Space Age
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This article is about the era. For the fire protection company, see Space Age Electronics.
Contents
Beginning
The Space Age began with the development of several technologies that culminated on October 4, 1957, with the launch of Sputnik 1 by the Soviet Union. This was the world's first artificial satellite, orbiting the Earth in 98.1 minutes and weighing in at 83 kg. The launch of Sputnik 1 ushered a new era of political, scientific and technological achievements that became known as the Space Age.[2]The Space Age was characterized by rapid development of new technology in a close race mostly between the US and the Soviet Union. Rapid advances were made in rocketry, materials science, computers and other areas. Much of the technology originally developed for space applications has been spun off and found other uses.
The Space Age reached its peak with the Apollo program, that captured the imagination of much of the world's population. The landing of Apollo 11 was watched by over 500 million people around the world and is widely recognized as one of the defining moments of the 20th century. Since then, public attention has largely moved to other areas. Public perception of the dangers and cost of space exploration in the US was greatly affected by the Challenger disaster in 1986. Public interest in space exploration further faded when the space race came to an end due to the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
During the 1990s funding for space related programs fell sharply as the remaining structures of the Soviet Union disintegrated and NASA no longer had any direct competition.
Since then participation in space launches has increasingly widened to more governments and commercial interests. Since the 1990s, the current period has more often been referred to as the Information Age rather than the Space Age, since space exploration and space-related technologies gained a perception by many people of being commonplace.
Current period
This section does not cite any references or sources. (May 2009) |
Several countries now have space programs; from related technology ventures to full fledged space programs with launch facilities. There are many scientific and commercial satellites in use today, with a total of thousands of satellites in orbit, and several countries have plans to send humans into space.
Chronology
See also: Timeline of space exploration
Date | First ... | Mission | Person(s) | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
October 4, 1957 | artificial satellite | Sputnik 1 | – | Soviet Union |
January 2, 1959 | Lunar flyby, and first spacecraft to achieve a heliocentric orbit | Luna 1 | – | Soviet Union |
September 12, 1959 | Impacted on the Lunar surface; thereby becoming the first human object to reach another world | Luna 2 | – | Soviet Union |
October 7, 1959 | Pictures of the far side of the Moon | Luna 3 | – | Soviet Union |
April 12, 1961 | Human in space | Vostok 1 | Yuri Gagarin | Soviet Union |
March 18, 1965 | Spacewalk | Voskhod 2 | Alexey Leonov | Soviet Union |
December 15, 1965 | Space rendezvous | Gemini 6A & Gemini 7 | Schirra, Stafford, Borman, Lovell | United States |
April 3, 1966 | Artificial satellite of another celestial body | Luna 10 | – | Soviet Union |
December 21–27, 1968 | Humans to leave the Earth's influence, orbiting the Moon | Apollo 8 | Borman, Lovell, Anders | United States |
July 20, 1969 | Humans to walk on the Moon | Apollo 11 | Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin | United States |
April 19, 1971 | Space station | Salyut 1 | – | Soviet Union |
July 20, 1976 | Pictures from the surface of Mars | Viking 1 | – | United States |
April 12, 1981 | Reusable orbital spaceship | Space Shuttle | Young, Crippen | United States |
February 19, 1986 | Long-duration space station | Mir | – | Soviet Union |
November 2, 2000 | Resident crew | Expedition 1 (International Space Station) | – | International |
Earlier spaceflights
The Space Age might also be considered to have begun much earlier than October 4, 1957, because on October 3, 1942, a German A4 rocket, a prototype version of the V-2 rocket program, reached space. It thus became the first man-made object to enter space, albeit only briefly. Since this flight was undertaken in secrecy, it was not public knowledge for many years afterwards. Further, the German launch, as well as the subsequent sounding rocket tests performed in both the United States and the Soviet Union during the late 1940s and early 1950s, were not considered significant enough to start a new age because they did not reach orbit. Having a rocket powerful enough to reach orbit meant that a nation had the ability to place a payload anywhere on the planet, or to use another term, possessed an inter-continental ballistic missile. The fact that after such a development nowhere on the planet was safe from a nuclear warhead is why the orbit standard is used to define when the space age started.[3]See also
- Space exploration
- Space Race
- Spacecraft
- Human spaceflight
- Space probe
- Information Age
- Atomic Age
- Googie architecture (space age design movement)
- Space tourism
References
- Jump up ^ McDougall, Walter A (Winter 2010), "Shooting the Moon", American Heritage.
- Jump up ^ Garber, Steve. "Sputnik and The Dawn of the Space Age". History. NASA. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
- Jump up ^ Schefter, James (1999), The Race: The Uncensored Story of How America Beat Russia to the Moon, New York, New York: Doubleday, pp. 3–49, ISBN 0-385-49253-7
External links
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