File:Virgil Gus Grissom's Visit to LaRC 2.tif
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[edit]DescriptionVirgil Gus Grissom's Visit to LaRC 2.tif | Astronaut Virgil "Gus" Grissom at the controls of the Visual Docking Simulator. From A.W. Vogeley, "Piloted Space-Flight Simulation at Langley Research Center," Paper presented at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1966 Winter Meeting, New York, NY, November 27-December 1, 1966. "This facility was [later known as the Visual-Optical Simulator.] It presents to the pilot an out-the-window view of his target in correct 6 degrees of freedom motion. The scene is obtained by a television camera pick-up viewing a small-scale gimbaled model of the target." "For docking studies, the docking target picture was projected onto the surface of a 20-foot-diameter sphere and the pilot could, effectively, maneuver into contract. this facility was used in a comparison study with the Rendezvous Docking Simulator - one of the few comparison experiments in which conditions were carefully controlled and a reasonable sample of pilots used. All pilots preferred the more realistic RDS visual scene. The pilots generally liked the RDS angular motion cues although some objected to the false gravity cues that these motions introduced. Training time was shorter on the RDS, but final performance on both simulators was essentially equal." "For station-keeping studies, since close approach is not required, the target was presented to the pilot through a virtual-image system which projects his view to infinity, providing a more realistic effect. In addition to the target, the system also projects a star and horizon background. " | ||||||
Date | Taken on 22 February 1963 | ||||||
Source | https://images.nasa.gov/details/LRC-1963-B701_P-01516 | ||||||
Author | NASA, Bob Nye | ||||||
Permission (Reusing this file) |
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This image or video was catalogued by Langley Research Center of the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) under Photo ID: LRC-1963-B701_P-01516. This tag does not indicate the copyright status of the attached work. A normal copyright tag is still required. See Commons:Licensing. Other languages:
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current | 14:14, 18 June 2023 | 4,580 × 5,744 (11.14 MB) | Gildir (talk | contribs) | {{Information |Description=Astronaut {{w|Virgil "Gus" Grissom}} at the controls of the Visual Docking Simulator. From A.W. Vogeley, "Piloted Space-Flight Simulation at Langley Research Center," Paper presented at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1966 Winter Meeting, New York, NY, November 27-December 1, 1966. "This facility was [later known as the Visual-Optical Simulator.] It presents to the pilot an out-the-window view of his target in correct 6 degrees of freedom motion. The sc... |
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Image title | Astronaut Virgil "Gus" Grissom at the controls of the Visual Docking Simulator. From A.W. Vogeley, "Piloted Space-Flight Simulation at Langley Research Center," Paper presented at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1966 Winter Meeting, New York, NY, November 27-December 1, 1966. "This facility was [later known as the Visual-Optical Simulator.] It presents to the pilot an out-the-window view of his target in correct 6 degrees of freedom motion. The scene is obtained by a television camera pick-up viewing a small-scale gimbaled model of the target." "For docking studies, the docking target picture was projected onto the surface of a 20-foot-diameter sphere and the pilot could, effectively, maneuver into contract. this facility was used in a comparison study with the Rendezvous Docking Simulator - one of the few comparison experiments in which conditions were carefully controlled and a reasonable sample of pilots used. All pilots preferred the more realistic RDS visual scene. The pilots generally liked the RDS angular motion cues although some objected to the false gravity cues that these motions introduced. Training time was shorter on the RDS, but final performance on both simulators was essentially equal. " "For station-keeping studies, since close approach is not required, the target was presented to the pilot through a virtual-image system which projects his view to infinity, providing a more realistic effect. In addition to the target, the system also projects a star and horizon background. " |
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Author | NASA, Bob Nye |
Width | 4,580 px |
Height | 5,744 px |
Bits per component | 8 |
Compression scheme | LZW |
Pixel composition | Black and white (Black is 0) |
Number of components | 1 |
Number of rows per strip | 1 |
Horizontal resolution | 574.4 dpi |
Vertical resolution | 574.4 dpi |
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11,683,950 byte
5,744 pixel
4,580 pixel
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1f85ef7ceb49751532f570a4c30c97b0de5dc617
- NASA astronaut training
- Black and white photographs of men smiling with teeth
- Black and white photographs of men wearing neckties
- Black and white photographs of people in Virginia
- Black and white photographs of smiling men in the United States
- Black and white photographs of standing men in the United States
- Black and white photographs of Virginia in the 1960s
- Gus Grissom in 1963
- Langley Research Center
- Male humans with headsets
- Men facing left and looking at viewer in the United States
- Men smiling while standing
- Men wearing neckties in Virginia
- Men with short hair
- 1963 black and white portrait photographs of men
- February 1963 in Virginia
- Portrait photographs of men smiling
- Smiling men in Virginia
- Standing men in Virginia
- 2 men in Virginia
- 20th-century black and white portrait photographs of standing men at three-quarter length