Mother ship

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A mother ship (or mothership) is a vehicle (e.g. ship, aircraft or spacecraft) that leads, serves or carries other, usually smaller vehicles. Examples include bombers converted to carry experimental aircraft to altitudes where they can conduct their research (such as the B-52 carrying the X-15), or ships that carry small submarines to an area of ocean to be explored (such as the Atlantis II carrying the Alvin). A mother ship may also be used to recover smaller craft, or go its own way after releasing them.

Usage

The term mother ship dates back to the 19th century whaling trade when small, fast ships were used to chase and kill whales. The dead meat from several boats was then brought back to the larger, slower ship for processing and storage until the return to land. This model enabled a far more efficient method of whaling. Though whaling is much lower-scale than in earlier days, the single large storage ship model is still used extensively by fishermen. Such ships are known today as factory ships.

In many languages, such as Chinese, Finnish and Japanese the word mother ship refers to an aircraft carrier; see 母艦 (literally "mother" + "warship").

The mother ship concept was used in moon landings performed in the 1960s. Both the unsuccessful American 1962 Ranger landers and the successful Soviet 1966 Luna landers were unmanned spherical capsules ejected at the last moment from mother ships that had carried them to the Moon, and crashed onto its surface. In the manned Apollo program, astronauts in the lunar module separated from the command module in lunar orbit, descended to the lunar surface, and returned to dock in a lunar orbit rendezvous with the command module once more for a ride home to Earth.

Somalian pirates use mother ships to extend the reach of their attacking speed boats into the Indian Ocean.

The Short S.21 Maia experimental flying boat that served as the "mother ship" of the Short Mayo Composite two-plane maritime trans-Atlantic project design was one pioneering example of a fixed-wing aircraft mother-ship in the 1930s, while the White Knight I and White Knight II aircraft are examples of contemporary mother ships in aviation.

In science fiction and UFO lore

The concept of a mother ship has achieved prominence in science fiction and UFO lore, extending the idea to spaceships that serve as the equivalent of flagships among a fleet. In this context, mother ship is often spelled as one word: mothership. A mothership may be large enough that its body contains a station for the rest of the fleet.[citation needed]

A variant of the term mother ship in this context can be traced to numerous claimed UFO sightings in the U.S. during the summer of 1947, when a woman in Palmdale, California was quoted by contemporary press as describing a "mother saucer (with a) bunch of little saucers playing around it".[1] The term mothership was also popularized in UFO lore through the sightings of George Adamski in the 1950s, who claimed to sometimes see large cigar-shaped Venusian motherships, out of which flew smaller-sized flying saucers.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. Hall, Mark A. and Wendy Connors. "Alfred Loedding & the Great Flying Saucer Wave of 1947", p. 55, quoting from the Palmdale South Antelope Valley Press, 10 July 1947, p. 1

External links

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