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The First Space Race: Launching the World's First Satellites (Centennial of Flight Series)
 
 
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The First Space Race: Launching the World's First Satellites (Centennial of Flight Series) [Paperback]

Matthew A. Bille (Author), Erika Lishock (Author), James A. Van Allen (Foreword)
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Book Description

Centennial of Flight Series August 4, 2004
From 1955 to 1958, American and Soviet engineers battled to launch successfully the world's first satellite, as the first nation to do so would gain advantages in science, the Cold War propaganda contest, and the military balance of power.

The race to orbit featured two American teams led by rival Services--the army and the navy--and a Soviet effort so secret that few even knew it existed. Now, Matt Bille and Erika Lishock tell this story from both sides of the Iron Curtain, from the origins of spaceflight theory through the military and political events that shaped the modern world.

Some aspects of this story, such as the navy's NOTSNIK satellite project, are almost unknown. Even some details of well-known programs, such as the appearance of America's pioneering Explorer 1 satellite and the contributions made by its rival, Project Vanguard, are generally misremembered.

In today's era of space shuttles, Mars rovers, and the International Space Station, it is difficult to imagine just how challenging the first steps into space really were. Yet at the end of the race, not only had those first satellites been launched, but he resulting new technologies had forever changed life on Earth.

--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“[the authors] skillfully utilize more recent historical studies of early Soviet space activities to craft a balanced comparison and sense of interaction between Soviet and US initiatives. Their own original research and interviews address historical questions unresolved in existing accounts. . . brisk and engaging. . . solid and engaging. . . the authors’ enjoyment of their subject shines through, allowing readers to enter readily into their story.”. . . the authors do a good job of bringing together salient elements from a wealth of serious historical writing on the subject in the last decade. This represents the best narrative available synthesizing this story. The authors also make some key contributions that have not been explored before. This is especially true of their discussion of the Navy program known at Notsnik, an effort to build an orbital satellite in the 1950s that was even largely secret from the Navy.”--Dr. Roger D. Launius, Chair, Space History, National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution
(Dr. Roger D. Launius, Chair, Space History, National Air and Space Museum, Smith )

About the Author

Matt Bille is a former Air Force officer who now works on launch systems and space law. He is currently an associate with the global consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton, and he works on space launch, microsatellites, and other space policy and technology projects. He is also a science writer with numerous publications on space, history, and zoology.Erika Lishock has worked extensively as a launch operations engineer on major military satellite programs and has written a number of studies on satellites and launch vehicles. She is currently an associate with Booz Allen Hamilton supporting current and future communications satellite projects. She is also an avid mountain climber and a trainer with Market America, Inc., specializing in concepts of mass customization and one-to-one marketing.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 232 pages
  • Publisher: TAMU Press (August 4, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585443743
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585443741
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 5.1 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,155,781 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What was the World Like Before Spaceflight?, February 3, 2005
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The authors have written a fine historical synthesis of the period between the mid-1950s and the aftermath of Sputnik, focusing on the rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union to launch the first orbital satellite. This work makes an important contribution in focusing on this first satellite race, and the authors explore the mirror image nature of the two programs, how they played off of each other, and why that was necessary to the manner in which the race unfolded. By keeping the space race front and center they succeed in creating a focus that is compelling and often missed in other studies of the same era.

Bille and Lishock are at their best in probing the individuals who were the bearers of the spaceflight dream; many of whom seem to encounter obstacles (social, political, technical) at every turn, and then eventually surmount them to achieve success and plant the seeds for future accomplishment. At some level this represents a romantic narrative of transcendence, but one that is both evocative and powerful. The authors seem to suggest that it was the spaceflight true believers, rather than great nations locked in cold war rivalry or geopolitical machinations or the scientific method on each side, who were engaged in a race. Certainly they expressed frustration by the percerived foot dragging of their respective governments. Yet, Sergei Korolev in the Soviet Union and Wernher von Braun and others in the United States achieved the birth of the space age in this international race.

