- Space Mirror Memorial
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The Space Mirror Memorial, also known as the Astronaut Memorial, is a memorial on the grounds of the John F. Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex on Merritt Island, Florida. It is maintained by the Astronaut Memorial Foundation, whose offices are located in the NASA Center for Space Education next door to the Visitor Complex. The memorial was dedicated in 1991 to remember the lives of the men and women who have died in the various space programs of the United States, particularly those of NASA. The Space Mirror Memorial has been designated a National Memorial by the U.S. Congress.
In addition to 20 NASA career astronauts, the memorial includes the names of a U.S. Air Force X-15 test pilot, a U.S. Air Force officer who died while training for a then-classified military space program, a civilian spaceflight participant who died in the Challenger disaster, and an Israeli astronaut who was killed during the Columbia disaster.
Contents
Memorial elements
The primary feature of the memorial is the Space Mirror, a large area of polished black granite, divided into 90 smaller panels. The names of the 24 astronauts who have died are scattered over the mirror, with names of astronauts who died in the same incident grouped on the same panel, or pairs of adjacent panels. The names are cut completely through the surface, exposing a translucent backing, and filled with translucent acrylic, which is then backlit with a combination of reflected sunlight (when available) and floodlights, causing the names to glow, and appear to float in a reflection of the sky. The names were cut into the 2" thick 500-pound granite panels by Creative Edge Mastershop of Fairfield, Iowa.[citation needed]
Near the Space Mirror is a granite wall, bearing pictures and brief biographies of those listed on the Mirror.
The Astronaut Memorial was designed by Wes Jones of Holt Hinshaw Pfau Jones and was commissioned after he won an international design competition.
Memorial funding
The Astronauts Memorial Foundation and Space Mirror Memorial are funded in part by a specialty vehicle registration plate issued by the state of Florida. Called the Challenger plate, it was first issued in 1987, and was the first (and, until recently, most popular) specialty plate issued by the state. The third edition, introduced in 2004, includes Columbia in the text, but is still termed the Challenger plate.[1] The memorial cost US$6.2 million.[2]
License plates brought in $377,000 in 2009.[3]
Operations
The president of the Astronaut Memorial Foundation has been Stephen Feldman since 1999. He was paid $303,000 annually. This was criticized as being the highest among 100 of Brevard County non-profits. The salary represents 18.3% of the fund's $1.8 million budget in fiscal year 2009. He defended his salary by saying that he is the sole fundraiser and the chief financial officer for the foundation.[3]
Defunct sun tracking mechanism
The memorial, as built, incorporated motors and jackscrews to constantly track the sun across the sky in both pan and tilt axes. Parabolic reflectors on the back side of the mirror would then direct the sunlight through the acrylic panels to brilliantly illuminate the honorees' names with sunlight. Supplemental floodlights were used when the sun was inadequate.
In 1997, the tracking system failed, allowing part of the monument to strike a steel beam on an adjacent platform. Insurance paid US$375,000 in repair work, but later, the mechanism again ground to a halt, due to further problems with the slewing ring.[2]
Estimated repairs were on the order of US$700,000, and the Astronauts Memorial Foundation unanimously decided the money would be better spent on educational programs instead. The floodlights were therefore repositioned and are kept burning 24 hours a day.[2]
Honorees
Only those killed during human spaceflight missions or during training for such missions sponsored by the United States are eligible for inclusion in the memorial.[4] For a comprehensive list of space disasters, see List of space disasters.
The people honored on the memorial are:
- Theodore Freeman, one of the "Astronaut Group 3" recruits from 1963, died in a T-38 training accident on October 31, 1964.
- Elliot See and Charles Bassett were killed in a T-38 accident on February 28, 1966 when their aircraft crashed into McDonnell Building 101 on a foggy day. They were originally slated to be the crew of Gemini 9. Bassett was another Group 3 recruit, whereas See was an Astronaut Group 2 recruit from 1962.
- Virgil Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee were in the Apollo 1 capsule for plugs-out test on January 27, 1967 when a short circuit ignited flammable materials in the pressurized pure-oxygen atmosphere. The astronauts died of carbon monoxide poisoning before ground crews could reach them. Grissom, one of the "Mercury Seven" astronauts, had flown twice before. White conducted the first US spacewalk on Gemini 4. Chaffee, a rookie, was a Group 3 recruit.
- Clifton Williams died in a T-38 training crash on October 5, 1967. Another Group 3 recruit, he was in the Apollo astronaut rotation, and would have been on the crew of Apollo 12. He was also memorialized by a fourth star on the official Apollo 12 mission badge.
- Michael J. Adams died in an X-15 crash on November 15, 1967. He was not a NASA astronaut recruit, but made the memorial by virtue of having earned the Astronaut Badge according to the USAF standard by reaching just over 50 miles in altitude on his fatal flight. He was also in the United States Air Force's Manned Orbiting Laboratory program.
- Robert H. Lawrence, Jr., died on December 8, 1967, when the F-104 he was testing crashed and his ejection seat parachute failed to open. He was in the Manned Orbiting Laboratory program at the time, and could have become among the first African-American astronauts had he survived to take NASA's offer for all under-35 MOL candidates to join their space program when MOL was scrapped in 1969.
- On January 28, 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger broke apart 73 seconds after liftoff on mission STS-51-L. All seven crew members — Francis "Dick" Scobee, Michael J. Smith, Ronald McNair, Gregory Jarvis, Judith Resnik, Ellison Onizuka, and Christa McAuliffe — died. Scobee, McNair, Resnik and Onizuka had flown before. McAuliffe was participating via the Teacher in Space Project.
- M. L. "Sonny" Carter died on April 5, 1991, in the crash of Atlantic Southeast Airlines Flight 2311. Carter was a passenger traveling on NASA business. He had flown on STS-33 and was in training for STS-42 at the time.
- On February 1, 2003, the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated on re-entry at the end of mission STS-107 due to damage during ascent. The crew was Rick D. Husband, William C. McCool, David M. Brown, Kalpana Chawla, Michael P. Anderson, Laurel Clark and Ilan Ramon. Husband, Chawla and Anderson were veterans. Ramon was a pilot in the Israeli Air Force.
Gallery
See also
- Fallen Astronaut, a memorial to dead astronauts on the Moon
References
- ^ [1]
- ^ a b c Ash, J.: "Memorial Repairs Delayed Indefinitely", Florida Today, January 23, 2001.
- ^ a b Schweers, Jeff (21 November 2010). "Space nonprofit CEOs pay unusually high". Melbourne, Florida: Florida Today. pp. 1A. http://www.floridatoday.com/article/20101121/NEWS01/11210334/Space-nonprofit-CEO-s-pay-unusually-high.[dead link]
- ^ [2]
External links
Coordinates: 28°31′31″N 80°40′54″W / 28.525232°N 80.681598°W
- The Astronauts Memorial Foundation official website
- Astronaut Memorial Space Mirror
- Astronaut Memorial at Find-A-Grave
Categories:- Human spaceflight
- Space program fatalities
- Space Shuttle program
- Mirrors
- Monuments and memorials in Florida
- Landmarks in Florida
- Visitor attractions in Brevard County, Florida
- Merritt Island, Florida
- 1991 works
- Buildings and structures in Brevard County, Florida
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