TopFoto home
login register gallery about us contact us help
guest search
Search Tips

Gallery Package - The Space Race ... and beyond
LEAD UP    |    LIFT OFF    |    SPUTNIK    |    TOURISTS

For a different view why not try Space according to PUNCH

Click on a thumbnail for preview and caption information

Newspaper headlines following the news that Russia had launched a rocket on a journey to the moon.<br>3rd January 1959

0009629

The Russian built Luna 1 (Lunick One) - the first ever space probe. Launched into space towards the moon on 2nd January 1959.

0025148

On January 11, 1960 a center for preparing cosmonauts was  established 30 kilometers away from Moscow. Today the Cosmonaut Training Center has a unique training and scientific potential:  its large simulator base permits practically in full to model a  space flight in conditions of the Earth. The Center has put into  orbit over 80 space expeditions, over 350 crews including  stand-by and reserve. Among them are more than 30 international  crews of astronauts from 17 countries -- the United States,  China, Slovakia, Austria, Afghanistan, Bulgaria, the United  Kingdom, Germany, Syria, France, Japan and the European Space  Agency. A spacewalk, so far as a training session. Photo by  Alexander Mokletsov. From the RIA Novosti archives. 83-15051a

1043838

Space pilot German Titov preparing for a  flight. June, 1960.

1043813

Capt Ralph Richardson adjusts the helmet of Major Robert White, US Air force, in the cockpit of the X-15 rocket plane just before it flew 24 miles above the earth.<br>Edwards Air Force Base California<br>13th August 1960

0108587

Edwards Air Force Base, California, 4th August 1960<br>Walker Ends Record Flight<br>Joe Walker, National Aeronautics and Space Administration test pilot, prepares to leave the cockpit of the X15 rocket plane after flying it 2,150 miles an hour over the California desert today.  It was faster than any man has flown before.

0238292

Crewmen aboard the USS Donner lift the cover from the couch and &quotHam", the space chimp, gets his first breath of fresh air and a look at the activity around him after being picked out of the sea after his 420 mile ride through space.  The animal rode in a mercury capsule atop a Redstone rocket fired yesterday from Cape Canaveral, Florida. USA - 1st February 1961

0582891

Major Robert White, US Air force,stands besidef the X-15 rocket plane just after his record flight of 2650mph<br>March 7th 1961 <br>Edwards Air Force Base California<br>

0108586

00023714  Sergie Korolyov (1907-1966) - Rocket scientist. Sergei Pavlovich Korolyov holding a dog before its flying into space, 1950s

0897315

00023717  Sergie Korolyov (1907-1966) - Soviet rocket scientist who designed the early space rockets1. At the control desk at the moment of launching Gagarin in Vostok-1, April 1961.

0897318

Cosmonaut Yury Gagarin before flying into space.

1043812

Hero of the Soviet Union Pilot-Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin upon the Vostok spaceship landing.

1043834

Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin aboard 'Vostok-1' spacecraft (from 'The Soviets in the Space' documentary).

1043820

April 12th 1961 , Cosmonauts' Day, marks the first manned space-flight. The Vostok space-craft piloted by Soviet pilot-cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin made the world's first orbit space flight. Yuri Gagarin on board the Vostok space-craft. April 1961. Photo from the archives of RIA Novosti. 81 - 1908.

0037827

The recovery module of Yury Gagarin's Vostok spaceship on the landing site.

1043822

The world's first manned spaceship, the  Vostok (East), is put on public display for first time in Moscow today. Vostok capsules like this one are carried Yuri Gagarin and 5 together Soviet cosmonauts in orbit, one at a time. Voskhod (Sunrise) capsules that have orbited more than one person have not been shown publicly.

