Forward
It would be easy for me to dismiss the 50th
anniversary of
Sputnik’s launch as unimportant in
today’s world of terror attacks and social
networks. After all the Cold War belongs to a
bygone era along with everything else pre-9/11.
Moreover, one of its most important battles, The
Space Race, ended at the same time I was born,
July
of ’75, when three American astronauts and two
Soviet cosmonauts shook hands in Earth orbit. By
then both the American and Soviet space programs
had moved on, in the US to the Space Shuttle, in
the USSR to Salyut. How could any of that still
affect my daily life?
Yet it does and I can guarantee as you read this
now it affects your daily life as well.
Red Star Rising?
The genesis story of the space age usual goes
something like this, 50 years ago today, October
4th 1957; the Soviet Union ‘shocked’ the world by
launching the world’s first artificial satellite.
Why did the Soviets even wish to launch an
artificial satellite in October of 1957 and why was
the assumption that the Americans would be first?
The International Geophysical
Year was an
international scientific effort that started in
July of 1957 to enhanced the study of eleven Earth
sciences: aurora and airglow, cosmic rays,
geomagnetism, gravity, ionospheric physics,
precision mapping, meteorology, oceanography,
seismology and solar activity. How else could one
enhance the knowledge of these sciences but by the
no-longer just theoretical idea of launching an
artificial satellite into Earth orbit? Since such
an international effort included the Unites States,
one of the two superpowers and the assumed
scientific leader; it was the US that first
developed and used the Atomic Bomb, the US that
refined jet engines, rocket power and broke the
sound barrier, thus the United States would lead
the world into Earth orbit and Outer Space.
Even Chief Designer Sergei Korolev feared the
Americans would beat him and his comrades. Using a
military designed missile and rocket engine the
Soviets saw their moment; the meeting of the IGY
committee was scheduled for the beginning of
October, at which time the American scientists
intended to tell of their plans for space
exploration. With the official go ahead from Soviet
Party Leader
Nikita Khrushchev Korolev and
his team
of engineers launched Sputnik from Kazakhstan, to
the great surprise of the West.
Model, Sputnik 1
What does this all have to do with today’s every day
life, other then the obvious GPS and satellite
television? The Space Race of course escalated and
by 1961 American had officially dedicated itself to
landing a man on the moon in 10 years time. The
moon became the target of the US space program
because it was determined that neither the Soviets
nor the Americans could roll out a rocket the next
day with enough thrust to send a man or men to the
moon and back.
This ‘edge’ in rocket development the Soviets had
resulted from the larger atomic devices the Soviets
had developed, compared to the Americans, requiring
greater rocket power. In order to beat the Soviets
at something required finding a goal that would
nullify the Soviet’s booster advantage, hence the moon.
Weight, even from the very beginning, became the
main issue for the American space program, even as
Redstone rockets gave way to Atlas, which gave way
to Titan, which were eclipsed by the Saturn rocket.
As the American military and civilian programs
found themselves in need to reduce weight while
enabling greater control a promising new
technological development entered the scene, the
integrated circuit.
microchips
The
integrated circuit is a
miniaturized electronic circuit consisting mainly
of transistors, themselves a recent technological
development at that time, which is manufactured on
the surface
of an electively conductive material, usually
silicon. Just as the Redstone rocket gave way to
the Saturn rocket, the vacuum tube, begat the
transistor, which gave us the integrated circuit,
which, by the time 8 of 12 men landed on the moon and
left, gave way to the
microprocessor.
Meanwhile, as the need to shuffle information
between locations grew, so did the need for the
development of a reliable and standard
communication network. The Advanced Research
Projects Agency, known as ARPA, another government
organization born in reaction to the launching of
Sputnik, started a program designed to connect the
growing collection of computers into a redundant,
highly robust and survivable - of a nuclear attack
– information swapping computer network known as
ARPANET. Over the course of time other networks
connected with the ARPANET, adopting the ARPANET’s
TCP/IP packet switching protocols, which, in major
part, gave way to today’s interconnection network
of computers or
Internet.
In other words, your computer, your computer’s
network connection, this computer and this
computer’s network connection all are by products
of The Space Race, born 50 years ago today, with
the launching of Sputnik.
Afterward
Thanks to my father I spent this evening
listening to Dr. Sergei N. Khrushchev, son of
former Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and Roger
Launius, PhD historian for the Smithsonian's
National Air and Space Museum. discussing the
history and impact of Sputnik.
Dr. Sergei N. Khrushchev made an interesting
comment about the Soviet booster, that, if I
understood him correctly (obviously English is not
his native language) the Soviet nuclear device was
not significantly heavier than the US, but that
Korolov (or an engineer of his) miscalculated the
weight by a factor of 3, thus the R-7 rocket was 3
times more powerful than it needed to be, leading
to the Soviet's early lead in rocket thrust.
Second, Dr. Roger Launius made an insightful
comment about the shock and awe of the West, its
was not Sputnik 1 alone that shook at the assumed
scientific leadership of the US, as I noted both
the Soviets and Americans had plans for an
artificial satellite for the The International
Geophysical Year, but the launch of Sputnik 1 and 2
just a few months apart and the public failure of
the 'American response' with the explosion of a
Vanguard satellite seconds
after booster ignition feed a public fear of lost
leadership. As Dr. Launius put it, in the direct
American phrase, "three strikes and your out!"
Further Reading:
High-tech culture of Silicon Valley
originally formed around radio by Tom Abate,
San Francisco Chronicle Staff Writer
We Shocked the World by Sergei
Khrushchev
The Real Sputnik Story by By
Sharon Begley, Newsweek
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