(2 minutes 50 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:15:47   QuickTime TV Clip: Astronauts on board the ISS offer advice on living in close quarters during coronavirus lockdowns Astronaut Neil Armstrong made history on July 20, 1969, when he became the first man to set foot on the moon. (3 minutes 13 seconds). Journal Text: 109:59:05   MPG 16-mm Clip: Find professional Apollo 11 videos and stock footage available for license in film, television, advertising and corporate uses. Journal Text: 110:23:05   Restored Video: (2 minutes 03 seconds). Crafted from a newly discovered trove of 65mm footage, and more than 11,000 hours of uncatalogued audio recordings, Apollo 11 takes us straight to the heart of NASA's most celebrated mission-the one that first put men on the moon, and forever made Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin into household names. (58 seconds; 3.3MB). (3 minutes 13 seconds). Journal Text: 110:23:32   QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 112:19:18   Restored Video: (2 minutes 52 seconds). Journal Text: 111:05:30   Restored Video: (5 minutes 02 seconds). Journal Text: 109:34:44   Restored Video: (2 minutes 55 seconds). Journal Text: 110:01:17   Restored Video: (3 minutes 49 seconds). During the following one hour ten minute sequence, the astronauts perform a variety of surface activities, both within and beyond camera range. Just before leaving the lunar module, Buzz set the 16mm DAC (data acquisition camera, or sequence camera) to run at one frame per second. Featuring never-before-seen large-format film footage of one of humanity's greatest accomplishments. Journal Text: 110:06:29   RealVideo TV Clip: (3 minute 24 seconds; 17MB). QuickTime TV Clip: (3 minute 21 seconds; 17MB). The voices are mainly those of Buzz Aldrin and capcom Charlie Duke. (1 minute 4 seconds; 3.3MB). To broadcast the SSTV transmission on standard television, NASA ground receiving stations performed real-time scan conversion to the NTSC television format. (50 seconds; 3.1MB). (2 minutes 55 seconds). (2 minutes 32 seconds). Buzz stamps his boot in the soil and observes the results. Journal Text: 110:43:33   QuickTime Video Clip: (55 seconds; 3.3MB). Watch 'Apollo 11' on Saturday, July 20 at 9 p.m. Journal Text: 110:08:14   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). Apollo 11: Quarantine will "feature never-before-seen 70mm footage sourced from the National Archives and NASA." Journal Text: 109:28:07   Restored Video: (3 minutes 12 seconds). Journal Text: 109:55:50   MPG 16-mm Clip: (3 minutes 23 seconds). (3 minutes 33 seconds). Journal Text: 102:34:24 to 102:46:06. (2 minute 15 seconds; 11MB). Journal Text: 110:25:25   MPG 16-mm Clip: Journal Text:   MPG Video Clip: Journal Text: 109:54:45   Restored Video: (3 minutes 19 seconds). (56 seconds, time-lapse; 1.4MB). Journal Text: 109:50:59   RealVideo Clip: Starting at 4:02 p.m. EDT on July 20, 2019, NASA TV replayed the original footage of the 1969 Moon landing. MPG 16-mm Film Clip: Journal Text: 111:36:32   RealVideo Clip: (2 minutes 47 seconds). It ran at 6 frames per second for the landing and was fitted with a … Journal Text: 109:22:06 to 109:25:44. (41 seconds; 2.9MB). However, NASA reaffirmed that there is no missing footage from Apollo 11 since the video transmissions were relayed to the Manned Spacecraft Center (now … Journal Text: 111:10:00   RealVideo Clip: Except where noted, (50 seconds; 5.2MB). Journal Text:   MPG Video Clip: Journal Text: 109:22:06 to 109:25:44. The 3 x Apollo 11 astronauts are shown clearly faking a view of the earth which was supposed to have been taken from near the moon. (1 minute 15 seconds; 7.7MB). The moonwalk's converted video signal was broadcast live aro Journal Text: 110:52:22   Restored Video: (0 minutes 37 seconds). Journal Text: 110:27:20   RealVideo Clip: (1 minute 47 seconds; 9MB). Journal Text: 110:18:31   MPG 16-mm Clip: (2 minutes 58 seconds). (3 minutes 4 seconds). Journal