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Title: Start Up12208


1
Start Up 1/22/08
  • Name the first human in space.
  • Name the first American in space.
  • Today Go over Visible Sky Test and Redo
    Open Responses

2
Start Up 1/23/08
  • Why do astronauts experience weightlessness?
    Explain.
  • If you found out you were going to space and were
    going to experience weightlessness, what would
    you like to do in that environment? Explain.

3
Race to Space!
  • Nathan Holt Steve Case
  • April 2006

4
Gravity Clips
  • http//www.teachersdomain.org/resources/phy03/sci/
    phys/mfw/asrnt/index.html
  •  
  • http//www.christa.org/gravity.htm
  •  
  • (12 min. video on Newton's laws in space)
  • http//quest.nasa.gov/space/teachers/liftoff/newto
    n.html

5
Wernher von Braun Father of Space Exploration
  • Along with other German scientists, developed the
    1st rockets during and after World War II
  • Came to the U.S. after WWII, lived and worked in
    Huntsville, AL from 1950 1970
  • Work provided the basis for all early NASA
    missions
  • 1st director of NASA

6
Start of the Space Race
  • October 4th, 1957, Russia launched the first
    artificial satellite, Sputnik, into orbit
  • Caused a wide-spread panic in the U.S.
  • People feared the Soviet Union would dominate the
    world in space exploration

7
Formation of NASA
  • Founded 1958 after Congress passed the National
    Aeronautics and Space Act
  • Formed in direct response to the launch of
    Sputnik
  • Purpose to provide organization and direction of
    U.S. space program
  • First missions focused on getting humans into
    space, studying effects of space on humans, and
    returning astronauts safely to Earth

8
Competitors in the Space Race
Soviet Union
United States
  • After the launch of Sputnik, the U.S. and
    U.S.S.R. were in direct competition to have most
    advanced space program
  • Viewed as contest between communism and
    capitalism
  • National pride and fears for national defense
    played large roles in motivating space race

9
First Human in Space
On April 12, 1961, the Soviets succeeded in
launching the first human into space, Yuri
Gagarin, and returning him safely to Earth
Yuri and his spacecraft, Vostok 1
10
First American in Space
  • Alan Shepard becomes the first American astronaut
    to enter space, aboard the Freedom 7 spacecraft,
    on May 5, 1961

Alan and his spacecraft, Freedom 7
11
The Mercury Project
  • NASAs first mission
  • Mission goals
  • getting an astronaut into space
  • completing an orbit
  • returning astronaut to Earth safely
  • Several preliminary Mercury launches were unmanned

The Mercury - Atlas I spacecraft
Enos the chimpanzee, crew of the Mercury Atlas
V spacecraft
12
The Gemini Project
  • Involved sending two astronauts into orbit for
    longer periods of time
  • Paved the way and tested equipment for the Apollo
    missions to the moon
  • Astronaut Ed White, II performs the first
    spacewalk by an American during the Gemini IV
    mission

Astronaut Ed White, II
The rendezvous of the Gemini VI and Gemini VII
spacecraft
13
President Kennedys Challenge
  • May 21, 1961 President Kennedy challenged the
    United States to land astronauts on the moon and
    to return them safely to Earth
  • Challenge provided a finish line for the space
    race

President John F. Kennedy
14
The Apollo Missions
  • Apollo 11-17 involved landing men on the moon
    Apollo 13 was aborted due to a malfunction
  • July 20, 1969, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong of
    Apollo 11 were first men on the moon
  • Each mission consisted of three astronauts one
    stayed on Command Module in lunar orbit, two
    descended in Lunar Module to moons surface
  • Total of 12 men have walked on the moon

The Apollo 11 launch
Neil Armstrong
Buzz Aldrin, in Apollo 11 and on the moon (above
and right)
15
When did the space race end?
  • Some historians believe the Space Race ended when
    Apollo 11 returned safely from the Moon
  • Others believe that the Race ended when the
    United States Apollo 18 spacecraft docked with a
    Russian Soyuz spacecraft in 1975

A drawing of the Apollo Soyuz rendezvous
(Apollo 18 is on the left)
16
Skylab The First Space Station
  • Launched by the U.S. in 1973
  • Built from a modified Apollo command module
  • Occupied by 3 different teams of astronauts for a
    total of 171 days
  • Purposely burned up in the Earths atmosphere in
    1979
  • Over 2,000 hours of scientific and medical
    experiments performed onboard

Two photographs of Skylab, taken by astronauts on
their approach to the space station
17
Space Shuttles
  • Originally spacecraft were used only once
  • In the 1980s, NASA developed reusable spacecraft,
    the space shuttles
  • Launched like rockets but land like modern-day
    airplanes
  • Considered the most complex machines ever built
  • Used to take satellites and instruments into
    space
  • Originally five shuttles, two of which have been
    destroyed (Challenger, Columbia), three remaining
    in service (Atlantis, Endeavor, Discovery)
  • Fleet of shuttles scheduled to be retired in 2010

18
The International Space Station (ISS)
  • 15 nations participating
  • Assembly began in 1998 should be completed by
    2010
  • Teams of astronauts have lived aboard the ISS
    since 2001
  • Provides a permanent laboratory for conducting
    experiments in space

