DISCOUNT :
Ref PP650 : Saturn - Voyager 1
Ref T39 : Télescope PERL 114/1000
Ref C002 : TOP GUN CAP
Ref LPP01 : The set of the 5 posters at a promotional price
Ref T20 : Sky-Watcher Maksutov 90
Ref D17 : URANUS - 20 slides set
Ref L99.1 : HIGH LANDER Prominar visée à 45°
Our Picture Library
Retailers space
Our products
Photo Prints
Fisher Space Pen
Observation Instruments
Telescopes
Refractor Telescopes
Binoculars
Planetariums
Posters
NASA Caps
Slides
Message to E.T.
Wall Charts
Post Cards
Aviation Badges
Products listing
Our favourite links
*****************
Quick Find
Advanced Search
Newsletter
Unsubscribe
Information
Shipping & Returns
Privacy Notice
Contact Us
PageRank
Home
»
Photo Prints
»
Aviation-NASA aircrafts-Prototypes
»
S04909
Ref S04909 : X-1A in flight with flight data superimposed
Select in the form below the print format
you would like to order
DIMENSIONS
High Definition PRINT
BACKLIT*
40 x 60 cm
15.7 x 23.6 inches
23.00 €
20.70 €
125.00 €
50 x 75 cm
19.7 x 29.5 inches
29.90 €
26.91 €
140.00 €
60 x 90 cm
23.6 x 35.4 inches
45.00 €
40.50 €
170.00 €
80 x 120 cm
31.5 x 47.2 inches
75.00 €
220.00 €
100 x 150 cm
39.4 x 59.1 inches
109.00 €
290.00 €
*Backlit is a translucent matter to apply in front of a neon light
Thème :
Aviation-NASA aircrafts-Prototypes
Description
:
This photo of the X-1A includes graphs of the flight data from Maj. Charles E. Yeager's Mach 2.44 flight on December 12, 1953. (This was only a few days short of the 50th anniversary of the Wright brothers' first powered flight.) After reaching Mach 2.44, then the highest speed ever reached by a piloted aircraft, the X-1A tumbled completely out of control. The motions were so violent that Yeager cracked the plastic canopy with his helmet. He finally recovered from a inverted spin and landed on Rogers Dry Lakebed. Among the data shown are Mach number and altitude (the two top graphs). The speed and altitude changes due to the tumble are visible as jagged lines. The third graph from the bottom shows the G-forces on the airplane. During the tumble, these twice reached 8 Gs or 8 times the normal pull of gravity at sea level. (At these G forces, a 200-pound human would, in effect, weigh 1,600 pounds if a scale were placed under him in the direction of the force vector.) Producing these graphs was a slow, difficult process. The raw data from on-board instrumentation recorded on oscillograph film. Human computers then reduced the data and recorded it on data sheets, correcting for such factors as temperature and instrument errors. They used adding machines or slide rules for their calculations, pocket calculators being 20 years in the future.
Customers who bought this product also purchased
Ref S01716 : The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) floats gracefully above the blue Earth
Ref S01974 : microscopic formations in Mars meteorite ALH84001, found in Antarctica
Ref T01945 : Lake Baikal (Baykal) and Selenga River Delta, Russia November 1994
Ref PP070 : Saturnian System - Voyager
Ref E202 : Aviation Badge
Ref T08A : Lunette PERL 60/700
Ref C411R : CELESTRON NEXSTAR 11GPS - XLT
Ref SF1008 : Matte Black Fisher Space Pen with removable cap and Shuttle Emblem
My account
Create an account
My Shopping Cart
Your Shopping Cart is Empty
Languages
Tell A Friend
Specials
Ref E332 : Aviation Badge
5.90 €
-
5.00 €
What's New?
Ref L99_N2 : HIGH LANDER visée à 45°
4,800.00 €
Currencies
US Dollar
Euro
Reviews
Write a review on this product!
Bestsellers
Ref T23 : Sky-Watcher 70/900 Eq
250.00 €
Last update Thursday 25 April, 2024