VOICE ONE:
I'm Barbara Klein.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember with EXPLORATIONS
in VOA Special English. The nineteen sixties were exciting times in space exploration.
Today look back at the first flights of the Apollo program designed to land
humans on the moon.
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VOICE ONE:
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| President John Kennedy sets the goal of a moon landing before a joint session of Congress on May 25, 1961 |
The
decision to go to the moon was made in May, nineteen sixty-one. President John
Kennedy set the goal in a speech to Congress and the American people. JOHN KENNEDY: "I
believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before
this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to
the Earth. No single space project in
this period will be more impressive to mankind or more important for the long
range exploration of space. And none
will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish. "
VOICE TWO:
At
the time President Kennedy first spoke about landing humans on the moon, the
Soviet space program seemed far ahead. The Soviet Union had put the first
satellite into Earth orbit. A Soviet spacecraft was the first to land
instruments on the moon. And a Soviet cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin, was the first
man in space.
The United
States had sent an astronaut of its own into space for the first time in
nineteen sixty-one. Alan Shepard made only a fifteen-minute flight in the
little one-man Mercury spacecraft. But his flight gave Americans the feeling
that the United States could pull ahead of the Soviet Union in the space race.
There was great public support
for President Kennedy's moon landing goal. And Congress was ready to spend the
thousands of millions of dollars that a moon landing program would cost.
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VOICE ONE:
Much
happened in the months after America decided to go to the moon. New space
flight centers were built. Designs for launch rockets and spacecraft were
agreed on. And a new spaceflight program -- Project Gemini -- was begun.
Flights in the two-man Gemini spacecraft tested the men, equipment and methods
to be used in the Apollo program to the moon. Gemini let astronauts learn about
the dangers of radiation and the effects of being weightless during long
flights. Astronauts learned to move their spacecraft into different orbits and
to join with other spacecraft.
VOICE TWO:
While
the Gemini program prepared astronauts for Apollo flights, NASA engineers were
designing and building the Apollo spacecraft. It was really two spacecraft. One
was a cone-shaped command module. The astronauts would ride to the moon in the
command module. And they would return home in it. The second craft was a
moon-landing vehicle. Two astronauts would ride in it from the orbiting command
module to the moon's surface. Later, the landing vehicle would carry them back
to the command module for the return trip to Earth.
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| The Saturn 1B rocket |
VOICE ONE:Engineers
also were working on a huge new rocket for Apollo. It needed much more power
than the rockets used to launch the one-man Mercury and the two-man Gemini
flights. The Apollo rocket was called Saturn. Two Saturn rocket systems were
built. One was the Saturn One-B. It did not have enough power to reach the
moon. But it could launch Apollo spacecraft on test flights around the Earth.
The other was the Saturn Five. It would be the one to launch astronauts to the
moon. Saturn One-B rockets launched six unmanned Apollo spacecraft. The test
flights showed that all the rocket engines worked successfully. They also
showed that the Apollo spacecraft could survive the launch and could re-enter
Earth's atmosphere safely.
VOICE TWO:
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| The crew of Apollo 1, from left, Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee |
By the end of nineteen
sixty-six, NASA officials considered the Apollo spacecraft ready for test
flights by astronauts. Three astronauts were named for the first manned Apollo
test flight: Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee. Four weeks before
the flight, the three men were in the command module at Cape Kennedy, Florida.
They were testing equipment for the flight. Suddenly, fire broke out
in the spacecraft. When rescuers got the door open, they found the flames had
killed the three astronauts. Grissom, White and Chaffee were the first
Americans to die in the space program.
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VOICE ONE:
Engineers
redesigned and rebuilt the Apollo command module. They designed a new door that
could be opened more quickly. They improved the electrical wiring. And they
used only materials that would not burn easily. By November, nineteen
sixty-seven, the moon launch rocket, Saturn Five, was ready for a test flight.
It thundered into space perfectly, pushing an unmanned Apollo spacecraft more
than eighteen thousand kilometers up into the atmosphere.
