Forty-four years (and
three days) after it helped launch the first men to walk on the moon, a huge
rocket engine part salvaged from the ocean floor has been positively identified
as a historic component of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission.
"I'm thrilled to
share some exciting news," Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos wrote
Friday (July 19) on his Bezos Expeditions website.
"44 years ago tomorrow
[July 20] Neil Armstrong stepped onto the moon, and now we have recovered a
critical technological marvel that made it all possible."
In March 2012, the
billionaire entrepreneur underwrote a private — and secret — expedition to find
and recover the Apollo engines that launched astronauts Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin
and Michael Collins to the moon. [Apollo 11 Moon Rocket's F-1 Engines Explained
(Infographic)]
After their fuel was
spent, the 12.2-foot-wide-by-18.5-foot-tall (3.7 by 5.6 m) F-1 engines were
allowed to drop into the Atlantic Ocean. The force of the impact with the water
and their ensuing plunge to the seafloor 14,000 feet (4,300 m) below the
surface ripped apart the massive structures, leaving them almost
unrecognizable.
In March 2013, Bezos
revealed that his team had raised the parts for at least two F-1 engines, but
they didn't know if they were from Apollo 11 or one of the 12 other Saturn V
rockets that flew between 1967 and 1973, each equipped with five of the
engines.
"There was one
secret that the ocean didn't give up easily: mission identification,"
Bezos wrote on his website. "The components' fiery end and heavy corrosion
from 43 years underwater removed or covered up most of the original serial
numbers."
The job of identifying
the heritage of the thrust chambers, gas generators, injectors, heat
exchangers, turbines, fuel manifolds and dozens of other F-1 engine artifacts
fell to the conservation team at the Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center in
Hutchinson, Kansas. In addition to their work cleaning and stabilizing the
parts for public display, the conservators were tasked with meticulously inspecting
and documenting each component.
"One of the
conservators who was scanning the objects with a black light and a special lens
filter has made a breakthrough discovery – '2044' – stenciled in black paint on
the side of one of the massive thrust chambers," wrote Bezos. "2044
is the Rocketdyne [company] serial number that correlates to NASA number 6044,
which is the serial number for F-1 Engine #5 from Apollo 11."
After removing more
corrosion from the base of the same thrust chamber, the conservator also found
"Unit No 2044" stamped into the massive engine part's metal surface.
Rocket Engine Part
Recovered by Amazon CEO Has Apollo …
SpaceWorks technician
Jerrad Alexander uses a brush to clean an F-1 engine thrust chamber at the Kan
…
"Huge kudos to the
conservation team," Bezos exclaimed on his Expeditions site.
"Conservation is painstaking work that requires remarkable levels of
patience and attention to detail, and these guys have both."
The team at the Kansas
Cosmosphere expects that it will take about two years to complete the
conservation of the engines. During that time, the public can view the parts
and see the work being done to preserve them through a special tour offered at
the museum's SpaceWorks facility.
A website with a live
camera view of the same facility is also being developed.
The conservation work
is being done under an agreement between Bezos and NASA. The space agency is
retaining ownership of the artifacts and will ultimately decide where they go
on museum display.
In addition to the
National Air and Space Museum, Bezos earlier expressed interest in having one
of the engine's parts displayed at The Museum of Flight in Seattle, which is
located near Amazon's headquarters and the offices of Blue Origin, the
commercial spaceflight company founded by Bezos in 2000.
That at least one of
the F-1 thrust chambers is now known to have flown on Apollo 11 adds to the
historical significance to the engine parts' eventual exhibit.
"This is a big
milestone for the project and the whole team couldn't be more excited to share
it with you all," Bezos stated.
Take a look at the F-1
engine parts being conserved at the Kansas Cosmosphere's SpaceWorks Observation
Gallery.
Source: Yahoo news.
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