Apollo-15: Endeavour, Falcon, Lunar Rover … and Books

Forty years ago today — July 26, 1971 — Apollo-15 lifted off from Cape Canaveral with astronauts David R. Scott, James B. Irwin, and Alfred M. Worden, to become the fourth manned mission to land on the Moon.

The Apollo-15 mission was the first of three upgraded missions designed to maximize the scientific returns from the program. Scott, the commander, and Irwin, the lunar module pilot, landed on the Moon on July 30th in the Lunar Module “Falcon”, and spent several days exploring and collecting samples. Worden, the command module pilot, remained in orbit in the Command and Service Module “Endeavour” and photographed several high-interest lunar formations.


(Lunar Roving Vehicle, first used on Apollo-15. NASA image.)

Apollo-15 was the first mission to feature the Lunar Roving Vehicle. For those interested in the technical details,

The Lunar Roving Vehicle had a mass of 210 kg and was designed to hold a payload of an additional 490 kg on the lunar surface. The frame was 3.1 meters long with a wheelbase of 2.3 meters. The maximum height was 1.14 meters. The frame was made of aluminum alloy 2219 tubing welded assemblies and consisted of a 3 part chassis which was hinged in the center so it could be folded up and hung in the Lunar Module quad 1 bay. It had two side-by-side foldable seats made of tubular aluminum with nylon webbing and aluminum floor panels. An armrest was mounted between the seats, and each seat had adjustable footrests and a velcro seatbelt. A large mesh dish antenna was mounted on a mast on the front center of the rover. The suspension consisted of a double horizontal wishbone with upper and lower torsion bars and a damper unit between the chassis and upper wishbone. Fully loaded the LRV had a ground clearance of 36 cm.

The wheels consisted of a spun aluminum hub and an 81.8 cm diameter, 23 cm wide tire made of zinc coated woven 0.083 cm diameter steel strands attached to the rim and discs of formed aluminum. Titanium chevrons covered 50% of the contact area to provide traction. Inside the tire was a 64.8 cm diameter bump stop frame to protect the hub. Dust guards were mounted above the wheels. Each wheel had its own electric drive, a DC series wound 0.25 hp motor capable of 10,000 rpm, attached to the wheel via an 80:1 harmonic drive, and a mechanical brake unit. Manuevering capability was provided through the use of front and rear steering motors. Each series wound DC steering motor was capable of 0.1 hp. Both sets of wheels would turn in opposite directions, giving a steering radius of 3.1 meters, or could be decoupled so only one set would be used for steering. Power was provided by two 36-volt silver-zinc potassium hydroxide non-rechargeable batteries with a capacity of 121 amp-hr. These were used to power the drive and steering motors and also a 36 volt utility outlet mounted on front of the LRV to power the communications relay unit or the TV camera. Passive thermal controls kept the batteries within an optimal temperature range.

The lunar rover performed well during Apollo-15 and the next two lunar missions, and enabled the astronauts to examine much more terrain than they could have otherwise.

Apollo-15 landed on the eastern edge of Mare Imbrium, at the base of the Apennine range, near the snaking channel known as Hadley Rille:


(Hadley Rille, taken from the Apollo-15 Lunar Module on the last orbit prior to landing. NASA image.)

Of interest to those of us with a literary bent, Hadley Rille was the source of the name for Hadley Rille Books, a small but well-respected publisher of science fiction and fantasy. One of their recent releases is Buffalito Contingency, by my friend Lawrence Schoen (whom I interviewed here and here). Their Footprints anthology is also very good, and proof that their lunar fascination is not just in name only.

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Congratulations to Redstone SF!

The online magazine Redstone Science Fiction was recognized last week by the Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America as a professional-level publication.


Redstone Science Fiction logo.

RSF published my story, “Memorial at Copernicus,” last August in their third issue. That story now counts as my second “pro” sale, even though it was published before my first pro sale to Analog.

Thanks, Redstone, and may you have many more years of success!

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Latest 'Honorable Mention'

Got an e-mail from the Writers of the Future folks a couple of days ago, with the news that I earned another “Honorable Mention” in the quarterly contest.

This brings my tally to 6 Honorable Mentions and 1 Semi-Finalist out of 13 total entries (including one sent in about a week ago).

Now to figure out where to send this little contemporary fantasy tale. And to start writing the next story.

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Read the First Part of My ANALOG Story

For the curious, the first part of my story, “Therapeutic Mathematics and the Physics of Curve Balls,” has been posted online at the Analog Science Fiction & Fact web site.


(Cover of the September 2011 issue.)

Scroll down about half-way on the front page for the start of the excerpt, which will probably only be active while the magazine is on sale … say, for another month or so. Or, if you prefer, here’s the direct link.

This still seems a bit surreal to me, but in a good way.

