Transcript File
National Advisory Committee for
Aeronautics (NACA)
Congress founded NACA on 3
March 1915, as an independent
government agency reporting
directly to the President.
The Space Race
A competition between the United
States and USSR to explore outer
space with artificial satellites, to
send humans into space, and to
land people on the Moon.
It lasted from 1957 to 1975
It was set off by the launch of the
Soviet Sputnik 1 on 4 October
1957
It became an important part of the
cultural, technological, and
ideological rivalry between the
USSR and the United States
during the Cold War.
The Background
Russian scientist Konstanti
Tsiolkovsky (1857-1935) theorized
in the 1880s on multi-stage, liquid
fuel rockets which might reach
space and established the basics
of rocket science. He also wrote
the first theoretical description of a
man-made satellite
The American Robert Goddard
designed the first practical liquid
fuel rocket
The German scientist Wernher
Von Braun borrowed and
expended on Robert Goddard's
original research and came up
with the first such projectile to
reach space launched in 1942
Sputnik
On 4 October 1957, the USSR
successfully launched Sputnik 1,
the first artificial satellite to orbit
the Earth
Sputnik caused fear and stirred
political debate in the United
States and the formation of NASA
The satellite questioned US
technological superiority
The National Defense Education
Act was passed by Eisenhower in
order to strengthen the defenses
of the country
Sputnik helped to determine the
density of the upper atmosphere
Sputnik 2
Nov 3 1957 -Launched a small dog
named Laika into orbit.
• There was no plan for recovery
NASA
Oct 1 1958 NASA is formed and
replaces NACA.
Satellite 1958 Alpha – Explorer I
The US answer to the Soviet
Sputnik
Launched on January 31, 1958
Explorer I flight data led to the
discovery by James Van Allen of
the Van Allen radiation belt
Mar 5 Explorer 2 fails to reach
orbit
Satellite communications
• 1958: relayed a Christmas message from President Eisenhower
to the world
• 1962: Telstar: the first "active" communications satellite
(experimental transoceanic)
• 1972: Anik 1: first domestic communications satellite (Canada)
• 1974: WESTAR: first U.S. domestic communications satellite
• 1976: MARISAT: first mobile communications satellite
Animals in Space
Laika was the first animal that
traveled into space in the USSR's
Sputnik 2 in 1957. She died of
stress and overheating soon after
reaching space
In 1960 Russian space dogs
Belka and Strelka orbited the
earth and successfully returned
The American space program
imported chimpanzees from
Africa, and sent at least two into
space before launching their first
human orbiter
Soviet-launched turtles in 1968 on
Zond 5 became the first animals to
fly around the Moon
Humans in Space
The Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin
became the first human in space when
he entered orbit in Russia's Vostok 1
on April 12, 1961, a day now
celebrated as a holiday in Russia and
in many other countries
Alan Shepard first entered sub-orbital
space for the U.S 23 days after
Gagarin
John Glenn became the first American
to successfully orbit Earth, completing
three orbits on February 20, 1962
Soviet Valentin Tereshkova became
the first woman in space on June 16,
1963 in Vostok 6
Aleksei Leonov carried out the
first spacewalk. This mission
nearly ended in disaster, because
Leonov almost failed to return to
the capsule and due to a poor
retrorocket fire the ship landed
1600 km off target.
Lunar missions
Unmanned probes for the
Americans
Unmanned probes for the
Soviet
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The Pioneer program.
- The Luna program
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The Ranger program
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Luna 1 spacecraft
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The Lunar Orbiter program
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Luna 2 - the first craft to land on
the Moon
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The Robotic Surveyor program
Lunar landing – The Soviet
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The Soviet showed a greater
ambivalence about human visits to the
Moon.
Korolev, the Soviet Space Agency's
chief designer, had started promoting
his Soyuz craft and the N1 craft
rocket that had the capacity for a
manned Moon landing.
In 1964 the new Soviet leadership
gave Korolev the backing for a Moon
landing effort and brought all manned
projects under his direction.
The failure of the first Soyuz flight
was in 1967.
The failures of the N1 booster in
1969.
Lunar landing – The U.S.
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Americans proposed joint
programs, such as a Moon landing
by Soviet and American
astronauts and improved weathermonitoring satellites, but the
Soviet rejected these ideas.
American Neil Armstrong became
the first person to set foot on the
lunar surface on 21 July 1969.
The event was watched by over
500 million people around the
world.
The Soviet missions to other
planets
The Soviet Union first sent
planetary probes to both Venus
and Mars in 1960.
The Soviet's Venera 7 became the
first craft to land on Venus in
1971.
Venera 9 transmitted the first
pictures from the surface of
another planet.
Mars 3 was the first spacecraft to
land on Mars in 1971 by the
Soviet Union, but it did not return
pictures.
U.S. missions to other planets
U.S.'s Mariner 2 was the first
spacecraft to successfully fly by
Venus on December 14, 1962
The U.S.’s Mariner 10 was the first
and the only spacecraft to fly by
Mercury in 1974.
Mariner 4 became the first probe to
Mars in 1965 and it transmitted
completely unexpected images.
The U.S.’s Pioneer 10 had a
successful flight by Jupiter in 1973
and Pioneer 11 by Saturn in 1979.
The "end" of the Space Race
The first human meeting took
place between Soviet crafts’
Vostok 3 and Vostok 4 , on
August 12, 1962.
The meeting of the Apollo and
Soyuz spacecraft on July 17, 1975
traditionally marks the end of the
Space Race between the U.S. and
the Soviet.
The Russians won the race by
being the first one to sent a man
into space however their U.S.
rivals were the ones to set their
feet on the Moon.
Thank You