quote:
Originally posted by lazygamer:
Three theories.
1)Something else.
2)Getting into and out of space isn't as complex as it seems, and all the calculations can be handled by some human math and instinct/training.
3)This is some proof that we might not of gone to space as early as we think we did.
Just to illustrate what a gap there is between now and the bulk of the space program ('60's-'70's), watch "Apollo 13". There'a scene that shows JUST how different things are. As a background, I was an adult in 1970, I was a 23-year old Navy vet with 2 kids.
Anyway, thre's a scene in the movie where Jim Lovell is doing some astro-navigation; he's tired and cold, so he's a little skittish about making a decision that, if wrong, will kill him and the other 2 occupants of the capsule. He asks Mission control to check his math; they all whip out SLIDE RULES and start figuring like mad. Now, the first time I watched that movie, I distinctly remember thinking "Why are they using slide rules? Where's their calculators" Then I remembered- there were NO hand-held calculators on the market in 1970. Do you see my point; I was an ADULT in 1970, and yet I had to think about why they ere using slide rules, even though, as a machinist, I used one regularly at that time.
As far as whether the space program actually did what they perported to do in the 1960's, yeah, I think they did; remember, digital computers didn't exist in a practical form then, but there were analog systems that, while not as flexible, were accurate to the point of being usable for space flight.