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A Boeing B-52 strategic bomber being prepared for EMP testing at Trestle in 1982.. ATLAS-I (Air Force Weapons Lab Transmission-Line Aircraft Simulator), better known as Trestle, was a unique electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generation and testing apparatus built between 1972 and 1980 during the Cold War at Sandia National Laboratories near Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Atlas I was the last use of the classic Atlas design with three engines, a jettisonable booster section, and two vernier engines. While retaining most of those features, Atlas II replaced the verniers with a hydrazine roll control system. [2] An Atlas I (serial number AC-69) on Pad 36B prior to launch of the CRRES satellite in 1990.
Mercury-Atlas 1: Mercury test Suborbital Failure Excessive aerodynamic bending of the Mercury adapter interface results in Atlas structural failure T+58 seconds. First attempted launch of a Mercury capsule. 1960-08-09 18:09 Atlas D 32D CCAFS LC-12: ICBM test Suborbital Success 1960-08-12 13:00 Atlas D 66D CCAFS LC-12: ICBM test Suborbital Success
STS-45 carried the first Atmospheric Laboratory for Applications and Science (ATLAS-1) experiments, placed on Spacelab pallets mounted in the orbiter's payload bay. The non-deployable payload, equipped with 12 instruments from the United States , France , Germany , Belgium , Switzerland , the Netherlands and Japan , conducted studies in ...
F-1 rocket engine used in the Saturn program, Rocketdyne former main production facility, Canoga Park, Los Angeles. After World War II, North American Aviation (NAA) was contracted by the Defense Department to study the German V-2 missile and adapt its engine to Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) measurements and U.S. construction details.
The Atlas was one of the world's first supercomputers, in use from 1962 (when it was claimed to be the most powerful computer in the world) to 1972. [1] Atlas's capacity promoted the saying that when it went offline, half of the United Kingdom's computer capacity was lost. [ 2 ]