Warning: The query SELECT COUNT(*) FROM emailtable WHERE 1=1; produced the error Table 'touristi_tourist.emailtable' doesn't exist in includes/commonfuncs.php on line 9341
An error occured while processing this page:

Please email support and include the above message to get this fixed. Since this is a localhost install, PHP mail probably does not work so the script cannot email for you.

Carnarvon Space and Technology Museum, BROWN RANGE, Western Australia. Information, Photos and Reviews.
Carnarvon Space  and Technology Museum

Carnarvon Space and Technology Museum

Categories: Western Australia
Share Listing Reviews Local
Carnarvon Space  and Technology Museum

THE CARNARVON Space and Technology Museum celebrates the little known history of the role Carnarvon played in the manned space program and in the Australian communications industry.

The museum focuses on two parts. The Carnarvon Tracking Station and the OTC Satellite Earth Station, for which each station played separate roles in the early space industry.

The Carnarvon Tracking Station was located 10 kilometres south from Carnarvon. The station was built to support NASA’s Gemini, Apollo and Skylab programs. It was commissioned in 1964 and operated for 11 years. It was the last station to communicate with the space capsules leaving the earth orbit, and the last to make contact before splashdown in the Pacific Ocean. At the height of the operation it had a staff of 220 people.

The OTC Satellite Earth Station (and now museum site) is situated at the northern end of Browns Range, about 6 kilometres from the centre of Carnarvon, and 4 kilometres north of the Tracking Station. The OTC Satellite Earth Station was opened in 1966, initially with the 12.8 metre wide Casshorn antenna as part of the global satellite communications system. The Casshorn antenna has interacting parabolic and hyperbolic reflectors in a characteristic ‘sugar scoop’ form.

On 21 July 1969, the day of the Apollo 11 moon landing, the Casshorn antenna relayed Neil Armstrong’s first steps on the Moon from NASA's Honey Suckle Creek Tracking Station to Perth's TV audience via Moree earth station - the first live telecast into Western Australia. Later in 1969, the larger 29.6 metre wide steerable antenna was built to facilitate better communication between the NASA Tracking Station and the USA.

Local

See and Do

Contact

Carnarvon Space and Technology Museum
25 Mahony Ave
BROWN RANGE
Western Australia
6701
Australia
+61 8 99419901
loading...

Reviews

Nobody has reviewed Carnarvon Space and Technology Museum yet, Be the first.

Booking Enquiry Form

You are submitting a booking enquiry. Carnarvon Space and Technology Museum will then contact you by email with details of availability and prices.