GBH Openvault
NOVA; To the Moon; Interview with Carolyn Shoemaker, Astronomer, part 1 of 3
Part of To the Moon Interviews.
1998
Carolyn Shoemaker, Astronomer, is interviewed about late husband Gene Shoemaker's role in the Apollo program. The footage begins with 5 minutes of B-roll footage of a mountain. Shoemaker begins by explaining Gene Shoemaker's first push to get to the moon, and why he wanted to go to the moon. Gene thought that Sputnik came too early, and Carolyn recounts his illness that eventually prevented him from becoming an astronaut. Because of his illness, Gene had to focus on being a scientist rather than an astronaut and Carolyn explains the possibilities of a scientist in relation to the moon (audio-only). Shoemaker explains Gene's illness more extensively and talks about Gene's diagnosis with Addison's disease.
- Series
- NOVA
- Program
- To the Moon
- Program Number
2610
- Title
Interview with Carolyn Shoemaker, Astronomer, part 1 of 3
- Series Description
NOVA is a general-interest documentary series that addresses a single science issue each week. Billed as "science adventures for curious grown-ups" when it first aired in March, 1974, NOVA continues to offer an informative and entertaining approach to a challenging subject. It is also one of television's most acclaimed series, having won every major television award, most of them many times over.
- Program Description
Alan Binder, former Principal Investigator of NASA's Lunar Prospector mission, is interviewed about the Lunar Prospector. Binder says that if moon travel became viable again, he would want to go to the moon, but says that in order to get financial and public support for space exploration, scientists need to sell the science of the moon. Another option, according to Binder, is to make travel to the moon commercially viable, and lists many benefits of going to the moon, including using it as a fuel source, or colonizing the surface for human habitation (audio cuts out from 00:07:30 - 00:09:00). Binder explains the work of the Lunar Prospector and talks about the necessity of having computers to do a lot of the work. On Apollo, Binder calls the program the most significant event of the 21st century, and talks about the roles of the Apollo program, the Clementine spacecraft, and hte Lunar Prospector. The interview ends with Binder's views on his relationship with NASA, which he characterizes as being needlessly bound up in beaurocracy and red tape.
- Duration
0:15:28
- Asset Type
Raw video
- Media Type
Video
- Subjects
- American history
- Moon
- Apollo
- Gemini
- Astronaut
- Space
- Creators
- WGBH Educational Foundation (Producing Organization)
- Contributors
- Shoemaker, Carolyn, 1929- (Interviewee)
- Rights Summary
Rights Holder: WGBH Educational Foundation
- Citation
- Chicago: “NOVA; To the Moon; Interview with Carolyn Shoemaker, Astronomer, part 1 of 3,” 1998, GBH Archives, accessed November 23, 2024, http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_12D0B45D303A46329B09ACAFDA532B8D.
- MLA: “NOVA; To the Moon; Interview with Carolyn Shoemaker, Astronomer, part 1 of 3.” 1998. GBH Archives. Web. November 23, 2024. <http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_12D0B45D303A46329B09ACAFDA532B8D>.
- APA: NOVA; To the Moon; Interview with Carolyn Shoemaker, Astronomer, part 1 of 3. Boston, MA: GBH Archives. Retrieved from http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_12D0B45D303A46329B09ACAFDA532B8D