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  • 2 weeks ago
On Sept. 14, 1966, NASA's Gemini 11 mission set an all-time spaceflight altitude record when two astronauts reached an orbit of 850 miles above the Earth.

This remains the highest altitude ever achieved by a crewed, non-lunar mission. Gemini 11 command pilot Pete Conrad and pilot Dick Gordon spent three days orbiting the Earth in their cramped Gemini spacecraft. After launch, they performed the first-ever direct-ascent rendezvous with an Agena target vehicle.
Once the two spacecraft were adjoined, they used the rocket on the Agena target vehicle to ascend to their record-breaking altitude. They also created a little bit of artificial gravity while in orbit by using their thrusters to rotate the combined spacecraft.
Transcript
00:00On this day in space. In 1966, NASA's Gemini 11 mission set an all-time spaceflight altitude
00:08record when two astronauts reached an orbit of 850 miles above the Earth. This remains the
00:13highest altitude ever achieved by a crewed non-lunar mission. Gemini 11 command pilot
00:18Pete Conrad and pilot Dick Gordon spent three days orbiting the Earth in their cramped Gemini
00:23spacecraft. After launch, they performed the first-ever direct ascent rendezvous with an
00:27Agena target vehicle. Once the two spacecraft were joined, they used the rocket on the Agena target
00:32vehicle to ascend to their record-breaking altitude. They also created a little bit of artificial
00:37gravity while in orbit using the thrusters to rotate the combined spacecraft. And that's what happened
00:42on this day in space.
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