0779548

USA Florida -- 1962 -- President John F Kennedy (left), John Glenn (centre) and General Leighton I Davis ride together during a parade in Cocoa Beach, Florida after Glenn's historic first US human orbital spacefight -- Picture by Lightroom Photos / NASA *NB Not fully retouched for dust, scratches

1035277

President John F. Kennedy declares the USA will get a man on the moon, and safely bring him back, by the end of the decade.<br>Houston, Texas, USA: President John F. Kennedy (Centre) of America is pictured receiving a model of Apollo space-craft here today. Behind him is the proposed moon landing craft called &quotMoon Bug" seen at the right is American Vice-President, Mr Lyndon B. Johnson.<br>12 September 1962 <br>©TopFoto

1017860

Pilot-Cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova before lift-off.

1043825

Washington, DC, USA. June 3rd 1965. President Lyndon B Johnson of America watches launching of US astronauts, James McDivitt and Edward White on a television screen in the White House.

0616374

Pasadena, Cal : Dr William Pickering, Director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Pasadena, stands before a model of the American spacecraft, Mariner - 4, holding one of the pictures it sent back to earth of the planet Mars.<br>16 July 1965

0778766

Cape Kennedy, Oct 25- Their Flight Was Scrubbed - Astronauts Walter Schirra, foreground, and co-pilot Thomas Stafford, all suited up and ready, walk toward their Gemini 6 spacecraft at Cape Kennedy today but several hours later their flight was scrubbed.  The flight was postponed after the Agene rocket failed to achieve orbit.  The plan had been to rendezvous with the Agene in space.  1965.

0027285

Huntsville, Alabama: Workmen put finishing touches on this huge 138 foot Saturn V Rocket booster recently, before moving it out of the hanger for static test firings in the spring.<br>This booster was designed to prove the propulsion system. Later models will be used for moon flights. (note size in comparison to the car on the left)<br>4 February 1965

0886532

Command Pilot John Young the astronaut who is due to be placed in orbit together in a Gemini space capsule on March 23rd pictured during preparations for Americas two man space flight. They are scheduled to take off from Cape Kennedy, Florida, on a Titan II rocket for three orbits of the earth.<br>17th March 1965

0849617

Soviet cosmonaut Alexei Leonov was the world's first to emerge into open space. Leonov outside the Voskhod-2 orbital craft, piloted by Pavel Belyaev. March 18, 1965

1043821

'Moon men' checking over the Surveyor craft (designed to make a soft landing on lunar terrain)  in the San Gabriel mountains of California. 1966

0469961

Cape kennedy: Apollo spaceship for the first Saturn 5 super rocket flight undergoes testing at the moonport here january 10. The apollo will be unmanned and will be hurled more than 8,000 miles from earth late this spring to test its heatshield on a 25,000 mph drive to earth. First manned flight of the 36 storey Saturn 5 Moon Rocket is set for later this year.<br>11 January 1967

0886534

Mosco: Automatic station Luna - 9 made the first landing on the moon and transerred the TV image of Lunar surface to earth. On jshow at the new &quotSpace" Pravilion Exhibition of National Economic Achievements.<br>21 August 1967

0779687

Major William Knight walks away from the scorched tail section of the X-15 rocket aeroplane after streaking to a new world speed for winged aircraft, a record of 4,534mph<br>Edwards Air Force Base California<br>4th October 1967<br>

0108588

Apollo 8 Command service module is being removed from the Altitude Chamber for instalation in the workstand at the Manned Spacecraft Operations building. When launched, Apollo 8 will be the second manned flight in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Lunar Landing Program. 3rd October 1968.

0964585

Leonid Brezhnev, CPSU Central Committee Secretary General, right, and Alexei Kosygin, USSR Council of Ministers Chairman, left, in the funeral procession of Yuri Gagarin, the world's first spaceman, and pilot Engineer-Colonel Vladimir Seregin

1043811

Leave-taking ceremony for Soviet cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov, who died in the crash landing on April 26, 1967.

1043815

A space container with test animals landing at a preset point.

1043826

Pilot cosmonaut Andriyan Nikolayev learning to take pictures under zero-gravity conditions.

