Everything about The Sputnik totally explained
The
Sputnik program () was a series of
robotic spacecraft missions launched by the
Soviet Union. The first of these,
Sputnik 1, launched the first man-made object to orbit the Earth. That launch took place on
October 4,
1957 as part of the
International Geophysical Year and demonstrated the viability of using
artificial satellites to explore the upper atmosphere.
The
Russian name "Спутник" means literally "co-traveler", "traveling companion" or "satellite", and its
R-7 launch vehicle was designed initially to carry
nuclear warheads.
Impact
The surprise launch of
Sputnik 1, coupled with the spectacular failure of the United States' first two
Project Vanguard launch attempts, shocked the
United States, which responded with a number of early satellite launches, including
Explorer 1,
Project SCORE, and
Courier 1B. The
Sputnik crisis also led to the creation of the
Advanced Research Projects Agency (renamed the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in 1972):
DARPA, and
NASA, and an increase in U.S. government spending on scientific research and education.
The launch of
Sputnik 1 inspired U.S. writer
Herb Caen to coin the term "
beatnik" in an article about the
Beat Generation in the
San Francisco Chronicle on
April 2,
1958.
See also:
-nik.
Early flights
Sputnik 1 was launched on
October 4,
1957. The satellite was 58 cm (about 23 in) in diameter and weighed approximately 83.6 kg (about 183 lb). Each of its elliptical orbits around the Earth took about 96 minutes. Monitoring of the satellite was done by many
amateur radio operators. Sputnik's
R-7 booster had previously proven itself more than one month earlier as the world's first
ICBM in the successful long-range test flight of
August 21 (with the accomplishment published in
Aviation Week). Sputnik 1 wasn't visible from
Earth but the casing of the
R-7 booster, traveling behind it, was.
Sputnik 2 was launched on
November 3,
1957 and carried the first living passenger into orbit, a
dog named
Laika. The mission planners didn't provide for the safe return of the
spacecraft or its
passenger, making Laika the first orbital
casualty. This mission was promptly dubbed "Muttnik" by US humorists.
The first attempt to launch
Sputnik 3, on
February 3,
1958, failed, but the second on
May 15 succeeded, and it carried a large array of instruments for
geophysical research. Its
tape recorder failed, however, making it unable to measure the
Van Allen radiation belts.
Sputnik 4 was launched two years later, on
May 15,
1960.
Sputnik 5 was launched on
August 19,
1960 with the dogs
Belka and Strelka, 40
mice, 2
rats and several
plants on board. The spacecraft returned to earth the next day and all animals were recovered safely.
Sputnik 40 and Sputnik 41
Sputnik 40, also called Sputnik PS2, Radio Sputnik 17 (RS-17) and Mini-Sputnik, was a
1⁄
3-scale model
amateur radio satellite launched from the
Mir space station on
3 November 1997 to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Sputnik 1. The spacecraft body resembled Sputnik 1 and was built by students at the Polytechnic Laboratory of Nalchik in
Kabardino-Balkaria. The transmitter was built by students from
Jules Reydellet College in
Réunion, with technical support from
AMSAT-France. Its batteries expired on 29 December 1998 and the VHF transmitter fell silent. Its international designator is 1997-058C,
United States Space Command object 24958.
Sputnik 41 (RS-18, designator 1998-62C, object 25533) was launched a year later, on
10 November 1998. It also carried a transmitter.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Sputnik'.
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