Text: 110:07:01 to 110:09:50. (1 minute 45 seconds; 9MB). Journal Text: 110:25:05   Restored Video: (3 minutes 16 seconds). (57 seconds; 2.9MB). The Apollo 11 missing tapes were those that were recorded from Apollo 11's slow-scan television telecast in its raw format on telemetry data tape at the time of the first Moon landing in 1969 and subsequently lost. (55 seconds; 3.2 MB). MPEG clips are by Ken Glover, Journal Text: 112:12:48   Restored Video: (4 minutes 00 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: Apollo 11 - Landing on the Sea of Tranquility - July 20, 1969. (1 minute 7 seconds, time-lapse; 5.2MB). (2 minute 57 seconds; 26MB). Journal Text: 110:43:20   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 110:23:32   QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 109:30:53   Restored Video: (2 minutes 31 seconds). Journal Text: 110:28:16   Restored Video: (4 minutes 04 seconds). (1 minute 20 seconds; 4.0MB). A set of original videotape recordings of the Apollo 11 Moon landing that were bought for $217.77 at a government surplus auction by a … (2 minutes 50 seconds). (2 minutes 28 seconds; 5 MB). (3 minute 18 seconds; 33MB). Journal Text: 111:02:08   RealVideo Clip: The thumbnail image shows the new footage on the left and the old on the right. After returning from their historic mission to … The astronauts stand by the flag to take a telephone call from the president. BUZZ ALDRIN admitted that one of the most iconic photos ever taken during the Apollo 11 was 'so well staged' during an interview in 2016 with Professor Brian Cox, unearthed footage shows. Journal Text: 110:52:57   RealVideo Clip: The sequence camera was pointing out Buzz Aldrin's right-hand lunar module window. Journal Text: 109:36:47   QuickTime Video Clip: (3 minutes 47 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: He sets it down 18 meters northwest of the lunar module and performs a panorama for mission control. Journal Text: 109:23:38 to 109:25:00. Journal Text: 109:57:30   MPG 16-mm Clip: Journal Text: 111:34:56 to 111:35:51. Journal Text: 109:33:34 to 109:37:19. AVI Video Clip: (3 minutes 45 seconds; 33MB). (4 minutes 13 seconds). Apollo 11 is worthwhile simply for this unearthed footage. (3 minutes 18 seconds; 33 MB). Journal Text: 110:11:33   Restored Video: (0 minutes 52 seconds). Watch the historic Apollo 11 moments as the world witnessed them 50 years ago. Journal Text: 112:16:44   Restored Video: (2 minutes 38 seconds). (3 minutes 30 seconds). (2 minutes 44 seconds). (3 minutes 44 seconds). The television cable is clearly visible in Buzz's hands, as are its movements disturbing the surface dust towards the tripod. Journal Text: 110:45:07   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). Journal Text: 110:05:04   Restored Video: (3 minutes 10 seconds). Journal Text: 110:55:42   RealVideo Clip: (1 minute 13 seconds; 3.7 MB). (30 seconds; 1.4MB). Apollo 11 tapes are in the spotlight at the moment. Get the latest updates on NASA missions, subscribe to blogs, RSS feeds and podcasts, watch NASA TV live, or simply read about our mission to pioneer the future in space exploration, scientific discovery and aeronautics research. Original NASA Apollo 11 moon landing tapes set to fetch $1 million For Apollo 11's 50th anniversary, Sotheby's is auctioning first-generation NASA footage of the big event. QuickTime clips are by Gerald Megason, and Journal Text: 111:15:39   Restored Video: (4 minutes 12 seconds). Neil appears carrying the television camera and tripod. The blowing dust cleared within seconds of touchdown: this phenomenon is observable in the small slice of the surface visible in the camera frame above the lunar module shadow. (2 minutes 35 seconds). (48 seconds; 5.0MB). Neil collects bulk soil samples using the scoop, sometimes in view of the camera, sometimes off-camera when his shadow remains visible. Neil's face is visible within his helmet when he walks in front of the lunar module. Journal Text: 