1043837

Apollo11<br><br>The National  Aeronautics and Space Administration<br>(NASA) has named these three astronauts as the prime crew of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission. Left to right, are Neil A. Armstrong, commander; Michael Collins, command module pilot; and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot. <br>(MAY 1969)

0418513

The crew  men of the Apollo 11 lunar landing mission            leave the Kennedy Space Center's (KSC) Manned Spacecraft Operations Building  (MSOB) during the pre-launch countdown.   Astronauts Neil A. Armstrong, commander;  Michael Collins, command module pilot; and Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., lunar module pilot,  ride the special transport van over to Launch Complex 39A where their         spacecraft awaited them. Liftoff was at 9:32 a.m. (EDT), July 16, 1969.

0418514

Moon landing 1969

0173032

Space walker - walking on the moon

0705234

Moon Landing -  Apollo II 1969

0019030

Washington, DC:  Split screen of President Richard talking talking via telephone to moon walkers. 1969  ©Larry Mulvehill / The Image Works

imw0119090

Dietologist prepares food for Soyuz-9 space crew.

1043829

SCIENTIFIC CURIOSITIES<br>Moon rock sample (on display in the laboratory at NASA) brought back from the first USA landing on the Moon

0700425

Apollo 12 was the second mission to land humans on the Moon. The landing site was picked to be near the location of Surveyor 3, a robot spacecraft that had landed on the Moon three years earlier. In the above photograph, taken by lunar module pilot Alan Bean, mission commander Pete Conrad retrieves parts from the Surveyor. The lunar module is visible in the distance. Apollo 12 brought back many photographs and moon rocks. Among the milestones achieved by Apollo 12 was the deployment of the Apollo Lunar Surface Experiments Package, which carried out many experiments including one that measured the solar wind. <br>

0439308

On November 10, 1970, an automatic station Luna-17 was launched to the Moon to land a moon rover Lunokhod-1 on the Earth's closest neighbour. The self-propelled machine then managed to pass a few hundred metres before it spent its energy resources. The experiment for the first time proved that it was possible to make mobile automatic research laboratories for researching other planets. Pictured: the station Luna-17 and the Lunokhod-1 landing on the Moon (drawing). Photo from RIA Novosti's photo bank. A70 - 33860

0111563

A B Shepard Jr on moon surface - Apollo 14

0530648

Scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt is photographed standing next to a huge, split lunar boulder during the third Apollo 17 Extravehicular Activity (EVA-3) at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. Schmitt is the Apollo 17 lunar module pilot. This picture was taken by astronaut Eugene A. Cernan, commander. While Cernan and Schmitt descended in the Lunar Module (LM) &quotChallenger" to explore the Taurus-Littrow region of the Moon, astronaut Ronald E. Evans, command module pilot, remained with the Apollo 17 Command and Service Modules (CSM) &quotAmerica" in lunar-orbit.  12/13/72©NASA / The Image Works<br>

imw0021924

Apollo 15 astronaut on the lunar surface, 1971. Astronaut James Irwin, with the Lunar Rover (right) and the Lunar Module nearby, salutes the Stars and Stripes. Apollo 15, the fourth successful lunar landing mission, was launched on 26th July 1971, carrying David Scott, Irwin and Alfred Worden. Worden remained in lunar orbit in the Apollo Command Module while the other two astronauts descended to the Moon, becoming the seventh and eighth men to walk on its surface. Apollo 15 was the first mission to use the battery-powered Lunar Rover which, with a top speed of 14 kilometres per hour, considerably increased the distances that astronauts could cover while exploring the lunar surface. <br>Credit: Spectrum Colour Library / HIP / TopFoto

