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Space Flight

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25 views4 pages

Space Flight

Uploaded by

jkailsonrette2
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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We human beings have been venturing into outer space since October 4, 1957, when the Union of Soviet

Socialist Republics (U.S.S.R.) launched Sputnik, the first artificial satellite to orbit Earth. This happened
during the period of hostility between the U.S.S.R. and the United States known as the Cold War.

Sputnik’s launch shifted the Cold War to a new frontier, space. The space race, a competition for prestige
and spectacle, was a less-violent aspect of the Cold War, the often-deadly clash between the U.S.S.R. and
the U.S. The endeavor was a soft-power ploy used to help win over potential nonaligned nations.
Nonaligned nations were called the Third World — now seen as a disparaging term.

For several years, the two superpowers had been competing to develop missiles, called intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs), to carry nuclear weapons between continents. In the U.S.S.R., the rocket
designer Sergei Korolev had developed the first ICBM, a rocket called the R7, which began the space
race. This competition became global news with the launch of Sputnik. Carried atop an R7 rocket, the
Sputnik satellite sent out audio beeps from a radio transmitter.

After reaching space, Sputnik orbited Earth once every 96 minutes. The radio beeps were detected on
the ground as the satellite passed overhead, so people around the world knew Sputnik was really in
orbit. The U.S. was surprised that the U.S.S.R. had exceeded U.S. space capabilities. Furthermore, there
was the fear the Soviets could now launch a bomb onto U.S. soil without a plane or a ship.

The origins of the space race began before the end of World War II. At the time, Germany was the world
leader in rocket technology, creating the V2, the first operational, long-range rocket. This weapon of war
pushed the U.S. and U.S.S.R. space exploration efforts, showing the dual nature of rocket technology.
Prior to the launch of Sputnik, the United States was building its launch capability.

The United States made two failed attempts to launch a satellite into space before succeeding with a
rocket that carried a satellite called Explorer on January 31, 1958. Explorer carried several instruments
into space for conducting science experiments. One instrument was a Geiger counter for detecting
cosmic rays. This was for an experiment operated by researcher James Van Allen, which, together with
measurements from later satellites, proved the existence of what are now called the Van Allen radiation
belts around Earth.

The team that achieved the first U.S. satellite launch consisted largely of German rocket engineers who
had once developed ballistic missiles for Nazi Germany. Working for the U.S. Army at the Redstone
Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama, the German rocket engineers were led by Wernher von Braun, who had
led the creation of Germany’s V2 rocket. His team used the V2 to build the more powerful Jupiter C, or
Juno, rocket. Von Braun headed the U.S. rocket program, leading the Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama, until 1970.

At the close of WWII, the U.S.S.R. and the U.S. scrambled to recruit German rocket engineers and
scientists to improve their rocket programs. The motivation for both governments was to improve their
respective military technologies. Von Braun and most of his top deputies sought out U.S. forces to
surrender to, preferring to work for the U.S. to the Soviets. The German specialists and some of their
missiles and designs were relocated to the U.S. in what became known as Operation Paperclip (originally
Project Overcast).

While the U.S. brought in von Braun and his scientists, except for Helmut Gröttrup, an expert on the V2
guidance system. The U.S.S.R., however, got more of the German technical personnel than the U.S.
Homegrown talent was more involved in the leadership of the Soviet space program than the U.S. space
program.

Von Braun and others on his team were members of the German Nazi Party. Von Braun was an officer in
the SS, the Nazi paramilitary wing. He managed the science operations at the Mittelwerk factory, which
used the labor of enslaved people. U.S. leadership was less concerned with their Nazi membership than
using their technical expertise to defeat Japan, and later to gain an advantage over the Soviet Union. U.S.
government officials lied about many of the Germans’ Nazi pasts to make working with them more
acceptable to the American public.

