NASA releases enhanced Aussie Moon landing videos

Original recordings erased and re-used by NASA
The Parkes telescope around the time of the Apollo 11 Moon landing in 1969: image CSIRO

The Parkes telescope around the time of the Apollo 11 Moon landing in 1969: image CSIRO

It may be 40 years since man first set foot on the Moon, but only now will people see the “real life” quality footage of Apollo 11 Moonwalk thanks to NASA and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation's (CSIRO) Parkes Radio Observatory.

To celebrate the 40th anniversary of the mission, NASA has released enhanced and digitally re-mastered copies of television recordings of the Apollo 11 Moonwalk taken from Australian telescopes on July 21, 1969.

NASA’s video collection can be viewed online at its Web site.

The videos released today show Apollo 11 mission commander Neil Armstrong’s first step on the Moon’s surface, Buzz Aldrin’s descent of the Lunar Module ladder, the plaque reading and the raising of the US flag.

The footage was taken from the CSIRO’s Parkes Radio Observatory and the Honeysuckle Creek tracking station outside Canberra.

According to the CSIRO, the new enhancements transform the blurry footage that was relayed by live television to an estimated 600 million people in 1969.

The new footage has surfaced after a three-year search by a team of Australian and American Apollo 11 Mission researchers for the original high-quality video recordings of the Moonwalk.

At the time of the landings, engineers recorded the video onto 1-inch magnetic data tapes at the three tracking stations – Honeysuckle Creek, Parkes and NASA’s Goldstone station in California.

The tapes ended up at the Washington National Records Center (WNRC) in Maryland, but, according to NASA, the original recordings of the event may be lost forever as it is “likely” they were erased and reused.

However, the search did uncover the best available television recordings of the Moonwalk from which the digitally re-mastered footage was sourced.

John Sarkissian, the CSIRO scientist who initiated the search, has raised the possibility that backup tapes of the mission recorded at Parkes might still exist.

Sarkissian said his interest in the whereabouts of the original tapes was triggered in 1997 when he started researching the role the Parkes Observatory (known as “The Dish”) had played in the Apollo 11 Mission.

“I realised very quickly that the data tapes contained video recordings that were superior to the footage broadcast ‘live’ to the world and which were the best currently available to the public,” Sarkissian said.

His 2006 report led to NASA announcing an official search for the missing tapes.

Sarkissian said he was then alerted by a letter, written in the early 1990s by The Dish’s former director John Bolton, to the existence of a set of backup video tapes made at Parkes.

Subsequent talks with the engineer responsible for making those recordings confirmed the existence of the backup tapes.

“[We] have spent the last few years looking for those tapes and, although we haven’t found them yet, we are still hopeful, particularly as there is no record or other evidence that they were destroyed or lost,” Sarkissian said.

“They could still be stored somewhere and, with a bit of luck, the publicity about the release of details of NASA’s report on the official search for the tapes might jog someone’s memory.”

More about: Apollo, ASA, Creek, CSIRO, CSIRO, Moonwalk, NASA
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Comments

1

Anonymous

Fri 17/07/2009 - 12:52

Erased and reused? They have got to be kidding.

Ok, the big game is on and we only have this old tape of the monumental first step on the moon. No probs, just tape over it.

2

G.O.D

Fri 17/07/2009 - 14:57

Some restoration.. They land a man on the moon and this is all we have to go on. No wonder people are so skeptical, its says plenty for the American Government too. Lost or erased them, you do not lose something of that value, it supposedly holds mans GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT EVER! Surely copies were made following the landing, you would have to be stupid not to.

3

Anonymous

Fri 17/07/2009 - 16:41

Does anyone seriously believe they had the technology to land men on the moon in 1969 ?? If so, why have we not explored its surface thoroughly by now? I have little doubt that we have the technology today, but in 1969 - you must be kidding.

4

Anonymous

Fri 17/07/2009 - 17:11

Look, there is either a second hand moon buggy and a US flag up there or there is isn't. Of course if there isn't then they were probably taken as souvenirs by Martians for their moon museum. If so we'll probably find them on Mars when we finally land there. There is always a logical explanation.

5

Deevo

Fri 17/07/2009 - 20:30

I get the feeling that some of the people commenting below are very young and have no real idea about the state of technology at the time.
Let me put it simply:
Rockets - easy. Video - hard.
What they need to appreciate was that video tape was new and very, very expensive. All those shows from the sixties were filmed, not videoed. In fact, video recording (in black and white) wasn't even available generally until the mid-70s, and was so expensive that only corporations could afford it.
As for the dweeb that doesn't think the moon landings happened, think again. A good friend of my father was a technician at the Carnarvon Tracking Station during the moon landings. Oddly enough, his job was to track the flights, and there is no way he or any other Aussie there would have engaged in any silly conspiracy or cover-up. These guys were ex WW2 radio and radar guys who had front line war experience. To think that they would obey the orders of any Yank for a cover-up is just laughable.
Things were different forty years ago. People were brave, not "risk averse". Everyone knew there was at least a 50% chance it would all end very badly, but they had the sheer guts and determination to try anyway. They felt that if they died, so what? At least they tried. True courage from true heroes, unlike the milksops you see today.
Sporting "heroes"? Don't make me laugh.

6

R Sutherland

Sat 18/07/2009 - 09:39

For all of the cynics who didn't witness this get off your mobile phone, switch off your fire alarm, throw out your velco strap shoes, your fire retardant suits and get rid of those zip lock bags - and all the other 30000 spins off from the space project. The reason they haven't gone back to the moon is that is extraodinarily expensive to do so and its a rock - there is a new frontier out there beyond our solar system and that's where NASA has its telescopes aimed. - Aren't you excited - this is absolutely the most amazing adventure - and it's in our time.

7

Good Elf

Wed 22/07/2009 - 16:22

The reason we need to go "back" to the moon (besides all those other reasons) is the surface is "laced" with Helium 3 which is a source of free and available fusion energy at our level of technology. There is no naturally occuring He3 on earth.

Other than the Bussard Polywell Reactor (funded in current Obama Budget), which uses Boron, this is the safe and easy path to world energy independence.

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