hip0012760

The Mariner Mars 1971 spacecraft is a Mars orbiter which is fully attitude stabiized using the sun and the star Canopus as the basic attitude references. The spacecraft's basic structure is a 40 pound, 8 sided magnesium framework with eight electronic compartments. The electronic assemblies fastened within the compartments provide structural support to the spacecraft. The weight of the spacecraft is approximately 2200 pounds. The launch vehicle/spacecraft upper adapter weight is about 72 pounds. The spacecraft measures 8 feet from the separation plane to the top of the low gain antenna and has a burn out weight of approximately 1190 pounds. Its span is 22 feet 7 1/2 inches with the solar panels extended. The basic octagonal structure is 54 1/2 inches high. Four solar panels, each 84 1/2 inches long and 35 1/2 inches wide, are attached on outriggers to the octagon.

0469964

S73-22871 (13 December 1972) --- Scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt is photographed standing next to a huge, split lunar boulder during the third Apollo 17 Extravehicular Activity (EVA-3) at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. The Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV), which transported Schmitt and Eugene A. Cernan to this extravehicular station from their Lunar Module (LM), is seen in the background. The mosaic is made from two frames from Apollo 17 Hasselblad magazine 140. The two frames were photographed by Cernan.  photo credit: NASA / The Image Works

imw0020908

AS17-134-20425 (11 December 1972) --- Scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt, lunar module pilot, collects lunar rake samples at Station 1 during the first Apollo 17 Extravehicular Activity (EVA-1) at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. This picture was taken by astronaut Eugene Cernan, commander. The lunar rake, an Apollo lunar geology hand tool, is used to collect discrete samples of rocks and rock chips ranging in size from one-half inch (1.3 centimeter) to one inch (2.5 centimeter).  photo credit: NASA / The Image Works

imw0020907

AS17-145-22157 (12 December 1972) --- Scientist-astronaut Harrison Schmitt, Apollo 17 lunar module pilot, uses an adjustable sampling scoop to retrieve lunar samples during the second Apollo 17 extravehicular activity (EVA-2), at Station 5 at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. A gnomon is atop the large rock in the foreground. The gnomon is a stadia rod mounted on a tripod, and serves as an indicator of the gravitational vector and provides accurate vertical reference and calibrated length for determining size and position of objects in near-field photographs. The color scale of blue, orange and green is used to accurately determine color for photography. The rod of it is 18 inches long. The scoop Dr. Schmitt is using is 11 3/4 inches long and is attached to a tool extension which adds a potential 30 inches of length to the scoop. The pan portion, obscured in this view, has a flat bottom, flanged on both sides with a partial cover on the top. It is used to retrieve sand, dust and lunar samples too small for the tongs, another geological tool used by the astronauts. The pan and the adjusting mechanism are made of stainless steel and the handle is made of aluminum. Within the foreground of this scene, three lunar samples were taken --numbers 75060, 75075 and 75080. Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan, crew commander, was using a 60mm lens on the 70mm Hasselblad camera and type SO-368 film to take this photograph. photo credit: NASA / The Image Works

imw0020906

AS17-134-20426 (11 December 1972) --- Scientist-Astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt collects lunar rake samples at Station 1 during the first Apollo 17 extravehicular activity (EVA-1) at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. This picture was taken by Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan, Apollo 17 commander. Schmitt is the lunar module pilot. The Lunar Rake, an Apollo Lunar Geology Hand Tool, is used to collect discrete samples of rocks and rock chips ranging in size from one-half inch (1.3 cm) to one inch (2.5 cm).   photo credit: NASA / The Image Works

imw0020905

Apollo17<br><br>Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan,  commander, makes a short checkout of the  Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) during the<br>early part of the first Apollo 17  Extravehicular Activity (EVA-1) at the  Taurus-Littrow landing site. This view of the<br>&quotstripped down" LRV is prior to loading up. Equipment later loaded onto the LRV  included the ground-controlled television assembly, the lunar communications relay unit, hi-gain antenna, low-gain antenna, aft  tool pallet, lunar tools and scientific gear.  This photograph was taken by                scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt,  lunar module pilot. The mountain in the right background is the east end of South Massif.<br><br> (11 December 1972)

