Engineering Education "Today in History" Blog: Apollo 12 mission lands on the moon
by Alice Agogino
closeAuthor: Alice Agogino
Name: Alice Agogino
Email: agogino@berkeley.edu
Site: http://www.me.berkeley.edu/faculty/agogino/
About: Alice M. Agogino is the Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering and is affiliated faculty at the Haas School of Business in their Operations and Information Technology Management Group. Her research interests include: community-based design; sustainable engineering; intelligent learning systems; information retrieval and data mining; multiobjective and strategic product design; nonlinear optimization; probabilistic modeling; intelligent control and manufacturing; sensor validation, fusion and diagnostics; wireless sensor networks; multimedia and computer-aided design; design databases; design theory and methods; MEMS/NEMS synthesis and computer-aided design; artificial intelligence and decision and expert systems; and gender/ethnic equity.
She has served in a number of administrative positions at UC Berkeley, including Chair of the Faculty Senate, Associate Dean of Engineering and Faculty Assistant to the Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost in Educational Development and Technology. Prof. Agogino also served as Director for Synthesis, an NSF-sponsored coalition of eight universities with the goal of reforming undergraduate engineering education, and continues as PI for the NEEDS (www.needs.org) and SMETE.ORG digital libraries of courseware in science, mathematics, engineering and technology.
Prof. Agogino received a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of New Mexico (1975), M.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering (1978) from the University of California at Berkeley and Ph.D. from the Department of Engineering-Economic Systems at Stanford University (1984). Prior to joining the faculty at UC Berkeley, she worked in industry for Dow Chemical, General Electric and SRI International. She has authored over 150 scholarly publications; has won numerous teaching, best paper and research awards; and is a member of the National Academy of Engineering (NAE). At NAE she served on the Committee on Engineering Education, working on the Technologically Speaking and the Engineer 2020 projects. She is currently a member of the National Research Council's Board on Education and the Women in Academic Science Engineering Committee. She has supervised 66 MS projects/theses, 26 doctoral dissertations and numerous undergraduate researchers.See Authors Posts (333) · November 19th, 2007 · Add a Comment
Today in History – November 19, 1969 – The Apollo 12 becomes the second successful manned lunar landing with astronauts Charles Conrad and Alan Bean. The Apollo 12 mission almost failed at launch due to a leaking hydrogen tank; fortunately launch crew managed to change it before takeoff. The failure of the television camera was caused by Alan Bean, who had accidentally pointed it directly at the Sun causing the optics to burn out. The two astronauts spent over seven hours on the lunar surface and successfully retrieved parts of the Surveyor lander and returned it to Earth.
Apollo 13, the next manned mission to the moon, was launched on April 11, 1970 and nearly ended in tragedy when there was a fire and an explosion on board. Fortunately, quick thinking and skill by the astonauts and ground command allowed the astronauts to return to earth safely, but without carrying out their lunar landing mission. A total of eight astronauts travelled to the moon in five more Apollo missions with the final manned lunar landing of the Apollo 17 mission accomplished in December 1972. NASA maintains extensive online resources associated with the Apollo missions, including logs of the flight and lunar surface journals of the astronauts.
The high cost of the Apollo manned space exploration program led NASA to focus more on unmanned flights in future years. Much to the surprise of the public, President Bush in January 2004 announced a new program to send American astronauts to the Moon by 2020 as the launching point for missions to Mars and further into space. It is not clear whether NASA will be able to stay the course on this program with the changeover in NASA adminstration and presidential elections.
For more information, see the Engineering Pathway’s resources on the Apollo mission and space exploration. For related educational resources, visit the Aerospace Engineering Education Community site.
Tags: General Engineering, Engineering Science
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