March 26, 2013. Copyright 2013, Graphic News. All rights reserved UPDATED MARCH 26 WITH ACTUAL SALE PRICES (INC. PREMIUM) http://www.bonhams.com/auctions/20944/61119/ Space history you can own LONDON, March 26, Graphic News: Captions for graphic GN30456C 1. Apollo 11 emblem signed by Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin. Additionally inscribed by Collins with: "Carried to the moon aboard Apollo XI, July 1969". Sale price: $10,000 (7,767 euros) 2. Pilot sunglasses worn by Wally Scirra during the Gemini and Apollo missions. Sale price: $2,750 (2,136 euros) 3. Wind tunnel model of a reusable space plane manufactured by North American Rockwell around 1971. Sale price: $22,500 (17,476 euros) 4. Photographic atlas of the planet Mercury, derived from 100 original black and white photographs from the Mariner 10 mission. The atlas is believed to be one of only 250 copies printed. Sale price: $400 (311 euros) 5. Liquid-fuelled rocket engine of a Soviet V-750 surface-to-air missile, designed by the Alexei Isayev bureau. The artifact is a reminder that the space programmes were an offshoot of military research during the Cold War. From 1957-67 Isayev's engines powered the rockets carrying the first artificial satellites, the first man in space, and the first unmanned probes to the Moon and Venus. Sale price: $9,375 (7,282 euros) 6. Model of docked Salyut 6-Soyuz 26, made for the Khrunichev Space Centre. Salyut 6 was the Soviet space station prior to Mir, and was in operation for almost five years. Sale price: $3,750 (2,913 euros) 7. Glove from a Soviet Orlan (Bald Eagle) EVA space suit. The first spacewalk using an Orlan suit took place on December 20, 1977, on the Salyut 6 space station, during the Soyuz 26 mission. Sale price: $1,250 (971 euros) 8. Apollo-Soyuz baseball cap worn by cosmonaut Alexei Leonov. As well as being the first person to make a space walk, Leonov commanded the Soviet half of the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz mission -- the first joint space mission between the Soviet Union and the United States. Unsold 9. Packet of dehydrated Potato Soup carried around the moon on the ill-fated Apollo 13. Several food items were never eaten during the flight due to an oxygen tank explosion in the Service Module which caused an electrical power loss to the Command Module and eliminated the ability to supply and heat water for food rehydration. Sale price: $8,125 (6,311 euros) 10. Apollo-mission Buddy Secondary Life Support System (BSLSS), designed for use on the Moon's surface to link two astronauts in the event of the failure of one astronaut's cooling system. The BSLSS extended the 30-minute emergency oxygen supply to allow the astronauts to reach the Lunar Module. Unsold 11. One dollar bill, signed by all seven crew members of the ill-fated Challenger flight STS-51-L. The tenth mission for Challenger ended in disaster when the spacecraft experienced a catastrophic structural failure 73 seconds after lift-off on January 28, 1986. Sale price: $2,375 (1,845 euros) 12. One of only four copies of the "Space Magna Carta". Signed in orbit by Tom Stafford, Deke Slayton, Vance Brand, Valeri Kubasov and Alexei Leonov during the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz linkup, it signified the end of the space race between America and the Soviet Union. Unsold 13. Film strips from Hasselblad cameras taken during the Gemini 4, Apollo 8, and Apollo 9 missions. Cameras from Sweden's Hasselblad were first used in space in 1962, and continued in use until the end of the shuttle programme. Twelve Hasselblads remain on the lunar surface. Sale price: Up to $3,750 (2,913 euros) /ENDS