Apollo TV camera

RCA slow scan TV camera

Apollo 7 slow-scan TV

Apollo 7 and Apollo 8 used an RCA slow scan camera.

Lines per video frame: 320

Frame rate: (SSTV) 10 frame/s

Black and white

Westinghouse Apollo Lunar Television Camera

Lunar Module training mockup, showing relative position of deployed camera

Usage: Apollo 9 (Earth orbit), Apollo 11 (lunar surface), Apollo 13 and Apollo 14 (back-up to the lunar surface color camera, never used)

Optical resolution: ~220x~220

Lines per video frame: 320, 1280 (not used)

Frame rate: (SSTV) 10 frame/s, 0.65 frame/s (not used)

Bandwidth: 409.6 kHz

Black and white

Sensor: 1 vidicon

Analog FM transmission

The camera was built by Westinghouse, was 11 by 6 by 3 inches (280 mm  150 mm  76 mm) in size, and weighed 7.25 pounds (3.29 kg), It consumed 6.25 watts of power. It had four interchangeable lenses: “telephoto”, “wide-angle”, “lunar day” and “lunar night”.

Photo of the high-quality SSTV image received from Apollo 11 at Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station

Photo of the high-quality SSTV image before the scan conversion

Photo of the high-quality SSTV image before the scan conversion

Westinghouse camera on the Lunar surface during Apollo 11

Westinghouse Lunar Color Camera

Usage: Apollo 10 (lunar orbit), Apollo 11 (lunar orbit), Apollo 12, Apollo 13 and Apollo 14

Resolution: ~175x~175

Lines per frame: 262

Frame rate: 60 frame/s BW / 20 frame/s color (color filters alternated between each field)

Color: Field-sequential color system camera

Bandwidth: 2 MHz

Sensor: Secondary-Electron-Conduction (SEC) Tube

This camera was based on the TV camera used on previous missions inside the CSM, with modifications to adapt it to the lunar environment.

During the early part of the first Apollo 12 EVA, the camera was inadvertently pointed at the Sun while preparing to mount it on the tripod. This action caused an overload in the secondary vidicon tube, rendering the camera useless for the remainder of the mission. The camera worked properly for about forty-two minutes. On later missions problems were encountered with image brightness and contrast.

Apollo 10 TV image of Earth

Apollo 11 TV image

Apollo 12 EVA TV image

Westinghouse color camera on the Lunar surface during Apollo 12

Apollo 14 EVA image

Edgar Mitchell with the Apollo 14 camera

RCA J-Series Ground-Commanded Television Assembly (GCTA)

Usage: Apollo 15, Apollo 16 and Apollo 17

Resolution: ~ 200 lines

Frame rate: 60 frame/s BW / 20 frame/s color (color filters alternated between each field)

Color: Field-sequential color system camera

Spectral response: 350700 nm

Gamma: 1.0

Sensitivity: > 32 dB signal to noise ratio

Dynamic range: > 32:1

Sensor: Silicon Intensifier Target (SIT) Tube

Optics: 6x zoom, f/2.2 to f/22

Automatic light control (ALC): average or peak scene luminance

Because of the failure of the camera on Apollo 12, a new contract was awarded to the RCA Astro division in Hightstown, NJ. The RCA system was a new, more sensitive and durable TV camera tube. The design team was headed by Robert G. Horner. The team used newly developed SIT, and the improved images were obvious to the public.

The system was composed of the Color Television Camera (CTV) and the Television Control Unit (TCU). These were connected to the Lunar Communications Relay Unit (LCRU) when mounted on the Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV).

Once the LRV was fully deployed, the camera was mounted there and controlled by commands from the ground to tilt, pan, and zoom in and out.

GCTA transmission from the LRV

Apollo 15 television camera and high-gain antenna

Apollo 16 television camera. Notice the sunshade attached to the top of the lens, a feature first used on Apollo 16.

See also

Apollo 11 missing tapes

Notes

^ Apollo TV PDF

References

“Live TV From the Moon” by Dwight Steven-Boniecki. ISBN-10: 1926592166, ISBN-13: 978-1926592169 The first comprehensive written work detailing the TV cameras developed and used on the Apollo lunar missions. Due in June 2010.

Apollo TV and Communications Documentation

Apollo Lunar TV – Its History and Development from Armstrong to Leonov

Ground-Commanded Television Assembly (GCTA)

Apollo 10 Television

Sarkissian, John. Television from the Moon. The Parkes Observatory’s Support of the Apollo 11 Mission. Latest Update: 21 October 2005.

The Cameras of Apollo – Hosts many pictures and other information on lunar surface cameras

External links

Honeysuckle Creek discusses some of the Apollo 11 moonwalk video.

Apollo Talks Episode 8 is about the Apollo TV camera.

Categories: Apollo program | Space cameras

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