Difference between revisions of "1970s (FASA)"

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<div style="text-align:center;">'''Reference Stardate -1/7000 through -1/7900'''</div>
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<div style="text-align:center;">'''[[Stardate#Reference_Stardates|Reference Stardate]] -1/7000 through -1/7900'''</div>
  
 
==1970==
 
==1970==
* Disaster is averted as Apollo 13, which experiences a power failure en route to the moon, is skillfully swung around the satellite and brought safely back to Earth.<ref name="SFC"/>
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* RSD -1/7000: Disaster is averted as Apollo 13, which experiences a power failure en route to the moon, is skillfully swung around the satellite and brought safely back to Earth.<ref name="SFC"/>
 +
 
 +
==1971==
 +
* RSD -1/7100: Apollo 14 lands at Fra Mauro on the moon.<ref name="SFC"/>
 +
* RSD -1/7100: Apollo 15 lands in Hadley Rille on the moon.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
==1972==
 
==1972==
* The Pioneer 10 probe is launched.<ref name="SFC"/>
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* RSD -1/7200: The Pioneer 10 probe is launched.<ref name="SFC"/>
 +
* RSD -1/7200: Apollo 16 spends more than 71 hours on the Lunar surface.<ref name="SFC"/>
 +
* RSD -1/7200: Apollo 17 marks the end of NASA's manned lunar missions, spending a record 75 hours on the moon and returning with 113.6kg of lunar material.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
==1973==
 
==1973==
* The United States orbits the Skylab space station and sets records for duration in space. Among the experiments performed is the evaluation of long-term weightlessness on humans. Skylab will remain in orbit until 1979.<ref name="SFC"/>
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* RSD -1/7300: The United States orbits the Skylab space station and sets records for duration in space. Among the experiments performed is the evaluation of long-term weightlessness on humans. Skylab will remain in orbit until 1979.<ref name="SFC"/>
* The Mariner 10 probe is launched.<ref name="SFC"/>
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* RSD -1/7300: The Mariner 10 probe is launched.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
==1975==
 
==1975==
* Apollo 18 and Soyuz XIX link up in space, culminating two years of cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union.<ref name="SFC"/>
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* RSD -1/7500: Apollo 18 and Soyuz XIX link up in space, culminating two years of cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
==1976==
 
==1976==
* Viking 1 soft-lands on Mars and begins transmitting photographs, climatic measurements, and soil composition data. Designed for 90 days, the lander may remain functional for two years.<ref name="SFC"/>
+
* RSD -1/7600: Viking 1 soft-lands on Mars and begins transmitting photographs, climatic measurements, and soil composition data. Designed for 90 days, the lander may remain functional for two years.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
==1977==
 
==1977==
* Voyager 1 and 2 depart for the outer planets. Following up on the earlier Pioneer missions, these more sophisticated probes will encounter first Jupiter in 1979, then Saturn from 1980-81, eventually flying past Uranus in 1985.<ref name="SFC"/>
+
* -1/7700: Voyager 1 and 2 depart for the outer planets. Following up on the earlier Pioneer missions, these more sophisticated probes will encounter first Jupiter in 1979, then Saturn from 1980-81, eventually flying past Uranus in 1985.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
==1978==
 
==1978==
* Ten probes arrive at Venus in the largest research assault to date. Among the mysteries to be solved are understanding the atmospheric composition and the internal mass distribution of the planet.<ref name="SFC"/>
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* -1/7800: Ten probes arrive at Venus in the largest research assault to date. Among the mysteries to be solved are understanding the atmospheric composition and the internal mass distribution of the planet.<ref name="SFC"/>
  
 
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Revision as of 01:13, 14 January 2019

Reference Stardate -1/7000 through -1/7900

1970

  • RSD -1/7000: Disaster is averted as Apollo 13, which experiences a power failure en route to the moon, is skillfully swung around the satellite and brought safely back to Earth.[1]

1971

  • RSD -1/7100: Apollo 14 lands at Fra Mauro on the moon.[1]
  • RSD -1/7100: Apollo 15 lands in Hadley Rille on the moon.[1]

1972

  • RSD -1/7200: The Pioneer 10 probe is launched.[1]
  • RSD -1/7200: Apollo 16 spends more than 71 hours on the Lunar surface.[1]
  • RSD -1/7200: Apollo 17 marks the end of NASA's manned lunar missions, spending a record 75 hours on the moon and returning with 113.6kg of lunar material.[1]

1973

  • RSD -1/7300: The United States orbits the Skylab space station and sets records for duration in space. Among the experiments performed is the evaluation of long-term weightlessness on humans. Skylab will remain in orbit until 1979.[1]
  • RSD -1/7300: The Mariner 10 probe is launched.[1]

1975

  • RSD -1/7500: Apollo 18 and Soyuz XIX link up in space, culminating two years of cooperation between the United States and the Soviet Union.[1]

1976

  • RSD -1/7600: Viking 1 soft-lands on Mars and begins transmitting photographs, climatic measurements, and soil composition data. Designed for 90 days, the lander may remain functional for two years.[1]

1977

  • -1/7700: Voyager 1 and 2 depart for the outer planets. Following up on the earlier Pioneer missions, these more sophisticated probes will encounter first Jupiter in 1979, then Saturn from 1980-81, eventually flying past Uranus in 1985.[1]

1978

  • -1/7800: Ten probes arrive at Venus in the largest research assault to date. Among the mysteries to be solved are understanding the atmospheric composition and the internal mass distribution of the planet.[1]
References