VOICE TWO:
The
huge Saturn rocket, as tall as a thirty-six-floor building, was the heaviest
thing ever to leave Earth. It weighed more than two million seven hundred
thousand kilograms. The noise of its rockets was one of the loudest man-made
sounds ever created.
At the end of the test flight, the speed of the Apollo
spacecraft was increased to forty thousand kilometers an hour. That was the
speed of a spacecraft returning from the moon. The spacecraft re-entered the
atmosphere without damage. Apollo flights Five and Six tested the moon-landing
module and the Saturn Five rocket.
VOICE ONE:
Astronauts
first flew in the Apollo spacecraft in October, nineteen sixty-eight. Apollo
Seven astronauts Walter Schirra, Walter Cunningham and Donn Eisele spent eleven
days orbiting the Earth. They tested the spacecraft systems. And they
broadcast, for the first time, live television pictures of men in orbit. Everything
worked perfectly.
VOICE TWO:
The
successful flight of Apollo Seven led NASA officials to send the next flight,
Apollo Eight, to the moon. The launch was early on the morning of December
twenty-first, nineteen sixty-eight. Millions of people were watching on
television.
Astronauts Frank Borman,
James Lovell and William Anders were in the spacecraft at the top of the Saturn
Five rocket. NASA officials counted down the seconds: five, four, three, two,
one. The mighty engines fired. Slowly the giant rocket lifted off the Earth.
VOICE ONE:
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| A photo taken by the crew of Apollo 8 from lunar orbit |
Three hours later, NASA
officials told the crew that everything was "OK" for what they
called TLI, or trans-lunar injection. This meant the
Apollo Eight astronauts could fire the rocket that would send them from Earth
orbit toward the moon. Less than three days later, Apollo Eight was orbiting
the moon. The American spacecraft was just one hundred ten kilometers from its
surface. On December twenty-fourth,
the astronauts made a television broadcast to Earth. They described the moon's
surface as a strange, gray, lonely place. And, as they talked, people on Earth
could see pictures of the moon on their television sets.
FRANK BORMAN: "And from
the crew of Apollo Eight, we close with good night, good luck, a Merry
Christmas – and God bless all of you, all of you on the good Earth."
Apollo Eight returned to
Earth without problems. It landed in the Pacific Ocean near a waiting ship.
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VOICE TWO:
Apollo Eight showed that humans
could travel to the moon and return safely. The next step was to test the lunar
landing craft.
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| Astronaut David Scott tests linking the lunar lander to the command module on Apollo 9 |
That
was the job of the astronauts of Apollo Nine: James McDivitt, David Scott and
Russell Schweickart. They spent ten days in Earth orbit during March, nineteen
sixty-nine. During
the flight, they separated the lunar lander from the command module and flew it
for eight hours. They tested all its systems. Then, they joined the two
spacecraft together again, just as astronauts would do after a moon landing.
Engineers decided that
after Apollo Nine, one more test flight was needed. They wanted to test the
landing module near the moon. So astronauts Tom Stafford, John Young and Eugene
Cernan did that during the flight of Apollo Ten.
VOICE ONE:
They
reached the moon in May, nineteen sixty-nine. Astronauts Stafford and Cernan
entered the landing craft and separated it from the command ship. Stafford and
Cernan flew the lander down to only thirteen kilometers from the moon. They
described the moon during a radio and television broadcast. "It is like
wet clay," they said. "Like a dry river bed in New Mexico or Arizona.
It is a beautiful sight."
On
May twenty-third, the lander rejoined the command module one hundred kilometers
above the moon. Apollo Ten started for home. The final testing was done. Apollo
was ready to land on the moon. That will be our story next week.
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VOICE TWO:
This program was written by Marilyn Rice
Christiano and produced by Mario Ritter. I'm Barbara Klein.
VOICE ONE:
And I'm Steve Ember. You can find other programs about the
American space program at our web site, voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week as we continue the
story of the Apollo space flights on EXPLORATIONS in VOA Special English.