111:52:50   Restored Video: (3 minutes 36 seconds). Journal Text: 110:08:53 to 110:11:16. Journal Text: 111:28:24   Restored Video: (4 minutes 16 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 109:37:34   Restored Video: (3 minutes 23 seconds). (3 minutes 7 seconds). Journal Text: 109:23:25 to 109:25:00. Journal Text: 111:07:02   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 111:24:04 to 111:21:16. In the new documentary Apollo 11, freshly unearthed footage of the 1969 lunar mission, with the help of a community of space nerds, will tell the … Journal Text: 109:41:28   RealVideo Clip: The clip runs approximately from 50,000 feet altitude to the lunar surface, from about 102:30:45 to 102:46:38, one minute after touchdown. (2 minutes 55 seconds). (50 seconds; 2.3MB). He makes repeated trips between various representative sampling sites and the sample bag mounted on the scale at the MESA. Journal Text: 110:16:00   RealVideo TV Clip: (3 minutes 51 seconds; 2.7MB). ET and 11 p.m. Journal Text: 110:39:56   RealVideo Clip: (1 minute 1 second; 3.1MB). (50 seconds; 3.4MB). Journal Text: 110:01:16   MPG 16-mm Clip: Journal Text: 109:53:45   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 112:06:00   Restored Video: (3 minutes 32 seconds). from MPEG files provided by Robert Godwin. Journal Text: 111:25:27   Restored Video: (3 minutes 02 seconds). (3 minutes 24 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: As the spacecraft dropped the last few feet, its shadow filled the camera frame, blacking out the surface. Journal Text: 110:52:54   Restored Video: (2 minutes 41 seconds). Journal Text: 109:22:01 to 109:27:15. (3 minute 35 seconds; 18MB). Journal Text: 109:53:40   MPEG Video Clip: Original broadcast footage of Apollo 11's historic launch. (33 seconds; 2.6MB). Journal Text: 111:20:09 to 111:21:20. Journal Text: 110:18:39 to 110:21:10. Journal Text: 109:50:52   Restored Video: (3 minutes 57 seconds). (1 minute 17 seconds, time-lapse; 4.0MB). Journal Text: 109:47:36   Restored Video: (3 minutes 21 seconds). (44 seconds; 2.8MB). Journal Text: 110:13:30   QuickTime/VLC Video Clip: (55 seconds; 2.3MB). (11 minutes, 52 seconds; 8MB). Lunar module descent engine ignition for powered descent initiation at around 46,000 feet, Losses of voice communication and data telemetry, Low fuel warning light in the lunar module, Two verbal low fuel warnings from mission control, The landing announcement, and mission control's enormous relief. Journal Text: 110:48:26   Restored Video: (4 minutes 00 seconds). Journal Text: 111:04:16   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 111:12:31   RealVideo Clip: WATCH: Vintage Footage of the Apollo 11 Launch More U.S. News & World Report covered the Apollo 11 moon landing in several issues, detailing … (5 minutes 00 seconds; 80 Mb). Footage from the 1969 moon landing Apollo 11 mission Lie detector test proves Buzz Aldrin saw alien UFOs in space, claims bizarre and likely false viral report Andrew Griffin @_andrew_griffin It looks astonishing, the mint-condition film flawlessly transferred into digital, and then synced to the original audio files perfectly. (1 minute 10 seconds; 6.2MB). (2 minutes 54 seconds). MPEG 16-mm Clip: Journal Text: 109:58:01   Restored Video: (3 minutes 20 seconds). (3 minutes 21 seconds). Journal Text: 110:13:42   MPEG Video Clip: The liftoff of Apollo 11's Saturn V carrying Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins into space exploration history on July 16, 1969. In this video Buzz Aldrin was shown leaked footage which inconclusively proves we did not get to the moon in 1969 and that it was staged. Journal Text: 109:34:54 to 109:35:35. Journal Text: 110:14:57   Restored Video: (2 minutes 39 seconds). Journal Text: 110:36:58   RealVideo Clip: The window view was of black sky during this orientation until they reached 33,500 feet when the moon slowly reappeared at the bottom of the window, just after the first 1202 program