sagan|sense |
this is a dedication to the late Carl Sagan. In his honor, i will frequently update this page with all things Sagan, science & cosmos-related. keep looking up & remember, we are all star stuff. we float amongst the cosmos, yet the cosmos is in us as well. star stuff, contemplating with stars. may this page bring you closer to your own individual enlightenment, further your knowledge of the universe & allow you to achieve wisdom & connectivity toward all things. |
The Uncertainty of Space 50 Years Ago
When John Glenn blasted off inside his Mercury capsule 50 years ago on Monday to become the first American in orbit, not everyone breathed a sigh of relief that the country had finally matched the Soviet Union’s technology.
Doctors were worried that Glenn, a 40-year-old Marine Corps pilot, might not be able to see in space.
“The doctors were literally concerned that your eyes might change shape and your vision might change enough that you couldn’t even see the instrument panel,” Glenn told reporters at the Kennedy Space Center last week during a series of commemorations to mark the 50th anniversary of his flight.
“They were enough concerned about it we actually put a little miniaturized eye chart on the top of instrument panel,” he said.
Photo: Glenn returned home a hero and his flight paved the way for three more orbital flights by Americans, who were building up the skills and equipment for a journey to the moon before the end of the decade, an ambitious goal laid out by President John F. Kennedy.
Glenn resigned from NASA two months after Kennedy was assassinated and turned his attention to politics and business. He served in the U.S. Senate from 1974 to 1999.credit: NASA
(via scinerds)