Carnarvon Space Tracking Station
Australia /
Western Australia /
Carnarvon /
World
/ Australia
/ Western Australia
/ Carnarvon
World
NASA, satellite/space tracking station
The Carnarvon Tracking Station in Western Australia was a tracking station used by NASA. It was built in 1963 for the Gemini program, the second step for NASA's plan to put a human on the Moon.
It replaced the Muchea Tracking Station and used some of the equipment from Project Mercury.
After the conclusion of the Gemini program, Carnarvon Tracking Station provided extensive support for the Project Apollo missions to the Moon. By reason of Carnarvon's unique geographical position it was used to uplink the Trans Lunar Injection (TLI) command to the Apollo spacecrafts. It was subsequently used to support the Skylab space station.
The station was closed in 1974. The main building was then used by Radio Australia who were looking for a home after Cyclone Tracy put their Darwin installation out of commission. They closed this facility in June 1996. All Tracking Station equipment was removed and/or buried and all buildings, with the exception of one small one now used by Telstra, were razed. Only the foundations of what is an historical site remain.
Solar scientific research is carried out on the site, which provides a node of the Birmingham Solar Oscillations Network.
www.carnarvonspace.com/wiki/index.php?title=Welcome_to_...
It replaced the Muchea Tracking Station and used some of the equipment from Project Mercury.
After the conclusion of the Gemini program, Carnarvon Tracking Station provided extensive support for the Project Apollo missions to the Moon. By reason of Carnarvon's unique geographical position it was used to uplink the Trans Lunar Injection (TLI) command to the Apollo spacecrafts. It was subsequently used to support the Skylab space station.
The station was closed in 1974. The main building was then used by Radio Australia who were looking for a home after Cyclone Tracy put their Darwin installation out of commission. They closed this facility in June 1996. All Tracking Station equipment was removed and/or buried and all buildings, with the exception of one small one now used by Telstra, were razed. Only the foundations of what is an historical site remain.
Solar scientific research is carried out on the site, which provides a node of the Birmingham Solar Oscillations Network.
www.carnarvonspace.com/wiki/index.php?title=Welcome_to_...
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnarvon_Tracking_Station
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 24°54'5"S 113°43'12"E
- Former Red Lake Tracking Station 2363 km
- Telemetry and Control Facility 2364 km
- Island Lagoon Minitrack (site) 2379 km
- Woomera Space Communications Centre (site) 2379 km
- Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex, NASA 3567 km
- Former Orroral Valley Tracking Station 3569 km
- Former Honeysuckle Creek Tracking Station 3570 km
- Shark Bay 62 km
- Dorre Island 68 km
- Cape Peron 77 km
- Lake MacLeod 80 km
- Strait Naturaliste 88 km
- Faure Island 107 km
- Dirk Hartog Island 121 km
- Shell Park 147 km
- Woodleigh Impact Structure 159 km
- Coburn Mineral Sands 228 km