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  1. 23 de jul. de 2019 · Los Angeles. Before Neil Armstrong walked on the Moon and before he flew on Gemini 8, he was a NASA test pilot. Noted for his engineering excellence and technical capability as a pilot, Armstrong became one of only 12 pilots to fly the ultimate experimental aircraft – the North American X-15.

  2. 28 de feb. de 2014 · Among the 12 was Neil Armstrong, the first human to step on the moon’s surface and a former X-15 pilot who also flew many other research aircraft at the Flight Research Center. In the area of physiology, researchers learned that the heart rates of X-15 pilots ranged from 145 to 185 beats per minute during flight.

  3. 29 de abr. de 2021 · Hard left turn, Neil! Hard left turn!” By then, Armstrong had, in his own words, gone “sailing merrily by the field.”’. Armstrongs fastest flight in the X-15 was on Jul. 26, 1962, when he achieved Mach 5.74.

  4. Neil A. Armstrong papers. Collection Overview. Collection Organization. Container Inventory. Scope and Contents. The Neil A. Armstrong papers document the military, aeronautics, astronautics, teaching and corporate business career of Neil A. Armstrong. The papers also feature items from Armstrong's youth and education.

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  5. www.nasa.gov › people › neil-a-armstrongNeil A. Armstrong - NASA

    26 de feb. de 2024 · NASA Astronaut. Neil A. Armstrong served as a naval aviator from 1949 to 1952 before joining the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) at the Lewis Flight Propulsion Laboratory (later NASA’s Lewis Research Center in Cleveland, Ohio, and today the Glenn Research Center) in 1955.

  6. 20 de abr. de 2016 · On April 20, 1962, Armstrong experienced a harrowing flight, testing the new X-15. It was a plane designed to go higher than any other. In 1959, the new plane would drop from a B-52 ...more....

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  7. 20 de jul. de 2019 · NASA. Collins later writes that Eagle is “the weirdest looking contraption I have ever seen in the sky,” but it will prove its worth. When it comes time to set Eagle down in the Sea of Tranquility, Armstrong improvises, manually piloting the ship past an area littered with boulders.