Darn you EDG - you got me :shock: ! - Here I am just innocently :twisted: trying to stoke the conspiracy fires and you come along with your darn fire extinguisher!
Actually the 'true' origins behind many names are often unclear even to the ones who originated them and then muddled by 'history' - and while amused by NASA conspiracy theories I never put stock in the bunk… not to say that there aren't problems of a political nature (global warming PR both ways; shuttle tiles done the way they were; which states and companies get which projects).
EDG said:
BP said:
… original space shuttle - Enterprise

(ok - so it never flew in space either)
That one was definitely named after the Starship Enterprise - it was originally to be called "Constitution" but a write-in campaign changed that.
So I also 'believed', though I wasn't really sure - and it may not actually be that it was. According to this site
http://united-scifi.com/index.php/grassroots-enterprise-how-the-space-shuttle-got-its-name/ there may have been other motivations
Faced with this deluge of Trekkers, President Gerald Ford casually remarked to NASA chief James Fletcher in a late afternoon meeting, "You know, I'm a little partial to the name Enterprise." Ford did not mention the letters or petitions. Instead, he claimed that he liked the name because he had served aboard a Navy ship that serviced an aircraft carrier of that name. Fletcher then objected, but was immediately overruled by Ford.
It is also possible that Ford preferred the name Enterprise for other reasons. Not only did the word conjure up images of human endeavor, but it also hinted at cost-effectiveness and profitability, two characteristics that Ford desparately hoped to associate with the expensive space program.
Even if Ford had other reasons for choosing the name this does not rule out that the write-in campaign triggered the name change - not to mention that the Star Trek Enterprise might have been named for the aircraft carrier! (and of course this site didn't cite any sources !)
EDG said:
BP said:
The Apollo 13 Command Module was named Odyssey (after 2001: A Space Odyssey - ok it was unlucky).
Nope. There's a bit in "Lost Moon" that explains this, which I fortuitously found online at Google books:
this link …
So no, nothing to do with 2001.
I love internet searches!
I had actually pulled this one from a quick google to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_C._Clarke#cite_note-72 which cited
http://epizodsspace.testpilot.ru/bibl/spaceflight/20/names.html (which btw claims that Dr. James C. Fletcher served aboard the Enterprise and that NASA offered the name to Ford! Though a quick bio at NASA doesn't indicate he was ever Navy) I'd tend to believe your book source over the Wiki any day of the week; however, I also found this -
Apollo 13 air-to-ground transcript
Before disaster struck, the specter of HAL 9000 was raised in an amusing exchange between mission control and Apollo 13's moon-bound crew. From NASA's Apollo 13 Technical Air-to-Ground Voice Transcription[15]:
Code:
CC Capsule communicator (CAP COMM)
CDR Commander James A. (Jim) Lovell Jr.
CMP Command module pilot John L. Swigert Jr.
LEB Lower equipment bay
DSKY Display and keyboard
00 11 20 14 CC Apollo 13, Houston.
00 11 20 18 CDR Go ahead, Houston.
00 11 20 19 CC Okay. Looking at our computations back here, we show you about 55 450 and going out rapidly now.
00 11 20 33 CDR Well, Hal might be a little bit off.
00 11 20 36 CC Okay.
00 11 20 37 CMP We have a sign underneath our LEB DSKY that "my name is Hal."
00 11 20 45 CC I can't imagine how that got there. Just remember, you have to be nice to Hal.
00 11 20 55 CMP We will.
from
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HAL_9000. With the timing of the Movie to the naming, maybe the book put the spin on things and just left out the true motivation behind the name!
EDG said:
More recently we have the 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft (of the Mars missions this one had more luck).
Yep, that one's a tribute to ACC ( http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/odyssey/overview/):
Yeah that's the
only one I truly believed!
EDG said:
And there was the Genesis spacecaft (not so lucky)
As far as I can determine, Genesis was so named because its mission was "the search for origins". Whereas the device in the Star Trek movies was so named because it granted the power to create living worlds.
Haha - you caught me - I didn't even look this one up - or actually think it was related to Star Trek! - I only remembered the name because it crashed (chutes didn't deploy or something)
Funny thing is - the Genesis planet featured strongly in 'Star Trek III: The Search for Spock' - and you refer to the mission as 'the search for origins' - coincidence - you be the judge!
[P.S. this page will probably end up being the internet 'source' for more 'factual' information on spacecraft naming! :wink: ]