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Books > Earth & environment > Geography > Geographical discovery & exploration
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Looking Backward, Looking Forward - Forty Years of U.S. Human Spaceflight Symposium (Paperback)
Loot Price: R501
Discovery Miles 5 010
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Looking Backward, Looking Forward - Forty Years of U.S. Human Spaceflight Symposium (Paperback)
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Loot Price R501
Discovery Miles 5 010
Expected to ship within 18 - 22 working days
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Human spaceflight is the driver for most activities that the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) undertakes.
While NASA certainly has a rich aviation research heritage and has
also done pathbreaking scientific and applications work using
robotic spacecraft, human spaceflight is a difficult and expensive
endeavor that engenders great popular enthusiasm and support for
NASA. Much of this public interest stems from pushing boundaries of
adventure, by exploring the unique and challenging physical
environment of space. Humans can also perform tasks in space that
machines cannot. We can think, analyze, and make judgment calls
based on experience and intuition in real time. This NASA history
document contains sixteen fascinating essays about the past and
future of spaceflight, written by some of the most important and
famous figures in the space community. A confluence of
anniversaries made the spring of 2001 a propitious time for
reflection on a forty-year record of achievement and on what may
lie ahead in the years to come. The fortieth anniversary of Alan
Shepard's first spaceflight, the first time an American flew in
space, took place on 5 May 2001. The fortieth anniversary of Yuri
Gagarin's spaceflight, the first time a human traveled into space
and orbited Earth, took place on 12 April 2001. Coincidentally,
this date was also the twentieth anniversary of the launch of
STS-1, the first Space Shuttle flight. In addition, 25 May was the
fortieth anniversary of President John F. Kennedy's famous "urgent
needs" speech in which he proposed putting an American on the Moon
"before this decade is out," initiating the Apollo Project. Last
but not least, the Expedition One crew to the ISS had finished its
historic first mission in the spring of 2001.
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