alarm announcement. Then he walks off-camera to the left to direct Buzz's emergence through the hatch. Journal Text: 111:38:58   RealVideo Clip: The video was recorded there and in other locations; there is no missing video footage from the Apollo 11 moonwalk. Journal Text: 102:30:45 to 102:46:38   QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:41:49   Restored Video: (3 minutes 22 seconds). Journal Text: 109:56:35   RealVideo TV Clip: (2 minutes 53 seconds). (3 minutes 24 seconds). (15 minutes 59 seconds; 15.7MB). (2 minutes 21 seconds; 3.6MB). The grainy footage of Neil Armstrong placing man’s first step on the Moon is among the most iconic of images. Journal Text: 109:37:30 to 110:48:10. He moves in and out of camera range during this interval. Journal Text: 111:14:54 to 111:15:46. Journal Text: 111:19:46   Restored Video: (6 minutes 06 seconds). Journal Text: 110:24:30   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 111:12:09   Restored Video: (3 minutes 33 seconds). Journal Text: 109:20:55   Restored Video: (3 minutes 25 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: They move off-camera to the lunar module. At extreme left, Buzz repeats the boot penetration task in the soil and photographs the results. Journal Text: 111:15:57   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 111:02:43   Restored Video: (2 minutes 52 seconds). Journal Text: 110:35:06   Restored Video: (3 minutes 08 seconds). Journal Text: 111:22:49   Restored Video: (2 minutes 42 seconds). Journal Text: 102:45:02 to 102:46:16. MPG TV Clip: Journal Text: 102:42:08   WMV Video Clip: Then they go off-camera to the lunar module to collect the flag. QuickTime Film: Real time ( 7 min 46 sec; 93 MB) produced from Spacecraft Films DVDs, with permission; or time lapse with music track ( 56 seconds; 11 MB) produced from a NASA documentary. Neil completes his television panorama and moves to photograph Buzz at the solar wind collector. Join us for a trip down memory lane! (4 minutes 31 seconds, composite; 10MB). (1 minutes 16 seconds; 3.8MB). Journal Text: 109:26:54 to 109:27:44. Journal Text: 109:24:18   Restored Video: (3 minutes 54 seconds). Rare Apollo 11 Footage, Remixed and in HD In 1969, three men traveled to the moon cameras documented their every move (6:33) Journal Text: 110:06:29   MPG 16-mm Clip: Apollo 11 original footage: Relive the historic moment man first walked on the Moon It's 50 years since Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took their first steps on the Moon. (46 seconds; 3.2MB). MPEG Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:03:20   RealVideo TV Clip: Journal Text: 109:33:25 to 109:34:09. NASA.gov brings you images, videos and interactive features from the unique perspective of America’s space agency. Journal Text: 112:02:49   Restored Video: (3 minutes 15 seconds). Journal Text: 110:47:17   RealVideo Clip: 'Apollo 11,' a new immersive documentary from Todd Douglas Miller, unearths perfectly preserved 70mm footage of the Moon landing. QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 114:11:xx   Restored Video: (1 minutes 24 seconds). Journal Text: 102:40:49. Journal Text: 100:12:00   MPG Video Clip: Journal Text: 109:44:23   RealVideo Clip: QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 102:38:20   QuickTime Video Clip: (3 minutes 24 seconds). The data tapes were used to record all transmitted data for backup. Journal Text: 109:42:28 to 109:43:41. (2 minutes 41 seconds). Buzz's shadow appears, carrying the solar wind collector. The film consists solely of archival footage, including 70 mm film previously unreleased to the public, and does not feature narration, interviews or modern recreations. When they are off-camera, their dense, sharply-defined shadows often remain visible, their activities obvious, and the action is like a silent Asian shadow-puppet theatre. Google unveils stunning tribute for Apollo 11 engineer Rare NASA footage from 1969 shows search for lunar