In 1958, Though NASA leadership was almost entirely composed of White men, many of those doing the
work as mathematicians, physicists, and engineers to put astronauts and machines into space were from
underrepresented ethnicities and women of all ethnicities. Some examples of people of color who
played important roles at NASA include mathematicians Katherine Johnson and Josephine Jue, engineers
Miguel Hernandez and Walter Applewhite.

SEE HERE: Women of NASA and NASA’s West Area Computers

Space exploration activities in the United States were consolidated into a new government agency, the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). When it began operations in October of 1958,
NASA absorbed what had been called the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), and
several other research and military facilities, including the Army Ballistic Missile Agency (the Redstone
Arsenal) in Huntsville, Alabama.

Korolev’s R7 was the basis for the rocket family that would be the basis for the first launch successes and
even the still-used Soyuz. Soviet’s space program had rival teams that worked on competing designs.

Von Braun’s influence extended far beyond the world of rocket scientists and space enthusiasts. He
became well known after participating in three Disney-produced TV specials about space in the mid
1950s. Meanwhile, the role and accomplishments of von Braun’s Soviet counterpart, Korolev, were
largely hidden by his government.

Both Korolev and von Braun shared a desire and commitment to exploring space, even though their
governments preferred using rocket technology for military applications.

Despite the fact that Korolev drove the Soviet Space program’s early successes, he became a victim of
one of Soviet Premier Josef Stalin’s political purges and was recalled from prison to head the rocket
development program in 1944. After learning of the United States’ plan to launch an artificial satellite
into space, it was Korolev who convinced and pushed the U.S.S.R. government to beat the U.S. in this
endeavor, building the N1 rocket.

The U.S.S.R.’s win streak didn’t end there. A month after Sputnik’s launch, on November 3, 1957, the
U.S.S.R. achieved an even more impressive space venture. This was Sputnik II, a satellite that carried a
living creature, a dog named Laika.

The first human in space was Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, who made one orbit around Earth on April
12, 1961, on a flight that lasted 108 minutes. A little more than three weeks later, NASA launched
astronaut Alan Shepard into space, not on an orbital flight, but on a suborbital trajectory, a flight that
goes into space but does not go all the way around Earth. Shepard’s suborbital flight lasted just over 15
minutes.

In addition to launching the first artificial satellite, the first dog in space, and the first human in space,
the U.S.S.R. achieved other space milestones ahead of the United States under Korolev’s leadership. One
of these milestones was Luna 2, which became the first human-made object to hit the Moon in 1959.
Soon after that, the U.S.S.R. launched Luna 3. Less than four months after Gagarin’s flight in 1961, a
second Soviet human mission orbited a cosmonaut around Earth for a full day. The U.S.S.R. also achieved
the first spacewalk and launched the Vostok 6 mission, which made Valentina Tereshkova the first
woman to travel to space.

Korolev was gearing U.S.S.R. to send a cosmonaut to the moon. The goal of sending a human to the
moon became the final stage of the space race. Three weeks after Shepard’s flight, on May 25, U.S.
President Robert F. Kennedy challenged the United States to an ambitious goal, declaring: “I believe that
this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before the decade is out, of landing a man on the
moon and returning him safely to Earth."

During the 1960s, NASA made progress toward John F. Kennedy’s human moon landing goal with a
program called Project Gemini, in which astronauts tested technology needed for future flights to the
Moon, and tested their own ability to endure many days in spaceflight. Project Gemini was followed by
Project Apollo, which did take astronauts into orbit around the Moon and to the lunar surface between
1968 and 1972.

In 1969, on Apollo11, the United States sent the first astronauts to the moon, and Neil Armstrong
became the first human to set foot on its surface. During the landed missions, astronauts collected
samples of rocks and lunar dust that scientists still study to learn about the Moon. As the U.S. manned
space program rose, the Soviet program began to falter. There was internal disagreement about trying to
send a human to the moon. Perhaps more importantly was Korolev’s death after a fumbled surgery in
1966. Today, the U.S. and the Russian Federation still have active space programs.

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