- TitlePapers of Dr Peter Whittingham
- ReferencePWHITT
- Production date1948 - 1987
- Whittingham, Peter Donald George VenusBiographyBiography13th September 1923 – 17th July 1987 expert in survival and space medicine, and flight surgeon to the Apollo/Soyuz Mission Group Captain Dr Peter Donald George Venus (P.D.G.V.) Whittingham was born in South Shield on 13th September 1923. He would be educated at the Royal Grammar School, Newcastle, before attending the Newcastle School of Durham University to study medicine. After graduation he would join the Royal Airforce in 1948, serving in the Medical Service for 30 years and would eventually retire as a Group Captain. Whittingham would work at the RAF Institute for Aviation Medicine, located on the Farnborough Airfield, and this work would make him an expert in survival medicine. He would be involved in the study of a wide range of subjects including marching in flying boots, pressure suits, flying clothes for tropical weather, water deprivation, emergency rations and other problems of survival. Much of this research was undertaken on himself, and on several occasions, he would suffer from the bends and chokes. Beyond this work, he would also lecture for the other parts of the British military as well the U.S. Airforce, Commonwealth Committee on Defence, NATO and several other organisations. In 1959 he would be awarded an OBE for his work. In 1955, he co-authored a proposal to introduce pressure suits into the RAF, including specific details of recommended equipment, which was subsequently referred to by the Manchester company P Frankenstein & Sons Ltd in their development of a full pressure flying suit for sub-orbital flight. In 1975 he was seconded to NASA and was later he was appointed as a flight surgeon on the joint American-Soviet Apollo/Soyuz Mission. He was the first and only British doctor to be appointed to this role. Following the end of this mission would also be a consultant to the European Space Agency between 1976 and 1978. As a result of his varied work, P.D.G.V. Whittingham was a member of the Association of Flight Surgeons and the International Academy of Aviation and Space Medicine. On 17th July 1987, he would die in Aldershot at the age of 63.
- Scope and ContentA collection of papers relating to the work of Group Captain Dr Peter Donald George Venus Whittingham, covering both his work at the Royal Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine and at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. It covers a wide range of subjects including investigations into the effect of drinking sea water, motion sickness, food deprivation, cold weather survival and the human aspects of aircraft operation. Also included is material relating to the Apollo/Soyuz Mission and life science experiments undertaken as part of the Space Shuttle programme.
- LanguageEnglish
- Archival historyThe collection was created by Dr Whittingham over the course of his work and was then donated by his daughter, along with a pressure suit, in 1993.
- Level of descriptionTOP
- Repository nameScience Museum, London
- National Aeronautics & Space AdministrationBiographyBiographyThe National Aeronautics and Space Administration is an American civil space program responsible for space exploration. NASA has its basis in the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), which had formed a special committee on space technology in response to the launch of the Soviet satellite Sputnik. This was followed, on 29th July 1958, by the National Aeronautics and Space Act which was signed by President Eisenhower. This created a civilian organisation that was to encourage peaceful applications in space science, while the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), later known as the Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), was previously formed to manage defence research. The new agency would begin operations on 1st October 1958 and was initially formed of 3 existing laboratories, 2 test facilities and 8,000 staff inherited from the NACA as well as elements from the Army Ballistic Missile Agency, United States Naval Research Laboratory and the Air Force. The first head of the agency was Dr T. Keith Glennan who was appointed by the president. One of the first projects it was involved in was Explorer, which was the first American uncrewed satellite. The first of these was launched in January 1958, before NASA’s formation, but this continued after October 1958 and is still in operation at present. In addition to this, there was the X-15 hypersonic aircraft used to investigate extreme altitudes. In December 1958 NASA gained control of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), which had been operated by the California Institute of Technology. The first NASA project was Project Mercury, which ran from 