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This official NASA Skylab News Reference serves as the definitive historical document for America's first space station program. Originally produced by NASA in 1973 for the press corps, this hardcover reference book provides comprehensive technical and operational details about the Skylab mission that changed space exploration forever.
Launched on May 14, 1973, Skylab proved the concept of a zero-gravity laboratory and orbiting observatory, establishing the foundation for today's International Space Station. This reference guide documents the dramatic salvage operation after an aluminum micro-meteoroid shield tore loose during lift-off, taking one of two solar power arrays with it. The contingency repairs performed by the SL-2 crew, including installation of a parasol-like sun shield, represent one of NASA's most remarkable problem-solving achievements.
The guide contains extensive chapters covering Skylab's hardware and systems, flight operations, launch facilities, and onboard experiments. Readers gain access to official information about crew training procedures, contractor relationships, and project management strategies employed during this groundbreaking mission. The reference includes official press releases for all three missions: SL-2, SL-3, and SL-4.
The SL-4 crew's achievements are thoroughly documented, including their 83-day orbital stay that concluded on February 8, 1974. During this final mission, astronauts performed four EVAs, captured 75,000 images of the sun, filmed Comet Kohoutek, and traveled over 34.5 million miles. This reference preserves the complete record of these accomplishments before Skylab's abandonment and atmospheric reentry in 1979.
This hardcover volume serves as an invaluable resource for space historians, aerospace engineers, NASA enthusiasts, and collectors of space memorabilia. The 1973 original documentation provides authentic insight into the Saturn V era and the operational challenges faced before the Space Shuttle program. As a coffee table book or technical reference, it offers unmatched access to America's pioneering space station program.