DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race:
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GAL114_051016_10.JPG: V-1:
The German V-1, introduced in combat in June 1944, was the world's first operational cruise missile. Thousands of pulse-jet powered V-1s, also known as "buzz bombs," were launched against cities in Europe. V-1s were slow and inaccurate; they could be intercepted and shot down.
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Description of Subject Matter: Space Race
May 16, 1997 – March 27, 2022
This major exhibition traces the competition in space between the U.S. and the former Soviet Union from its origins in the 1950s to the recent international cooperation. Objects include a Soyuz TM-10 spacecraft, a Kosmos 1443 "Merkur" spacecraft, and a space suit made for the never-accomplished mission to land a Russian on the Moon. The exhibition is divided into the following sections:
* Military Origins of the Space Race examines the rivalry to develop rockets powerful enough to send thermo-nuclear warheads across the globe.
* Secret Eyes in Space reveals long-secret reconnaissance projects and includes the recently declassified "Corona" spy satellite camera.
* Racing to the Moon looks at the public accomplishments of both countries and includes the Soviet "Krechet" lunar space suit and the Apollo space suit.
* Exploring the Moon looks at the equipment developed to transmit pictures of the lunar surface to Earth, to perform chemical analyses of the soil, and to do other scientific experiments and includes an Apollo Lunar Landing Module.
* A Permanent Presence in Space looks at the efforts of both countries to establish permanent space stations for continued scientific discovery and the beginning of an era of cooperation in space.
* Fifty Years of Human Spaceflight examines how the Soviet Union and the United States raced to launch the first humans into space in 1961, during the Cold War.
* Repairing the Hubble Space Telescope features the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) and the Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement (COSTAR), which corrected the optics of the telescope in 1993.
Objects include:
* Skylab Orbital Workshop
* German V-1 "buzz bomb" and V 2 missile
* Soviet and U.S. spacecraft and space suits
* Full-size test version of the Hubble Space Telescope
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2021_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (7 photos from 2021)
2015_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (149 photos from 2015)
2014_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (6 photos from 2014)
2012_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (5 photos from 2012)
2011_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (1 photo from 2011)
2010_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (3 photos from 2010)
2009_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (3 photos from 2009)
2008_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (1 photo from 2008)
2007_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (2 photos from 2007)
2003_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (11 photos from 2003)
2002_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (6 photos from 2002)
1998_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (2 photos from 1998)
1997_DC_SIAIR_Gall114A: DC -- Natl Air and Space Museum -- Gallery 114: (a) Space Race (21 photos from 1997)
2005 photos: Equipment this year: I used four cameras -- two Fujifilm S7000 cameras (which were plagued by dust inside the lens), a new Fujifilm S5200 (nice but not great and I hated the proprietary xD memory chips), and a Canon PowerShot S1 IS (returned because it felt flimsy to me). I gave my Epson camera to my catsitter. Both of the S7000s were in for repairs over Christmas.
Trips this year: Florida (for Lotusphere), a driving trip down south (seeing sites in North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, and Georgia), Williamsburg, and Chicago.
Number of photos taken this year: 147,000.
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