984 Marc Garneau, was the selected to be the first Canadian in space

Page 47: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Pre-dawn launch of Marc’s flightOctober 5th 1984

Page 48: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 49: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 50: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Marc and Bob on the tour - in Victoria?

Page 51: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

A few days later in Whitehorse

Page 52: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 53: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Aboard the paddle wheel steamer on the Yukon river

Page 54: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 55: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

To: Dr Ken Pulfer, with the appreciation of the Canadian Astronaut Program, the Director and personnel, for your support, and particularly for your participation in the Trans-Canada tour following the flight of Canada’s first astronaut Marc Garneau, on STS 41G, October 5th to 13th 1984

Page 56: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

In 1986, at NRC, we began development of the Canadarm 2 for the International Space Station

Three years later

in 1989,the CanadianSpace Agency

was formed

In the fall of1989, I retired

from NRC

Page 57: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Amateur Radio on the Space Station

1996 - 2010

Page 58: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

In 1996, amateurs from the US, Russia, Japan, the UK and Canada met in Houston Texas to plan

Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS)

Carolynn Conley NASA

KA3HDO W6DUE K1STO ON4WF

Page 59: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Sergei Samburov RV3DR at ARISS meeting at CSA Montreal in 2002

Page 60: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 61: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Frank Culbertson, KD5OPQ

Page 62: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Canadian ARISS volunteers

• Robin Haighton VE3FRH AMSAT• Steve McFarlane VE3TBD mentor• George Roach VE3BNO QSLs• Norm Coull VE4EH QSLs• Wayne Harisimovitch VE1WPH mentor• Daniel Lamoureux VE2KA RAC• Stefan Wagener VE4NSA AMSAT• Maurice Andre Vigneault VE3VIG AMSAT

Page 63: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

Canadian school contacts• Feb 2001- The first Canadian amateur radio

school contact with the Space Station was at Merivale Public school Ottawa.

• Steve McFarlane VE3TBD and teacher wife Lori

were the organizers. George Roach and Clare Fowler provided technical support.

• So far there have been 44 Canadian amateur radio school contacts with astronauts on the Space Station. (nearly 600 worldwide)

Page 64: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program

• In Jan 2007 – a school contact was arranged with

the support of The Museum of Science and Technology, OVMRC, and Maurice Andre Vigneault VE3VIG

• My youngest granddaughter (then 10 years old) was at Le Prelude school in Orleans.

• She spoke to US astronaut Sunita Williams KD5PLB

Page 65: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program
Page 66: One Amateur’s Adventures in The  Canadian  Space          Program