0418510

Apollo16<br><br>Astronaut John W. Young, commander of the Apollo 16 lunar landing mission, leaps from the lunar surface as he salutes the United States flag at the Descartes landing site during the first Apollo 16 extravehicular activity (EVA-1). Astronaut Charles M. Duke, Jr., lunar module pilot, took this  picture. The Lunar Module (LM) &quotOrion" is on the left. The Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) is parked beside the LM. The              object behind Young (in the shade of the  LM is the Far Ultraviolet  Camera/Spectrograph. Stone Mountain               dominates the background in this lunar scene. <br><br>(21 April 1972)

0418508

Astronaut from Apollo 17 mission saluting American flag while walking on the moon. 1972 ©NASA / The Image Works

imw0042938

Astronaut from Apollo 17 mission walking on the moon. 1972 ©NASA / The Image Works

imw0042937

Apollo 11<br><br>Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., lunar   module pilot of the first lunar landing  mission, poses for a photograph beside the      deployed United States flag during an Apollo 11 Extravehicular Activity (EVA) on the lunar surface. The Lunar Module (LM) is on the left, and the footprints of the                astronauts are clearly visible in the soil of the Moon. Astronaut Neil A. Armstrong, commander, took this picture with a 70mm  Hasselblad lunar surface camera. While<br>astronauts Armstrong and Aldrin  descended in the LM, the &quotEagle", to explore the Sea of Tranquility region of the<br>Moon, astronaut Michael Collins, command  module pilot, remained with the Command  and Service Modules (CSM) &quotColumbia" in lunar-orbit.

0418499

(13 December 1972)<br>Astronaut Eugene A. Cernan, Apollo 17 commander, salutes the deployed United States flag on the lunar surface<br>during Extravehicular Activity (EVA) of NASA's final lunar landing mission in the Apollo series. The Lunar Module (LM) is at left background and the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV) also in background, is partially obscured. The photo was made by astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt, lunar module<br>pilot. While astronaut's Cernan and Schmitt descended in the LM &quotChallenger" to explore the Taurus-Littrow region of the Moon, astronaut Ronald E. Evans,  command module pilot, remained with the Command and Service Modules (CSM) &quotAmerica" in lunar-orbit.

0451029

Awkward and angular looking, Apollo 17's lunar module Challenger was designed for flight in the vacuum of space. This sharp picture from the command module America, shows Challenger's ascent stage in lunar orbit. Small reaction control thrusters are at the sides of the moonship with the bell of the ascent rocket engine itself underneath. The hatch allowing access to the lunar surface is visible in the front and a round radar antenna appears at the top. This spaceship performed gracefully, landing on the moon and returning the Apollo astronauts to the orbiting command module in December of 1972 - but where is Challenger now? Its descent stage remains at the Apollo 17 landing site, Taurus-Littrow. The ascent stage was intentionally crashed nearby after being jettisoned from the command module prior to the astronauts' return to planet Earth. Apollo 17's mission was the sixth and last time astronauts have landed on the moon. <br>

0439253

Apollo17<br><br>&quotEarth - Big Blue Marble/ Whole Earth"<br><br>This view of the Earth was seen by the Apollo 17 crew as they traveled toward the   Moon on their NASA lunar landing mission.  This outstanding translunar coast photograph extends from the  Mediterranean Sea area to the Antarctica<br>south polar ice cap. This is the first time the Apollo trajectory made it possible to photograph the south polar ice cap.<br><br>(7 December 1972)

0418511

The Soyuz-Apollo Soviet-U.S. space test crew: captain Alexei Leonov, right in the back row, and engineer Valery Kubasov, right in the front row, and astronauts Thomas Stafford, Donald (Deke) Slayton and Vance Brand. July 1975

1043824

The Soyuz-Apollo Soviet-U.S. space crew after docking, July 1975. Cosmonaut Alexei Leonov, center, and astronauts Thomas Stafford and Donald (Deke) Slayton.