Everyone should realize, of course, that this work is a synthesis. It is not intended as a sophisticated theoretical work--although something taking a post-modern approach to the subject would be quite interesting. It is, instead, a narrative that seeks to create a unified discussion of the rise of the American and Soviet rocket states. That rise, as the authors show, had long antecedents going back to the very earliest years of the twentieth century in both nations and a sophisticated technological base that allowed that longstanding vision to become reality. The authors also do a credible job of explaining the development of the Soviet Sputnik and the American Vanguard and Explorer programs. These represented the major elements of the "first space race" suggested in the title. While there is little new in this discussion the authors do a good job of bringing together salient elements from a wealth of serious historical writing on the subject in the last decade. This represents the best narrative available synthesizing this story.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Definitely deserves a place on your bookshelf, February 27, 2011
Before Apollo, there was Sputnik; and the events leading to the first satellites were no less dramatic than the race to land on the Moon. This fascinating account captures the world's first space race which ignited humanity's expansion into space.

The First Space Race is the inside story of the efforts to launch the world's first artificial satellite into space. While it was the following competition to land humans on the Moon which later dominated the history books, less material has been published about the events which led to that fateful day when people around the world were able to capture the beeping transmission of Sputnik in common HAM radios. The launching of a spacecraft into orbit - a feat theorized since the 16th century but never before accomplished - had profound implications to governments and people all over the globe.
The book starts its narrative in the time of Kepler and Newton, and then quickly progresses to the early efforts of German, Russian, and American rocket pioneers. It then follows the migration of German rocket scientists to both sides of the Iron Curtain after World War II, and describes the efforts within both the USSR and the USA to achieve orbital spaceflight with a wealth of detail. Not only is it clear that the authors collected a tremendous amount of source material - the foreword is written by none other than James van Allen - but in addition to facts, the book includes fascinating accounts of many historical characters. Reading how James Oberg describes the Baikonur launch complex as so desolate it is "a human settlement halfway into outer space", or how Werner von Braun proclaims that "we've firmly established our foothold in space; we will never give it up again" the story becomes one of people and characters; you can almost smell the acrid fumes of rocket-fuel coming of the pages. My favorite quote was that of rocket engineer Kurt Stehling describing the ill-fated TV-3 Vanguard rocket igniting with a "heart-rending, hoarse, whining moan like that of some antediluvian beast in birth pain". This isn't a story of esoteric rocket science theorized in pristine laboratories; it's a story of get-your-hands-dirty engineering with real people who sweat, cry, fear, err, learn, escape prisons, fight ridicule, overcome bureaucracy, and through it all never lose sight of their dreams to reach beyond planet Earth.

Aside from transporting the reader to the exciting days of humanity's first attempts at spaceflight, it also has some - still surprisingly relevant - lessons to offer. A Newsweek reporter is quoted summing up the reaction of the American public to the launch of Sputnik as follows: "There is a vague feeling that we have stepped into a new era, but people aren't discussing it the way they are football or the Asian flu." Sound familiar? Or how about Werner von Brauns complaint of "I believe something drastic must be done to raise the status of scientists in the public eye of this country," followed by his assessment that the Soviet Union had been consistently more successful in educating the next generation of young scientists and engineers. Reading these lines, comparisons with today's US / China relations are almost inescapable. However, there are positive parallels as well: considering the building momentum of commercial spaceflight entrepreneurship growing around the globe today, it's encouraging to read how the author's conclude in the final chapter that the projects which started it all had the common theme of "improvisation and the willingness to ignore proper procedure".

Whether you are a contemporary space professional trying to learn from these early pioneers, or simply a space enthusiast at heart who enjoys reading about other's who share the dream, this title definitely deserves a place on your bookshelf.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
first space race, scientific satellite program, satellite proposals, satellite vehicle, space enthusiasts, satellite launch vehicle, lunar probes, rocket technology, satellite launcher, launch attempts, large rockets, rocket development, telemetry equipment, rocket design, sounding rocket, satellite project, propellant tanks, launch crew, design bureau
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Air Force, United States, Van Allen, Stewart Committee, Soviet Union, Project Vanguard, White Sands, Cape Canaveral, William Pickering, General Medaris, Milt Rosen, President Eisenhower, World War, Academy of Sciences, China Lake, John Hagen, Cold War, Ernst Stuhlinger, New York Times, Robert Goddard, Fred Durant, George Hoover, Communist Party, Courtesy Naval Research Laboratory, Department of Defense
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