NASA's first attempt at rendezvous was made on June 3, 1965, when US astronaut Jim McDivitt tried to maneuver his Gemini 4 craft to meet its spent Titan II launch vehicle's upper stage. As a NASA astronaut, Aldrin worked to "translate complex orbital mechanics into relatively simple flight plans for my colleagues." First attempt failed In 1963 Buzz Aldrin submitted his doctoral thesis titled, Line-Of-Sight Guidance Techniques For Manned Orbital Rendezvous. The initial separation distances were in the range of 5 to 6.5 kilometers (3.1 to 4.0 mi), and slowly diverged to thousands of kilometers (over a thousand miles) over the course of the missions. In each case, the launch vehicles' guidance systems inserted the two craft into nearly identical orbits however, this was not nearly precise enough to achieve rendezvous, as the Vostok lacked maneuvering thrusters to adjust its orbit to match that of its twin. In its first human spaceflight program Vostok, the Soviet Union launched pairs of spacecraft from the same launch pad, one or two days apart ( Vostok 3 and 4 in 1962, and Vostok 5 and 6 in 1963). landing on one of the Martian moons would require the same matching of orbital velocities, followed by a "descent" that shares some similarities with docking. The same rendezvous technique can be used for spacecraft "landing" on natural objects with a weak gravitational field, e.g. Rendezvous may or may not be followed by docking or berthing, procedures which bring the spacecraft into physical contact and create a link between them. Rendezvous requires a precise match of the orbital velocities and position vectors of the two spacecraft, allowing them to remain at a constant distance through orbital station-keeping. Lunar Module Eagle ascent stage rendezvous with the command module Columbia in lunar orbit after returning from a landingĪ space rendezvous ( / ˈ r ɒ n d eɪ v uː/) is a set of orbital maneuvers during which two spacecraft, one of which is often a space station, arrive at the same orbit and approach to a very close distance (e.g.
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