1043823

Space - Mars from 31,000km above the surface. &quotGrand canyon of Mars" shown, just a few miles south of the equator.

0721392

  MARS (viking 1 and 2) :  Martian landscape and Viking 1 lander.

wds0010084

  MARS (Viking 1 and 2 ) :  Mars from 260,500 miles.

wds0009998

  MARS (Viking 1 and 2 ) :   Dust storm in the Argyre Basin.

wds0009875

A72-5773   Mars taken at a distance of 50,000 km from   Mars-3 launched May 28, 1971.  Capsule lands height of dust storm

0817940

<br><br><br>SURFACE OF THE PLANET MARS<br>Taken by the NASA Viking 1 Lander Spacecraft<br>Universal Pictorial Press<br>Photo CPC 065647<br>21.07.1976

0314384

Members of the international Soyuz-38 space team, cosmonauts Arnaldo Tamayo-Mendez (right) and Yury Romanenko (left), practicing a splashdown.

1043814

French cosmonaut-researcher Jean-Loup Chretien, crew member of Soyuz T-6 spacecraft, after landing.

1043818

© UPPA.CO.UK<br>THE SPACE SHUTTLE ENTERPRISE<br>Universal Pictorial Press & Agency photo<br>CJN 160427         05.06.1983<br>COMPULSORY CREDIT: uppa.co.uk

0582166

Space Shuttle CHALLENGER in Earth orbit  - June 22 1983 - shuttle bay doors open

0235014

Svetlana Savitskaya in extravehicular activities-metal cutting, smelting, welding and soldering-on the orbital complex, Salyut 7-Soyuz T 11-Soyuz T 12

1043827

Space Shuttle Challenger crew who died<br><br>On January 28, 1986 America was shocked by the destruction of the space shuttle Challenger, and the death of its seven crew members.<br>The seven heroes: Michael Smith, Dick Scobee, Judith Resnik, Ronald McNair, Ellison Onizuka, Gregory Jarvis, and Christa McAuliffe.

0866647

The Space shuttle Challenger exploding in 1986

0006507

  Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster 1986

0145180

Horror of Shuttle Challenger - witnesses

0776684

People in a department store watch the space shuttle Challenger as it crashes, shown on multiple screens in a television display. January 28, 1986 ©Dan Chidester / The Image Works

imw0065524

March 13, 2001. Fifteen years ago (1986) the first expedition --  crew members Leonid Kizima and Vladimir Solovyev -- started to  work aboard the orbital research station Mir. Cosmonauts Leonid  Kizima /right/ and Vladimir Solovyev in the Yu. Gagarin Space  Training Centre.       Photo by A. Mokletsov from RIA Novosti's collection.  86-4303.<br>ÿØÿà

0154473

February 20, 2001. The Mir, scientific-research station,  was put into orbit 15 years ago. It is the spacecraft cluster  permanently operating in circum-terrestrial space. Lots of  international research and experiments were carried out on  board. Regrettably, in January 2001 the Russian Cabinet ordered  that the orbital joint craft stopped working due to &quotits extreme  wear-out". This March, the Mir station will be de-orbited and  brought down to the ocean. Russian Mission Control. Photo by  Alexei Mokletsov. RIA Novosti collection. 87-6631.<br>

0152047

88-150033  88-15032  Buran (Snowstorm), the Soviet re-usable space shuttle, affixed to its booster rocket, Energiiya, at Baikonur, Russia’s launch site, Kazakstan. The Buran and its carrier rocket, Energia.

0897557

The USSR Pilot-Cosmonaut Vladimir Lyakhov (left), Researcher-Cosmonaut of the Republic of Afghanistan Abdul Ahmad Momand (center) and physician Valery Polyakov (right).

1043828

Pilots-Cosmonauts Alexander Volkov, Sergei Krikalev and Valery Polyakov, members of the Soyuz-7-TM space crew, after soft-landing.

