This work introduces the important emerging space powers of the
world.
Brian Harvey describes the origins of the Japanese space
program, from rocket designs based on WW II German U-boats to tiny
solid fuel 'pencil' rockets, which led to the launch of the first
Japanese satellite in 1970. The next two chapters relate how Japan
expanded its space program, developing small satellites into
astronomical observatories and sending missions to the Moon, Mars,
comet Halley, and asteroids.
Chapter 4 describes how India's Vikram Sarabhai developed a
sounding rocket program in the 1960s. The following chapter
describes the expansion of the Indian space program. Chapter 6
relates how the Indian space program is looking ahead to the
success of the moon probe Chandrayan, due to launch in 2008, and
its first manned launching in 2014. Chapters 7, 8, and 9
demonstrate how, in Iran, communications and remote sensing drive
space technology.
Chapter 10 outlines Brazil's road to space, begun in the
mid-1960's with the launch of the Sonda sounding rockets. The
following two chapters describe Brazil's satellites and space
launch systems and plans for the future. Chapters 13 and 14 study
Israel's space industry. The next chapters look at the burgeoning
space programs of North and South Korea.
The book ends by contrasting and comparing all the space
programs and speculating how they may evolve in the future. An
appendix lists all launches and launch attempts to date of the
emerging space powers.
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