本案例默认翻译为中文,点击可切换回原语言
已切换成原语言,点击可翻译成中文
案例简介:
案例简介:“It may have been one small step for Neil [Armstrong], but it’s a heck of a big leap for me” – Bruce McCandless II Forty years ago today, an astronaut left his spacecraft without tethers or umbilicals for the very first time. Astronaut Bruce McCandless II became the first astronaut to move in space unattached to a craft, during this first “field” tryout of a nitrogen-propelled, hand-controlled backpack device called the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU). Robert L. “Hoot” Gibson, the flight’s pilot, was the only one on the crew that “had absolutely nothing to do” as McCandless made his way out into space, so he picked up a Hasselblad camera and began documenting the events. When he first looked through the camera’s viewfinder, he could not believe what an incredible sight it was to see McCandless floating free above the Earth. Gibson wanted to capture what he was seeing and remembered how meticulous he was. For each photograph he took three light meter readings and checked the focus four times. In the crew’s photography training he learned that an off-kilter horizon looked wrong and was not pleasing to the eye. That presented a slight problem because Challenger was at a 28.5-degree inclination, so he “tilted the camera to put the horizon level in the pictures.” Image description: Astronaut McCandless II appears as a tiny figure clad in a white spacesuit surrounded by the blackness of space. Earth is visible in the bottom third of the photo. Credit: NASA / Robert L. “Hoot” Gibson #NASA #Space #Astronaut #History #Iconic #Spacewalk
NASA - “It may have been one small step for Neil [Armstrong], but it’s a heck of a big leap for me” – Bruce McCandless II Forty
案例简介:
NASA - “It may have been one small step for Neil [Armstrong], but it’s a heck of a big leap for me” – Bruce McCandless II Forty
案例简介:“It may have been one small step for Neil [Armstrong], but it’s a heck of a big leap for me” – Bruce McCandless II Forty years ago today, an astronaut left his spacecraft without tethers or umbilicals for the very first time. Astronaut Bruce McCandless II became the first astronaut to move in space unattached to a craft, during this first “field” tryout of a nitrogen-propelled, hand-controlled backpack device called the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU). Robert L. “Hoot” Gibson, the flight’s pilot, was the only one on the crew that “had absolutely nothing to do” as McCandless made his way out into space, so he picked up a Hasselblad camera and began documenting the events. When he first looked through the camera’s viewfinder, he could not believe what an incredible sight it was to see McCandless floating free above the Earth. Gibson wanted to capture what he was seeing and remembered how meticulous he was. For each photograph he took three light meter readings and checked the focus four times. In the crew’s photography training he learned that an off-kilter horizon looked wrong and was not pleasing to the eye. That presented a slight problem because Challenger was at a 28.5-degree inclination, so he “tilted the camera to put the horizon level in the pictures.” Image description: Astronaut McCandless II appears as a tiny figure clad in a white spacesuit surrounded by the blackness of space. Earth is visible in the bottom third of the photo. Credit: NASA / Robert L. “Hoot” Gibson #NASA #Space #Astronaut #History #Iconic #Spacewalk
暂无简介
NASA - “It may have been one small step for Neil [Armstrong], but it’s a heck of a big leap for me” – Bruce McCandless II Forty
暂无简介
基本信息
暂无评分
已有{{caseInfo.tatolPeople}}人评分
创作者
案例详情
涵盖全球100万精选案例,涉及2800个行业,包含63000个品牌
热门节日97个,23个维度智能搜索
-
项目比稿
品类案例按时间展现,借鉴同品牌策略,比稿提案轻松中标
-
创意策划
任意搜索品牌关键词,脑洞创意策划1秒呈现
-
竞品调研
一键搜索竞品往年广告,一眼掌握对手市场定位
-
行业研究
热词查看洞悉爆点,抢占行业趋势红利
登录后查看全部案例信息
如果您是本案的创作者或参与者 可对信息进行完善