1043836

British hopeful astronaut Clive Smith prepared to undergo G-force impact trial in a centrifuge at the Yury Gagarin Cosmonauts Training Centre.

1043830

Britain's hopeful astronauts Timothy Mace (left) and Gordon Brooks (right) at the Yury Gagarin Cosmonauts Training Centre.

1043831

Sharman exiting Soyuz 	The first British astronaut, Helen Sharman, being helped out of the Soyuz landing craft after her mission to the Mir space station in 1991.

0634896

A70-31993  Rockets to take the Mars & Venera out into space.

0817921

I03-8358  Mars probe

0817913

<br>	The recent interpretation of data from the Clementine spacecraft mission, a joint Ballistic Missile Defense Organization/NASA venture, has revealed that deposits of ice could exist in permanently dark regions near the South Pole of the Moon.  Initial estimates suggest that the ice deposit area is the size of small lake (60 to 120 thousand cubic meters), and that the lunar crater containing the ice deposit has a depth greater than the height of Mount Everest, and a rim circumference twice the size of Puerto Rico.<br>	The discovery of ice on the Moon has enormous implications for the potential return of humans to the Moon's surface and the establishment of a permanent lunar station.  The lunar ice could be mined and dissociated into hydrogen and oxygen by electric power provided by solar panels or a nuclear generator, providing both breathable oxygen and potable water for the permanent station on the Moon.  Hydrogen and oxygen are also prime components of rocket motor fuel and could potentially result in the establishment of a Òlunar filling stationÓ making transport to or from the Moon more economical by at least a factor of ten.<br>	The Clementine spacecraft was launched aboard a Titan II missile from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., on Jan. 25, 1994.  Its primary military mission was to qualify lightweight sensor and camera technology for possible application for ballistic missile defense programs, but it also demonstrated a capability for low-cost, high-value space exploration missions. .<br><br>Space

0269099

Space shuttle Atlantis and sixth docking with Russian space station Mir.

0062639

On April 4, 2000, the Soyuz TM-30 spaceship has been launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome with spacemen Sergei Zaletin and Alexander Kaleri on board. The space mission will have to spruce up the Mir station which was invalidated late in August 1999. The Mission Control Centre. Photo from the archives of RIA Novosti. 95 - 2286.<br>4th April 2000

0037481

95-95	The “Progress” plant , Samara city, Russian Federation [E06R67]. Making the Proton space rocket

0839548

V00-647  Proton rocket. ISS (Interantional Space Station) project

0820144

NASA SPACE ART<br><br><br>This artist's rendering shows the Galileo orbiter arriving at <br>Jupiter on Dec. 7, 1995. A few hours before arrival, the orbiter will have flown within about 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) of Jupiter's moon lo, shown as the crescent to the left of the spacecraft. The sun is visible between Io and the spacecraft, near the spacecraft's long magnetometer. Jupiter is to the right.A faint white streak above the planet's clouds shows the atmospheric probe beginning to decelerate before it deploys aparachute for its scientific mission to collect data as it descends into the atmosphere and relay that data to the orbiter. About an hour after the probe's mission is over, the orbiter will brake with its rocket engine to go into orbit around Jupiter for a two-year, 11-orbit study of Jupiter, its satellites and its magnetosphere. The Galileo mission is managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. The Galileo probe is managed by NASA'sAmes Research Center, Moffett Field. Calif.

