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Jim McDivitt, astronauta di Apollo 9, 1929-2022

Il 13 ottobre scorso è morto a 93 anni l’astronauta James Alton McDivitt, che
aveva partecipato ai programmi spaziali Gemini e Apollo.

Nella missione Gemini 4 (1965) aveva comandato il veicolo spaziale
mentre il collega Ed White effettuava la prima “passeggiata spaziale”
statunitense.

 

Nella missione Apollo 9 (1969) aveva comandato il primo volo pilotato
in orbita terrestre del Modulo Lunare. Durante questa missione era stato
effettuato il primo trasbordo interno di equipaggio fra due veicoli (il Modulo
Lunare e il Modulo di Comando). Il collega Schweickart aveva eseguito la prima
passeggiata spaziale con una tuta totalmente autonoma (tutte le passeggiate
precedenti avevano usato una tuta che dipendeva dal veicolo spaziale),
prototipo delle tute per le missioni lunari successive. A bordo del Modulo
Lunare, McDivitt e Schweickart si erano sganciati dal Modulo di
Comando, effettuando il primo volo con equipaggio di un veicolo incapace di
rientrare nell’atmosfera e usando i propri motori per allontanarsi fino a 183
chilometri dal Modulo di Comando. Durante questo volo separato, i due avevano collaudato anche la separazione dello stadio di risalita del Modulo Lunare
da quello di discesa.

Scendono così a sedici gli astronauti del programma Apollo ancora in vita
(inclusi i partecipanti alle missioni Skylab e Apollo-Soyuz):
Gibson, Lousma, Schweickart, Kerwin, Cunningham, Brand, Aldrin, Scott,
Mattingly, Duke, Schmitt, Stafford, Haise, Lovell, Anders e Borman.

Questo è il comunicato stampa della NASA:

Former NASA astronaut James A. McDivitt, who commanded the Gemini IV and
Apollo 9 missions, died Oct. 13. McDivitt passed away peacefully in his
sleep surrounded by his family and friends in Tucson, Arizona. He was 93
years old.

McDivitt was born June 10, 1929, in Chicago. He graduated from Kalamazoo
Central High School, in Kalamazoo, Michigan, before going on to receive a
Bachelor of Science degree in Aeronautical Engineering from the University
of Michigan, graduating first in his class in 1959.

He joined the Air Force in 1951 and retired with the rank of Brig. General.
He flew 145 combat missions during the Korean War in F-80 and F-86 aircraft.
He was a graduate of the U.S. Air Force Experimental Test Pilot School and
the U.S. Air Force Aerospace Research Pilot course and served as an
experimental test pilot at Edwards Air Force Base, California. He logged
more than 5,000 flying hours during his piloting career.

McDivitt was selected as an astronaut by NASA in September 1962 as part of
NASA’s second astronaut class.

He first flew in space as commander of the Gemini IV mission in June 1965.
McDivitt was joined by fellow Air Force pilot Ed White on the program’s most
ambitious flight to date. During Gemini IV, White would become the first
American to venture outside his spacecraft for what officially is known as
an extravehicular activity (EVA) or as the world has come to know it, a
spacewalk. In the following years, it was a skill that allowed Apollo
explorers to walk on the Moon and American astronauts and their partners
from around the world to build the International Space Station. The
mission’s four-day duration nearly doubled NASA astronauts’ previous time in
space to that point, with the longest American spaceflight previously being
Gordon Cooper’s 34-hour Mercury 9 mission.

McDivitt’s second spaceflight as the commander of Apollo 9 played a critical
role in landing the first humans on the Moon. This was the first flight of
the complete set of Apollo hardware and was the first flight of the Lunar
Module. The mission launched from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center on March 3,
1969, with Commander James McDivitt, Command Module Pilot David Scott, and
Lunar Module Pilot Russell Schweickart. After launch, Apollo 9 entered Earth
orbit and the crew performed an engineering test of the first crewed lunar
module, nicknamed “Spider,” from beginning to end. They simulated the
maneuvers that would be performed during actual lunar missions. During the
mission, the astronauts performed a series of flight tasks with the command
and service module and the lunar module. The top priority was rendezvous and
docking of the lunar module with the command and service module. The crew
also configured the lunar module to support a spacewalk by McDivitt and
Schweickart. On Flight Day 10, March 13, 1969, the Apollo 9 capsule
re-entered Earth’s atmosphere and splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean,
within three miles and in full view of the recovery ship, the USS
Guadalcanal, about 341 miles north of Puerto Rico.

McDivitt logged more than 14 days in space.

After Apollo 9, he became manager of lunar landing operations, and led a
team that planned the lunar exploration program and redesigned the
spacecraft to accomplish this task. In August 1969, he became manager of the
Apollo Spacecraft Program, guiding the program through Apollo 12, 13, 14, 15
and 16.

McDivitt retired from the U.S. Air Force and left NASA in June 1972, to take
the position of executive vice-president, corporate affairs for Consumers
Power Company. In March 1975, he joined Pullman, Inc. as executive
vice-president and a director. In October 1975 he became president of the
Pullman Standard Division, The Railcar Division, and later had additional
responsibility for the leasing and engineering and construction areas of the
company. In January 1981 he joined Rockwell International as senior vice
president, government operations, and Rockwell International Corporation,
Washington, D.C.

His numerous awards included two NASA Distinguished Service Medals and the
NASA Exceptional Service Medal. For his service in the U.S. Air Force, he
also was awarded two Air Force Distinguished Service Medals, four
Distinguished Flying Crosses, five Air Medals, and U.S. Air Force Astronaut
Wings. McDivitt also received the Chong Moo Medal from South Korea, the U.S.
Air Force Systems Command Aerospace Primus Award, the Arnold Air Society JFK
Trophy, the Sword of Loyola, and the Michigan Wolverine Frontiersman Award.

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