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  Mission Control: Inventing the Groundwork of Spaceflight (Michael Peter Johnson)

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Author Topic:   Mission Control: Inventing the Groundwork of Spaceflight (Michael Peter Johnson)
Sy Liebergot
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Posts: 501
From: Pearland, Texas USA
Registered: May 2003

posted 04-07-2015 12:12 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Sy Liebergot   Click Here to Email Sy Liebergot     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
This is the first I've heard of this:

'This is Ground Control': The Invention of Mission Control Centers in the United States and Europe
Dissertation by Michael Peter Johnson

This dissertation examines the invention of mission control centers by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the European Space Agency, particularly during the Cold War. The control rooms of Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, and the European Space Operations Centre, in Darmstadt, Germany, lie at the heart of this discussion. The three control centers developed individually, however each contain certain similarities yet important differences based on their particular political, economic, and spaceflight, needs.

Spaceflight history normally focuses on the astronauts and spacecraft in space. This dissertation instead looks at the history of spaceflight through its ground systems, where the majority of the spaceflight work takes place. It will ask how controllers have fashioned workplaces and workspaces. While all mission control centers fulfill the same basic task of monitoring spacecraft, minor and major differences have lead to some dramatic differences in the construction of the centers. This work tackles three centers with very different missions: American human spaceflight, American robotic spaceflight, and finally European robotic spaceflight.

Both domestic and international politics play an important role in the discussion. Because space agencies require large budgets, decisions to locate space centers in certain locations involve politically-charged debates and recommendations. Internationally, spaceflight efforts became quickly engrained in the Cold War. The Americans space program, which was large enough to pay for its projects and involved in a competition with the Soviet Union, reluctantly pursued relationships with outside space programs. The European space program, on the other hand, relied upon cooperation with other space programs due to its limited budget and fundamentally international characteristic. As budgets have lessened and the world community has changed to more acceptance of international collaboration, the dynamic has changed in spaceflight to embrace cooperative projects as essential. Each of the control centers necessarily has learned to adapt to an ever-changing political landscape.

onesmallstep
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From: Staten Island, New York USA
Registered: Nov 2007

posted 04-07-2015 01:45 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for onesmallstep   Click Here to Email onesmallstep     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Looks like a more technical, political/historical side to the NASA JSC MCC story. Note that the advisor is James Hansen, who wrote "First Man" and co-authored John Young's memoir. Should make an interesting read, and complements Murray and Cox's "Apollo," which tells the more human side of the roles the flight controllers and support staff had in the MCC.

cspg
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From: Geneva, Switzerland
Registered: May 2006

posted 04-24-2015 03:48 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for cspg   Click Here to Email cspg     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Mission Control: Inventing the Groundwork of Spaceflight
by Michael Peter Johnson
Brave astronauts, flaring rockets, and majestic launches are only one side of the story of spaceflight. Any mission to space depends on years — if not decades — of work by thousands of dedicated individuals on the ground. These are the people whose voices offer a friendly link to Earth in the void of space, whose hands maneuver rovers across the face of planets, and whose skills guide astronauts home. This book is a long-overdue history of three major centers that have managed important missions since the dawn of the space age.

In Mission Control, Michael Johnson explores the famous Johnson Space Center in Houston, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, and the European Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany — each a strategically designed micro-environment responsible for the operation of spacecraft and the safety of passengers.

Johnson explains the motivations behind the location of each center and their intricate design. He shows how the robotic spaceflight missions overseen in Pasadena and Darmstadt set these centers apart from Houston. He argues that the type of spacecraft and the missions they controlled — not the nations they represented — defined how the centers developed, yet they played vital national roles as space technology became a battleground for international power struggles in the Cold War years and even after.

Michael Peter Johnson is former director of the Skylab Oral History Project.

  • Hardcover: 208 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Florida (October 18, 2015)
  • ISBN-10: 0813061504
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813061504
Special thanks to Romi Gutierrez from UPF who provided the info.

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