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Sunday 15 July 2012

What else have the Russians ever done for space travel?

On the 12th April 1961, or so the story goes, a young man stood in front of his vehicle and urinated.

Nothing unusual you may say, but this young man's name was Yuri Alekseyevich Gagarin, an officer in the then Soviet Air Force and his particular mode of transport was about to make him a legend.

Vostok 1 left the surface of the Earth and turned Gagarin into the first human in space. He orbited the Earth and returned safely, drifting safely down after parachuting from his capsule. The capsule itself 'dusted' down onto the ground.

Approximately one month later an American by the name of Alan Bartlet Shepard followed Gagarin, but this was no orbital flight. Shepard's historic journey lasted approximately 15 minutes from start to finish, ending with him splashing down with his Mercury capsule into the Atlantic Ocean.

Space travel as we know it, had begun.

I wasn't born when these particular events took place. But as I got older and read about them, they filled me with awe and wonder.

What was it like to be a spaceman? What was it like to look upon the Earth from a vantage point so high you could see this silver, blue and green ball of life in its full glory?

I would never know, but I could dream.

My interest in space and space travel goes back a long way. My first real recollection of anything to do with space, outside of the Star Trek universe, was a television programme on the BBC.

The programme featured an interview with one of the crew of Skylab, America's first and so far only, space station.

Dr Owen Kay Garriott was selected by NASA in 1965 to be one of the six Scientist-Astronauts to take part in the space programme. His first space-flight, the Skylab 3 mission in 1973, set a new world record for duration of approximately 60 days, more than double the previous record. Extensive experimental studies of our sun, of earth resources and in various life sciences relating to human adaptation to weightlessness were made made during this flight.

Here was a real spaceman. A real 'star voyager' This man was actually going to voyage into space. Okay, he wasn't going to the moon or to Mars, but he was going to a space station. A real life space station.

Living in the 'west' all I really heard about were the flights of NASA, I never really heard much about the Soviet exploits. It wasn't until 1975 that the Russian space programme really came into my consciousness.

I did of course know about the Russians, I learned about them from my book.

When I was about 8 years I asked for a book. I begged for a book. That book was called Look-It Up Book of Space edited by by Ira M. Freeman. I still have that book and still treat it with the reverence it deserves.

What amazed me was the number of times the Russians were mentioned. After all, it wasn't as if they were the Americans. So what made them so special?

Apart from being the country that put the first man into orbit, what else had they done?

After Vostok 1 there was Vostok 2 carrying cosmonaut Gherman Titov into orbit for a full day. This was done to study the effects of a more prolonged period of weightlessness on the human body. Titov orbited the earth over 17 times, exceeding the single orbit of Yuri Gagarin on Vostok 1 − as well as the suborbital space-flights of Alan Shepard and after him,  Virgil I. 'Gus' Grissom aboard Mercury-Redstone 3 and 4 missions.

Next there was Vostok 3 and Vostok 4 which were launched a day apart on trajectories that brought the spacecraft within approximately 6.5 km (4.0 mi) of one another.

The cosmonauts aboard the two spaceships also communicated with each other via radio, the first ship-to-ship communications in space. These missions marked the first time that more than one manned spacecraft was in orbit at the same time.

Okay, apart from the first man in space, the first orbital flights, the first time two space had been in orbit and the first orbital communication, what else have the Russians ever done for space travel?

Well... on 16th June 1963 Vostok 6 was the first human space-flight mission to carry a woman, cosmonaut Valentina Vladimirovna Tereshkova, into space. This also made her the first civilian in space.

To be honest the number of achievements by the Soviet Space Agency is pretty impressive, and you want to learn more check out the  website of the Russian Federal Space Agency and for a bit of balance check out the website of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

Have fun.




Monday 19 March 2012

A Flight of Fancy

The following is not really a blog entry, but a flight of fancy, on my part anyway.

I originally published it on the Jottify website and got some good feedback as a result. At the time I meant to dedicate it to the men (and yes, at that time it was only men) of the Apollo Space Programme who inspired the story, but I didn’t. I would like to correct that omission now and hopefully share my dream with whoever is interested,

The crew of

Apollo 11 (1969)    Neil A. Armstrong, Edwin E. Aldrin Jr, Michael Collins   
Apollo 12 (1969)    Charles Conrad Jr, Richard F. Gordon, Alan L. Bean   
Apollo 14 (1971)    Alan B. Shepard Jr, Stuart A. Roosa, Edgar D. Mitchell
Apollo 15 (1971)    David R. Scott, Alfred W. Warden, James B. Irwin
Apollo 16 (1972)    John W. Young, Kenneth Mattingly II, Charles M. Duke Jr
Apollo 17 (1973)    Eugene A. Cernan, Ronald E. Evans, Harrison H. Schmitt

I hope you enjoy it. If you do, please let me know. If you don’t please let me know and I will try harder next time. Until then, here is the story.

* * *

Magnificent Desolation.
 
As I stand here looking over the grey landscape, I understand those words.
 
The desolation is magnificent and for the few moments of loneliness that I have before my colleagues join me, I am utterly alone. In the four days it has taken us to reach here, we have had little time to ourselves. So I am savouring this moment.

I am the first human being to stand on this surface in hundred years.
 
We are the first of three ships. We are Faith. Our sister ship Hope will leave Earth in one months time, one month after that Charity will leave from Centre Spatial Guyanais.
 
Our tour of duty on the moon will be six months. In that time we will establish the first of three modular bases made up of the lower parts of our landing craft, after that we will return to the silver blue ball that is earth. Three more crews will arrive and Tranquilty Base will be a reality.
 
Before me is a dust bowl. In the centre of that dust bowl is a white metallic spider, Eagle. The remains of Apollo 11. Her structure barely marked after all these years.
 
We descended into Mare Tranquillitatis, the Sea of Tranquillity. There is slight bluish tint, that I thought was due to the glass in my visor, but it’s not. There is higher metal content in the basaltic soil or rock.
 
I feel, rather than hear one of my crew members by my side. As I turn, I move back, I take a moment to look at my foot prints. I see my footsteps in the moon dust. If I walked to Eagle I would see the ‘one small step’ that Armstrong made as he stepped off the ladder.
 
I see the solid form of my boot print and I smile. As I look up into the visor of my fellow moon-walker, Helen, she returns the smile.
 
‘Mission control, Tranquillity Base here…’
 
This is no longer one small step, but a giant one towards the stars...