The 1960s marked the dawn of humanity’s boldest adventure, the race to space. As NASA pushed the boundaries of science and engineering to send astronauts beyond Earth’s atmosphere, the technology behind those missions often felt ripped from the pages of science fiction.
These innovations laid the groundwork for much of today’s aerospace and computing technology. What seems routine now (GPS, cordless tools, advanced materials) began as radical breakthroughs born of necessity in NASA labs and test facilities.
The Space Age was about inventing the tools that made it possible. Take a look back at the incredible ‘60s space tech that powered humanity’s first steps into the cosmos and still shapes our future among the stars.
1
Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC)
A 60s “supercomputer” small enough to fit in a spaceship, with less power than a digital watch, but it landed humans on the Moon.
2
Command Module Heat Shield
Ablative materials that burned away to keep astronauts alive during 25,000-mph reentry, pure sci-fi engineering.
3
Saturn V Rocket (1967)
The most powerful rocket ever built, it could fling 140 tons into space. Looked like something out of Flash Gordon.
4
Space Suits (A7L)
Pressurized, flexible mini-spaceships for each astronaut. They looked like superhero armor meets deep-sea diving gear.
5
Early Satellites (Telstar, Syncom)
First TV and communication satellites, they made global live broadcasts and “space age” television possible.
6
Lunar Rover Prototype
Designed at the tail end of the 60s, the concept of a moon car sounded like science fiction straight from The Jetsons.
7
Fuel Cells
Apollo’s hydrogen-oxygen fuel cells created electricity and drinking water, a sci-fi level multitasker.
8
Lunar Module (LEM)
A bug-shaped, alien-looking craft designed to land on another world. Totally bizarre and otherworldly for its time.
9
Mariner Probes
Unmanned spacecraft that flew by Venus and Mars, the first robotic explorers of other planets.
10
Gemini Spacecraft
Two-man capsules that pioneered spacewalking and orbital docking, baby steps toward living in space.
11
Deep Space Network
A worldwide network of radio antennas built to talk to probes millions of miles away, humanity’s first interplanetary Wi-Fi.
12
Vostok & Voskhod Capsules (USSR)
Soviet-era space capsules that took the first humans into orbit; minimalist, mysterious, and Bond villain–chic.
13
EVA Jetpack (Hand-Held Maneuvering Unit)
Astronauts literally flew untethered in space during the 60s Gemini missions, pure sci-fi hero stuff.
14
Surveyor Lunar Probes
Uncrewed landers that touched down on the Moon before Apollo, robot scouts that looked like alien spiders.
15
Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO)
A precursor to the Hubble, an actual space telescope in the 1960s!
16
Space Capsules’ Retro-Rockets
Tiny rockets that slowed reentry capsules just before splashdown, the definition of dramatic space tech.
17
Magnetic Tape Data Recorders
The “hard drives” of the 60s; reel-to-reel data storage for spacecraft, beeping and whirring like something from 2001: A Space Odyssey.
18
Skylab Concepts
The earliest plans for living and working long-term in orbit, “space stations” before Star Trek made it cool.
19
NASA Mission Control Computers
Room-sized computers that could process real-time telemetry from the Moon, the original “space-age AI.”
20
Atomic-Powered Satellite Concepts
NASA and the Air Force seriously proposed nuclear reactors in orbit, a Cold War dream/nightmare straight from pulp sci-fi.