Apollo 16 (Italian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Apollo 16" in Italian language version.

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archive.org

drewexmachina.com

honeysucklecreek.net

  • (EN) Hamish Lindsay, Apollo 16 (Essay), su honeysucklecreek.net, Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station. URL consultato il 26 gennaio 2021 (archiviato il 31 dicembre 2020).

llnl.gov

st.llnl.gov

loc.gov

lccn.loc.gov

nasa.gov

hq.nasa.gov

history.nasa.gov

lsda.jsc.nasa.gov

science.nasa.gov

  • Trudy E. Bell, Bizarre Lunar Orbits, su Tony Phillips (a cura di), Science@NASA, NASA, 6 novembre 2006. URL consultato il 26 gennaio 2021 (archiviato il 31 dicembre 2018).
    «Lunar mascons make most low lunar orbits unstable ... As a satellite passes 50 or 60 miles overhead, the mascons pull it forward, back, left, right, or down, the exact direction and magnitude of the tugging depends on the satellite's trajectory. Absent any periodic boosts from onboard rockets to correct the orbit, most satellites released into low lunar orbits (under about 60 miles or 100 km) will eventually crash into the Moon. ... [There are] a number of 'frozen orbits' where a spacecraft can stay in a low lunar orbit indefinitely. They occur at four inclinations: 27°, 50°, 76°, and 86°"—the last one being nearly over the lunar poles. The orbit of the relatively long-lived Apollo 15 subsatellite PFS-1 had an inclination of 28°, which turned out to be close to the inclination of one of the frozen orbits—but poor PFS-2 was cursed with an inclination of only 11°.»

nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov

news.google.com

si.edu

nasm.si.edu

airandspace.si.edu

space.com

usra.edu

lpi.usra.edu

web.archive.org

webcitation.org

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worldcat.org