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ZEISSMoonLandingPromotion Source:
NASA
Testbench FIRST CAMERA ON THE MOON
orbiting craft during four
Gemini missions.
The Lunar Surface Camera was
derived from the Hasselblad Super
Wide Camera (SWC) made in
1959, evolving from an earlier
model made in 1954. It consisted
of a slimline body with the fi lm
wind lever on the side and a
wideangle viewfi nder on top,
attached to a fi lm back. There
was no room for a refl ex mirror,
so there was no refl ex focusing.
The modifi cations that turned
the Hasselblad SWC into the
Lunar Surface Camera were
largely to accommodate the way
astronauts needed to handle
delicate controls while wearing
a helmet visor and extra-large,
heavy-duty gloves. A spring-
loaded, top-mounted viewfi nder
was fi tted with its back sight on the
front of the camera body and the
front sight on the rim of the lens.
An extra-large button was added
to the shutter release on top of
the body, and the crank arm on
the side that wound the fi lm was
lengthened. Shutter speeds and
apertures were adjusted with the
addition of large paddle-like arms.
The release lock that freed the
magazine back from the body
was also oversized.
The lens was a 38mm f/4.5
Zeiss Biogon with a 90° angle of
view. Now for the fi rst time, Zeiss
scientists began to
examine the optical
properties of lenses
when used in a
vacuum. What
happened when
the space between
elements no longer
contained air?
Would the refractive
index be changed?
For this reason, Zeiss
calculated the space
between the lens
elements of the Biogon
with the same exactness as
the elements themselves.
Following the Gemini
programme, the Apollo
programme, which eventually
included Apollo 11 and the moon
landing, began in 1968. Soon,
NASA switched its attention to
a new camera.
Hasselblad 500 EL
By now, instead of NASA
modifying standard Hasselblads,
the cameras were modifi ed by
Hasselblad to conform to NASA
specifi cations. The Hasselblad
Hasselblad Super
Wide Camera, the
model that was used
as a basis for the
Lunar Surface Camera
The Lunar
Surface
Camera
© JOHN MARRIAGE
© TIMOTHY CAMPBELL, COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL SCIENCE AND MEDIA MUSEUM
Hasselblad 500 EL: the model to be
modified for the first moon landing
Earthrise with a difference:
shot by Michael Collins,
this shows the Lunar
Module ascent stage
approaching the Apollo 11
command module after
Neil Armstrong and Buzz
Aldrin’s historic trip to the
lunar surface
The first photographer
on the moon: Neil
Armstrong, Commander
of the Apollo 11 mission
© NASA