Jurvetson stands with Apollo era rocket engine: During the Apollo 13 emergency, an engine like this one helped saved the astronaut's lives
The Apollo Fuel Cell in lobby of the office: This is an electric fuel cell. It combined hydrogen and oxygen to generate electricity onboard.
X-ray image of Neil Armstrong's Moon Boots: taken on 7-7-69, only 9 days before the launch. Jurvetson calls them "ethereal echoes" of the footprints Armstrong left on the moon.
Apollo 16 Lunar Module COAS: a tool that helped the Lunar module dock with the orbiting part of the ship. Brought back and signed by Mission Commander John Young
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe instrument panel from the early Apollo 1 Command Module. Very rare!
Here is the original Apollo Guidance computer display and keyboard.
These Appollo cables spent three days on the moon and are really heavy.
Apollo Portable Life Support System: necessary for any Apollo-era stroll on the moon.
Here's a moon rock from the Apollo 16 mission taken from the Earth-facing side of the moon. It is not made of cheese.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThis is the Apollo Goodwill Disc filled with messages from planet Earth. It was taken to the Moon in 1969 with Apollo 11.
Mementos from John Young's private collection include his badges and a shot of him jumping on the moon.
These are from the Soviet Buran spacecraft. They are escape levers. Pull it and "Hatches would open overhead, and a solid rocket would propel the astronauts away, much like the escape system in Russian fighter jets," Jurvetson says.
This private collection is so cool, PBS filmed it for a program about commercial space exploration.
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