0415974

Space Planets Mars piece of meteorite primitive life form found 1996

0218298

'Mars Attacks' by Tim Burton. Made in USA, 1996. <br>Credit: KPA / HIP / TopFoto

hip0019223

Caption: Kazakh Desert:  Doctors check up on health of cosmonaut Lazutkin after return from Mir space station.  1997   Adam Tanner/The Image Works  CTAN0366

imw0008937

The three wind socks on Mars Pathfinder

0005898

An area NASA Scientists have dubbed " Twin Peaks "

0005897

&quot7/97  The Mars Pathfinder rover Sojourner, photographed on the Martian surface by Pathfinder lander. The small rock on the left is "&quotBarnacle Bill,"" the large rock in the upper right is "&quotYogi.""  ©The Image Works Archives  EIWA0714"

imw0016506

(December 10, 1997) --- The first U.S. module to be launched to the International Space Station, a connecting module called Node 1, is shown as it neared the completion of manufacturing in the spring of 1997. The node was shipped from the Boeing manufacturing facility at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, to the Kennedy Space Center, Florida, to begin launch preparations in June 1997. The 22-foot long by 14-foot diameter node has six hatches like the one in which this technician is working that will connect to other Russian and U.S. station modules. The node will be launched aboard the Space Shuttle Endeavour in July 1998 and be docked with the already orbiting Functional Cargo Block, to be launched in June 1998 aboard a Russian rocket.

0627244

97_11949 (December 10, 1997) --- Astronauts Jerry Ross and Jim Newman train for one of the three spacewalks they will perform as they begin assembly of the International Space Station aboard Space Shuttle mission STS-88 in July 1998. Ross and Newman are in the Sonny Carter Training Facility, a giant new swimming pool-type facility opened in 1997 at the Johnson Space Center specifically to accommodate training for station assembly. The spacewalks by Ross and Newman will finalize the connection of a module called Node 1 to be launched aboard STS-88 and the Functional Cargo Block, which will have been launched earlier aboard a Russian rocket. In this view, a mockup of the node is on the right in the foreground and a mockup of the FGB is on the left in the background.

0010693

Launch of the Spirit Rover Toward Mars. Explanation: Next stop: Mars. Last month the first of two missions to Mars was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, USA above a Boeing Delta II rocket. Pictured above, solid fuel boosters are seen falling away as light from residual exhaust is reflected by the soaring rocket. The Mars Exploration Rover dubbed Spirit is expected to arrive at the red planet this coming January. Upon arriving, parachutes will deploy to slow the spacecraft and surrounding airbags will inflate. The balloon-like package will then bounce around the surface a dozen times or more before coming to a stop. The airbags will then deflate, the spacecraft will right itself, and the Spirit rover will prepare to roll onto Mars. The robotic Spirit is expected to cover as much as 40 meters per day, much more than Sojourner, its 1997 predecessor. Spirit will search for evidence of ancient Martian water, from which implications might be drawn about the possibility of ancient Martian life. A second rover named Opportunity was successfully launched on July 7 and will arrive at Mars a few weeks later. <br>

0752285

 As photographed through a hatch window on the Space Shuttle Discovery, Russia's  Mir space station is backdropped against  Earth's horizon. The photo was made<br>during the final fly-around of the members of the fleet of NASA shuttles. <br><br><br>STS091-707-060 (2-12 June 1998) ---

0418568

The Space Shuttle Discovery approaches Russia's Mir space station in this 70mm  photograph taken from the Mir. The nadirperspective affords a clear look at the  layout of the cargo bay, revealing the open  bay doors; the docking apparatus for connecting to Mir (near cabin), the tunnel;<br>the SPACEHAB module (second element from aft); the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer  (near aft firewall); and the Ku-band antenna  for communications (near cabin). Affixed to the lower right corner of the top of SPACEHAB is the external antenna for the  SPACEHAB universal communications         system (SHUCS). Discovery is the third  Shuttle to visit Mir in a series of ten rendezvous (including nine docking)               missions. <br>

0418567

MIR Space Station<br><br>Russia's Mir Space Station, as seen in this Electronic Still Camera (ESC) photo from the Space Shuttle Atlantis, and the Space Shuttle begin their relative separation  following undocking activity early today,  during Flight Day 9. <br><br> (24 September 1996) ---

0418515

Shuttle (STS-71) docked with Russian MIR Space Station

0235205