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Thus Quoth the Phoenix: 'Pottermore'

By now you’ve seen the news, too, and maybe even clicked onto J.K. Rowling’s mysterious new Pottermore web site. Lots of speculatin’ goin’ on about what it all means: an eighth book? a new series? a charitable cause?

My crystal ball is cracked (not my fault: it was my sister’s, and it was that way when she gave it to me), so it’s not usually very accurate. Even so, I’ll say this new venture is either an homage to Poe (as I alluded to in the post title) or a repository of “approved” Harry Potter fan fiction. Why the most famous British author of our time would do an homage to Poe, I don’t know, but maybe there’s a phoenix perched upon a bust of Hecate above her chamber door. Or it could be an owl.

We’ll all know soon enough. Meanwhile, the speculation is good fun and Ms. Rowling is once again the queen of successful promotion. And, I’ve done my part for her search engine optimization by linking to her new web site. Hey, what are fans for?

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Reality Outpaces My Science Fiction

On the New Scientist site this morning, this headline: Hybrid cars give flywheels a spin.

A British company is testing flywheels as energy-storage units in hybrid cars, to replace much heavier batteries. Their first tests will be with airport buses, which seems like a good choice.

Read down to the end of the article, and you’ll see that several other companies are working on making this technology more effective and more affordable.

Here’s where the science fiction comes into play: In the first chapter of my (still unpublished, unfortunately) novel,* the main characters drive a turbine-and-flywheel automobile … and flywheel “batteries” (if you will) are the storage medium of choice for most of the vehicles that operate in and around the lunar colony.

So, reality is ahead of my SF. I never know whether to laugh or cry over things like this.

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* WALKING ON THE SEA OF CLOUDS is the story of lunar pioneers: two couples determined to survive and succeed as part of the first commercial lunar colony. In the end, one will decide to leave, one will decide to stay, one will put off deciding, and one will decide to die so another can live.

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Putting Finishing Touches on 'The Elements of War'

Over the last month or so I’ve been revising an old nonfiction manuscript, tentatively titled The Elements of War.

The book expands on an article I wrote over a decade ago entitled “Theory of Knowledge, and War: First Steps Toward A Unified Theory.” A few years later (and a few years ago) the book-length manuscript went through the peer review process at a publisher of military history, but didn’t quite make the cut. So I put it away for a while, and now I’ve re-structured it and included reference to some recent military actions. I should be done with the revisions in the next few weeks.

At this point I’m trying to decide whether to try to navigate the traditional publisher maze again, or whether as a “niche” publication it might be suitable for “direct-to-e-book” publishing. I’m open to suggestions, if you have any — and to publication offers, of course, if you’re of a mind.

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Crossed Genres Quarterly (a shameless plug)

My short story “The Tower” is now available as part of the latest compilation from Crossed Genres.


(Crossed Genres Quarterly No. 2 cover art.)

“The Tower” is a swords-and-sorcery fantasy story, though much more swords than sorcery.

You can buy a copy of Crossed Genres Quarterly No. 2 in either electronic format ($2.99) or in hard copy ($11.95). Bear in mind that this is a compilation of three issues of the Crossed Genres online magazine, plus three extra stories … one of which is mine.

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Surveyor-1 and Mariner-9: to the Moon and Mars

Forty-five years ago today — May 30, 1966 — Surveyor-1 launched from Cape Canaveral on an Atlas-Centaur rocket.


(Surveyor-1. NASA image.)

Surveyor-1 was the first U.S. mission to make a soft landing on the Moon. The Surveyor program consisted of seven robotic lunar missions, designed to prove out capabilities and technologies for the Apollo lunar landings.

(As an aside: in my yet-unpubished novel, Walking on the Sea of Clouds, a team of colonists make their way south on an “ice run” and the main character takes a moment to reflect that only a slight detour would take them by the Surveyor landing site.)

In our other space history item for the day, 5 years later — on May 30, 1971 — the Mariner-9 mission to Mars launched, also on an Atlas-Centaur rocket from Cape Canaveral.

Taking advantage of favorable timing and a “direct ascent trajectory,” Mariner-9 sped past the Soviet Union’s Mars-2 and Mars-3 missions to arrive at Mars after only 167 days. On November 14, 1971, Mariner-9 become the first spacecraft in orbit around another planet.

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The Genre Chick Interviews the Gray Man

My friend Alethea Kontis has been running a series of interviews this month, and graciously included me in her coterie of interview subjects. Alethea it was who, upon hearing that I would be reading slush for Baen Books, suggested that rather than “slushmaster” my unofficial title should be “Slushmaster General.”

One click will take you to Genre Chick Interview: Gray Rinehart. Hope you enjoy it!

Many thanks, Princess Alethea!

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