life NASA astronaut captures stunning timelapse Hear them sing 'Strolling on … Journal Text: 111:27:23   RealVideo Clip: (2 minutes 49 seconds). Highlights (times shown in minutes and seconds): Journal Text: 109:40:50   Restored Video: (3 minutes 31 seconds). They erect the flag and Neil takes photographs. (3 minutes 42 seconds; 3.8MB). QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:34:13   RealVideo Clip: (2 minute 20 seconds; 12MB). [Journal Contributor Colin MacKellar, editor of the Honeysuckle Creek web site, tells us "the tape was almost certainly recorded at Sydney Video (OTC Paddington). QuickTime Video Clip: (1 minute 38 seconds; 8.3MB). QuickTime Video Clip: 23 MB (1 minute 15 seconds; 7.8MB). (2 minutes 43 seconds). Journal Text: 111:38:53   Restored Video: (3 minutes 56 seconds). All of the film footage has been gone over more than once in the course of the last fifty years, and a great deal of it was used in the documentary film, Apollo 11, which was produced this year as yet another commemoration of the event. Journal Text: 111:10:49 to 111:11:31. (5 minutes 14 seconds; 51MB). Journal Text: 110:58:16   RealVideo Clip: (2 minutes 35 seconds). (4 minutes 30 seconds). Journal Text: 112:09:29   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). Apollo 11 video from outside of the Lunar Module spacecraft, for instance, has been upscaled from 12fps to 24ps, which is a standardised framerate used across cinema and TV … Journal Text: 111:33:46   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 110:12:21   Restored Video: (2 minutes 39 seconds). (3 minutes 30 seconds). Journal Text: 111:19:44   RealVideo Clip: 16mm landing film by Gary Neff, source footage courtesy John Knoll. (1 minute 21 seconds; 4.7 MB). Journal Text: 110:31:43   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 109:35:43   QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:58:58   Restored Video: (3 minutes 48 seconds). Journal Text: 111:10:30   Restored Video: (1 minutes 35 seconds). Journal Text: 109:44:20   Restored Video: (3 minutes 20 seconds). The sequence camera was pointing out Buzz Aldrin's right-hand lunar module window. Journal Text: 109:31:15   Restored Video: (3 minutes 32 seconds). Journal Text: 111:32:37   Restored Video: (2 minutes 56 seconds). Journal Text: 111:59:29   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). Buzz runs around exploring lunar mobility in the area between the lunar module and the television camera. (2 minute 32 seconds; 82MB). Journal Text: 110:15:47   MPG 16-mm Clip: Journal Text: 110:50:26   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 111:35:29   Restored Video: (3 minutes 27 seconds). Journal Text: 109:52:40   MPEG Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:12:21   MPG 16-mm Clip: It ran at 6 frames per second for the landing and was fitted with a 10mm wide-angle lens. Journal Text: 110:09:50   MPG 16-mm Clip: It focuses on the 1969 Apollo 11 mission, the first spaceflight from which men walked on the Moon. Journal Text: 109:36:33   QuickTime Video Clip: (2 minutes 50 seconds). WASHINGTON, March 8, 2019 — Crafted from previously unseen 70mm film footage and more than 11,000 hours of uncatalogued audio recordings, a new documentary transports moviegoers to the heart of NASA’s most celebrated mission— Apollo 11, the one that first put men on the Moon and forever made Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin into American icons. Journal Text: 109:47:40   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 111:22:30   RealVideo Clip: From director Todd Douglas Miller (Dinosaur 13) comes a cinematic event 50 years in the making. (5 seconds; 0.8MB). Journal Text: 111:37:15   QuickTime Video Clip. The spacecraft then rotated 180 degress to a windows-up position at an altitude of 40,000 feet to allow the landing radar to take altitude readings of the surface. Buzz comes to help and swings the cable away from the immediate lunar module