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Testing the Limits - Aviation Medicine and the Origins of Manned Space Flight (Paperback)
Loot Price: R813
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Testing the Limits - Aviation Medicine and the Origins of Manned Space Flight (Paperback)
Series: Centennial of Flight Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In 1958 the United States launched its first satellite and created
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to oversee
its new space program. By 1961 NASA was confident enough to put a
human being into space. But how had it acquired enough medical
knowledge to ensure an astronaut's safety in just three years? It
hadn't. The credit goes instead to decades of military medical
research. Witnessing the first German missile attack on London in
1944, U.S. Army flight surgeon Harry Armstrong had been immediately
concerned that aeronautical engineers would transform the A-4 (V-2)
into a vehicle for transporting soldiers. He vowed, as founder (in
1934) of the military's only aviation human-factors research lab,
to make such trips survivable. Efforts at Wright Field and the
army's School of Aviation Medicine, which Armstrong had also turned
into a world-class research institution, were the real reason for
the successful start to America's manned space program. In Testing
the Limits, Maura Phillips Mackowski describes the crucial
foundational contributions of military flight surgeons who
routinely risked their lives in test aircraft, research balloons,
pressure chambers, rocket-propelled sleds, or parachute harnesses.
Drawing on rare primary sources and interviews, she also reveals
the little-known but vital contributions of German emigre
scientists whose expertise in areas unknown to Americans created a
hybrid specialty: space medicine. She reveals new details on human
aeromedical experimentation at Dachau, Washington's decision to
limit astronaut status to males, and the choice to freeze the air
force out of the research specialty it had created and brought to
fruition.
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