Images of the ISS
19
Unmanned Missions Space Probes and Landers
  • Besides manned missions like Mercury, Gemini, and
    Apollo, NASA launched a series of unmanned
    missions
  • Probes sent to study the outer planets and to
    land on planets of the inner solar system like
    Mercury, Venus, and Mars
  • Probes also sent to gather information about the
    moon before astronauts ventured there

20
Why send robotic probes instead of human?
  • Benefits
  • Cheaper theres no need to send along food, air,
    and living space for astronauts or fuel for a
    round-trip
  • Safer theres no danger to human life
  • Drawbacks
  • Robotic probes can only do what theyre
    programmed to do they cannot grow or adapt to
    face unforeseen changes
  • Robotic probes often must be controlled remotely
    from Earth
  • Some feel that robotic missions lack the romance
    of discovery and experience of manned missions

21
Voyager
  • Launched in 1977, first spacecraft to visit the
    outer planets of our solar system and send back
    pictures of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune
  • Continue to function to this day
  • Now the farthest man-made objects in the solar
    system

Images of Saturn (left) and Jupiter (below) from
the Voyager spacecraft
22
The Hubble Telescope
From left Images from the Hubble telescope of
the Sombrero Galaxy, Orion Nebula, Messier 101
Galaxy
  • In 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope was placed in
    orbit by the shuttle Discovery
  • Example of scientific instrument in space
  • Used to measure the age and size of the universe
  • Able to take extremely clear images that are
    undistorted by Earths atmosphere

23
The Cassini-Huygens Mission
An image of Saturn relayed to Earth by the
Cassini Huygens spacecraft
  • First spacecraft to explore Saturn and its rings
    and moons from orbit
  • Has been in orbit around Saturn since January 30,
    2004
  • The Huygens probe was released from the Cassini
    spacecraft in January 2005 to study Titan,
    Saturns largest moon

24
Mars Rovers
  • Probes launched to Mars with robotic rovers to
    explore surface
  • Spirit landed on Mars January 4, 2004
    Opportunity landed December 12, 2004
  • Primary mission scheduled to last 3 months, but
    mission has been active over two Earth years
  • Rovers remotely controlled by scientists on Earth

Top and bottom images of Mars from the rovers.
Left an artists vision of Spirit on Mars
25
President Bushs Vision for Space Exploration
  • Presented plan to NASA January 2004
  • ISS to be completed by 2010
  • Space shuttles to be retired from service by 2010
  • Develop new manned spacecraft by 2008 and
    complete manned mission by 2014
  • Return to the moon by 2020
  • Eventually send humans to Mars

26
Image Sources
  • http//liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/history/VonBr
    aun/VonBraun.html
  • http//www.cohsoft.com.au/cohsoft/gene/images/1950
    map.png
  • http//www.bbc.co.uk/science/space/exploration/mis
    siontimeline/vostok1.shtml
  • http//www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/shepard-alan
    .html
  • http//www.nasm.si.edu/galleries/ATTM/atmimages/S6
    1-01928.f.jpg
  • http//www.nasa.gov/home/index.html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury-Atlas_5
  • http//www.aerospaceguide.net/spaceexploration/gem
    ini.html
  • http//www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/white-eh.htm
    l
  • http//www.nasa.gov/home/index.html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury-Atlas_5
  • http//www.aerospaceguide.net/spaceexploration/gem
    ini.html
  • http//www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/white-eh.htm
    l
  • http//grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2000-001488.
    html
  • http//www.hbci.com/tgort/moon.htm
  • http//earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Giants/vo
    nBraun/vonbraun_4.html
  • http//grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2000-001488.
    html
  • http//www.hbci.com/tgort/moon.htm
  • http//www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/apollo11/

27
Sources Continued
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Soyuz_Test_Pro
ject http//heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/Images/skylab/ h
ttp//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skylab http//www.ed.a
rizona.edu/ward/Sonic/shuttle.jpg http//www.clipa
rtgallery.com/travel_trans/space/space_shuttle_bla
stoff2.html http//voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/science/ h
ttp//hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/r
eleases/2006/01/ http//hubblesite.org/gallery/alb
um/galaxy_collection/pr2003028b/ http//hubblesite
.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/releases/2006/10/
image/a http//www.pbs.org/spacestation/station/is
sfactsheet.htm http//hubblesite.org/newscenter/ne
wsdesk/archive/releases/2006/01/ http//hubblesite
.org/gallery/album/galaxy_collection/pr2003028b/ h
ttp//hubblesite.org/newscenter/newsdesk/archive/r
eleases/2006/10/image/a http//www.pbs.org/spacest
ation/station/issfactsheet.htm http//www.space.gc
.ca/asc/eng/iss/facts.asp http//www.issbabylon.co
m/html/cool_iss_pictures.html http//www.nasa.gov/
mission_pages/station/expeditions/expedition13/exp
13_dock.html http//saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/overview/i
ndex.cfm http//www.nasa.gov/images/content/54572m
ain_rover1_br.jpg http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ima
geMars_from_Spirit.jpg http//marsrovers.nasa.gov
/spotlight/20060302.html http//www.astro.cz/clane
k/tisk/1667 http//www.whitehouse.gov/news/release
s/2004/01/images/20040114-3_nasa1-515h.html
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