1958 until 1963. As part of this, on 5th May 1961, Alan Shepard became the first American in space, and on 20th February 1962, John Glenn became the first American in orbit. This was followed in 1961 by Project Gemini, which made use of a spacecraft built for two astronauts. It aimed to investigate the possibility of a human trip to the moon including extravehicular activity as well as rendezvous and docking. Upon its conclusion, it led to 10 missions that gathered medical data on the effects of weightlessness on humans. This was followed by Project Apollo, the name for the American mission to land on the moon that was launched by President Kenndey’s speech to congress on 25th May 1961. Although marred by the loss of the crew of Apollo 1 in a fire, Apollo 8 would conduct the first flight around the moon in December 1968 and Apollo 11 would land the first men on the moon, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin. This was followed by 5 further landings until the program was cancelled in 1972. The 1970s would see NASA’s involvement in several different projects including Skylab and the Apollo/Soyuz mission. Skylab was the United State’s first, and to date only, independent space station. Conceived in 1965 it was launched in 1973 and occupied until 1974. It would reenter the atmosphere on 11th July 1979. The Apollo/Soyuz mission was begun with an agreement signed between the US and USSR on 24th May 1972 and led to a joint mission in July 1975. This was the first cooperation in space between the two superpowers and would be the predecessor to other cooperative endeavours. The decade would also see the first successful landing on Mars when Viking 1 landed on the planet. It would also see the launch of both Voyagers 1 and 2 which were sent to study the out solar system. Both of these have now left it and are the most distant spacecraft currently operating at the edge of the solar system and interstellar space. Pioneer 11, launched in 1979, would be the first spacecraft to reach Saturn. In 1981 the agency would resume human spaceflight with the commencement of operations with the Space Shuttle. This had been the focus of NASA during the 1970s and 80s and was a fully reusable space vehicle, 4 of which were built by 1985. It would undertake its first flight on 12th April 1981 and would remain in service for 30 years, during which time it was instrumental in the construction of the International Space Station as well as the Hubble Telescope. Two shuttles would be lost, Challenger in 1986 and Columbia in 2003, but one additional vehicle, Endeavour, would be built using spare parts. After 135 missions the Space Shuttle would be retired on 21st July 2011. The 1990s would see the beginning of the construction of the International Space Station (ISS). Initially planned as an American project, under the name Freedom, budget constraints meant that it was merged with the Russian Mir-2, European Columbus and Japanese Kibo projects and received input from the Canadian Space Agency. NASA made use of their Space Shuttle to transport the modules into space, alongside the Russia Proton and Soyuz rockets Assembly in orbit began in 1998 and would be completed in 2019. Ownership of the station was divided with a Russian Orbital Segment and a US one, which was shared between the American and other agencies. Since the 2nd November 2000, the station has been continually occupied with crews usually staying 6 months at a time. Outside of work on the International Space Station the 1990s would also see work on several other projects. The first of these was the Hubble Telescope, which was launched in 1990 again using the Discovery Space Shuttle. A mission in 1993 would be launched to correct an error in the main mirror. 1995 would see the Galileo probe become the first to orbit Jupiter and the following year Mars Pathfinder would become the first rover to land on Mars. From 2005 NASA would begin the Constellation Programme which aimed to finish the ISS, return to the Moon and eventually launch a crewed mission to Mars. This would be cancelled in 2010 as it wouldn’t be possible to complete without a major increase in the agency’s budget. The following year would also see the retirement of the Shuttle and the beginning of the Commerical Crew Program that aimed to replace the use of the Russian Soyuz system for crew transfers to the ISS. Boeing and SpaceX would be later selected to produce the capsules to introduce them in 2017, but this was later delayed until 2020 and 2021. In 2012 the Mars Science Laboratory would land the Curiosity rover on Mars to begin the search for life on the planet. The following year would see the beginning of the Asteroid Redirect Mission which aimed to move a Near-Earth asteroid using ion thruster technology. This would be cancelled in 2017 and the same year would see