area. Armstrong, Collins, and public affairs officer Douglas Ward are also heard occasionally. Journal Text: 111:49:34   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). QuickTime Video Clip: QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:21:24   RealVideo Clip: Journal Text: 110:55:30   Restored Video: (3 minutes 31 seconds). NASA worked … The tape apparently was sent to Goddard, but it wouldn't have been recorded there.". They comprise footage of the landing of the Apollo 11 spacecraft, taken with a 16-mm camera mounted in Edwin Aldrin's window, and Neil Armstrong's first steps on the Moon, recorded by a television camera whose signal was transmitted back to NASA Mission Control in Houston. RealVideo clips were produced by Ken Glover Initially, the lunar module windows faced down towards the surface to allow Armstrong to perform visual landmark tracking. (2 minutes 50 seconds; 3.6MB). Journal Text: 109:42:42   QuickTime Video Clip: (2 minutes 35 seconds). Journal Text: 111:29:39   RealVideo Clip: QuickTime Video Clip: (3 minutes 27 seconds). Journal Text: 110:13:15 to 110:15:47. Journal Text: 111:42:49   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). (4 minutes 41 seconds; 56 MB). ET, See the moon landing as they did 50 years ago, Google unveils stunning tribute for Apollo 11 engineer, Rare NASA footage from 1969 shows search for lunar life, NASA astronaut captures stunning timelapse, Hear them sing 'Strolling on the moon' while on the moon, How space influenced decades of pop culture, See Apollo Mission Control restored to look like it's 1969, This is how being a dancer makes you a better astronaut, Washington Monument lit up like Apollo mission rocket, These are the benefits of space exploration, These women are designing spacesuits of the future, Jeff Bezos unveils his big plans for the moon. (50 seconds; 3.0MB). (1 hour 10 minutes 40 seconds; 11.6MB). Journal Text: 110:18:25   Restored Video: (4 minutes 44 seconds). The camera was pointing down at the lunar surface from inside Buzz's lunar module window. Following the pitchover manoeuvre at about 7,000 feet, the moon climbed higher into view as the lunar module tilted to a more vertical position for landing. Journal Text: 110:02:53   MPG 16-mm Clip: (3 minutes 50 seconds). Journal Text: 110:02:53   QuickTime TV Clip: Journal Text: 111:24:58   RealVideo Clip: QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 111:56:07   Restored Video: (3 minutes 15 seconds). Apollo 11 is a cinematic space event film fifty years in the making. Journal Text: 110:38:12   Restored Video: (3 minutes 42 seconds). Journal Text: 109:52:24   QuickTime Video Clip: As touchdown approached, Little West Crater passed 150 feet below them, the descent engine blew dust across the ground, and the shadow of the landing gear appeared. The search discovered high-quality broadcast versions of the footage. Buzz kicks the soil repeatedly in the “Scuff/Cohesion/Adhesion” activity, sending up sprays of dirt. (3 minutes 24 seconds). The Apollo 11 Plaque Neil Armstrong reads a commemorative plaque affixed to the Apollo 11 lunar module and compares existing footage with the partially restored video. (1 minute 20 seconds; 4.0MB). Neil tangles his foot in the television camera cable. Buzz appears on-camera with the solar wind collector until 25:03 when he goes off-camera, his shadow remaining in view while he deploys it. QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 111:46:09   Restored Video: (3 minutes 24 seconds). Surface detail became clearer below 500 feet and boulders were visible as Neil flew level looking for a clear landing site. Journal Text: 110:58:16 to 110:59:07. Apollo 11 is a 2019 American documentary film edited, produced and directed by Todd Douglas Miller. Getty Images offers exclusive rights-ready and premium royalty-free analog, HD, and 4K video of the highest quality. QuickTime Video Clip: Journal Text: 110:32:16   Restored Video: (2 minutes 55 seconds).