the start of the Artemis program, a crewed spaceflight programme that hoped to return to the moon by 2024. On 18th February 2021, the Perseverance rover landed on Mars, carrying a small helicopter, Ingenuity, which made the first powered flight on another planet on 19th April 2021 as well as producing the first breathable oxygen on Mars. 2021 was also when the James Webb Space Telescope was scheduled for launch. Currently, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is headed by an administrator appointed by the President of the United State, with approval by the Senate. The current administrator is Bill Nelson, who was sworn in on 3rd May 2021. In addition to this there is an there is also an Advisory Group, including the NASA Advisory Council and Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel, an Officer of the Inspector General, Mission Directorates, including Aeronautics Research, Human Exploration and Operations, Science and Space Technology, and a Mission Support Directorate, including Human Captial Management, Strategic Infrastructure, Headquarters Operations, NASA Shared Services Center and Procurement and Protective Service. The agency also manages the following centers and facilities: Ames Research Center (IT, fundamental aeronautics, bio and space technologies), Armstrong Flight Research Centre (Flight Research), Glenn Research Centre (Aeropropulsion and Communications Technologies), Goddard Space Flight Center (Earth, Solar System, and Universe Observations, and Space Communications and Navigation), Headquaters, Jet Propulsion Laboratory (robotic Explorationof the of the solar system), Johnson Space Center (Human Space Exploration), Kennedy Space Center (Prepare and Launch mission around the Earth and beyond), Langley Research Center (Aviation, Space Technology and Earth Science), Marshall Space flight center (space transportation and propulsion technologies), Stennis Space Center (Rocket propulasion testing and remote sensing technology), Goddard Institute for Space Studies (Broad Stuy of global climate change), Katherine Johnson Independent Verification and Validation Facility (Safety and cost-effeciveness for mission-critical software), Michoud Assembly Facility (manufacture and assembly of critical hardware for exploration vehicles), NASA Engineering and Safety Centre (Independent Testing analysis and assessment of NASA high-risk projects), NASA Safety Centre (Development of personnel, processes and tools needed for the safety and successful achievement of strategic goals), NASA Shared Services Centre (Financial management, human resources, information technology and procurement) and Wallops Flight Facility (Suborbital Research Programes)
- RAF Institute of Aviation MedicineBiographyBiographyThe Royal Air Force Institute of Aviation Medicine was a Royal Air Force aviation medicine research unit active between 1945 and 1994. It was first located at Farnborough Airfield in Hampshire, and was successor to the wartime RAF Physiological Laboratory. The Institute conducted theoretical and applied reseach in support of flying personnel with divisions for acceleration, altitude, biochemistry, biophysics, personal equipment and teaching. The IAM obtained a decompression chamber (moved from the Physiological Laboratory) in 1945, supplemented by a climatic chamber in 1952, and a human centrifuge in 1955 (the latter facility is still in operation and was designated a Grade 2 Listed Building in August 2007). Additionally, the Institute was responsible for a number of mobile decompression chambers and the training of operators for chambers deployed at certain RAF operational stations with the object of familiarising flying personnel with the effects of annoxia at operational altitudes. The IAM became a world leading centre for aviation medicine research in the 1960s and 1970s, gaining additional facilities, and continuing an active flight research programme that commenced in World War II. Research into protection against the effects of high altitude, high G force, heat and cold stress, noise and vibration, sleep and wakefulness, spatial disorientation, vision, aviation psychology and human error, and aircraft accident investigation dominated activities at the IAM. Much work was done to develop and improve aircrew life support equipment. The IAM ceased to exist in 1994, when many research staff and facilities were transferred to the DERA Centre for Human Sciences.
- Conditions governing accessOpen Access
- Conditions governing ReproductionCopies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions
- Research and Development for a Full Pressure SuitNotesNotesMaterial relating to Dr Whittingham's work on pressure suits for the Royal Air Force.
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- contains 2 partsTOPPWHITT Papers of Dr Peter Whittingham