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The Problem of Space Travel - The Rocket Motor (Paperback): Hermann Noordung The Problem of Space Travel - The Rocket Motor (Paperback)
Hermann Noordung; Edited by Ernst Stuhlinger, J. D Hunley
R580 Discovery Miles 5 800 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Skylab a Guidebook (Paperback): Leland F. Belew, Ernst Stuhlinger Skylab a Guidebook (Paperback)
Leland F. Belew, Ernst Stuhlinger
R510 R438 Discovery Miles 4 380 Save R72 (14%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Skylab's launch in 1973 represented a major milestone in America's space program. Intended to enrich scientific knowledge of the Earth, Sun and space, America's first space station was also intended to prove that humans could live and work in zero gravity for extended periods. The station's design originated from a 1959 proposal by Wehrner von Braun to use an empty rocket stage as an orbiting laboratory -- Skylab's Orbital Workshop design was built around a Saturn S-IVB stage. With a total length of about 117 feet and a mass of 169.950 pounds, the station was about the size of an average house. It included a multi-spectral solar observatory, two docking ports, and Airlock Module with EVA hatches, and a large habitation area. Power on-board came from solar arrays and the fuel cells of the docked Apollo CSM. Skylab was damaged by vibrations during lift-off, destroying an important meteoroid shield and one of the station's two solar panel arrays. The second array could not be deployed until the crew of the SL-2 mission made an EVA to fix it. The crew remained in space for 28 days, a record eclipsed by the next two missions SL-3 (59 days) and SL-4 (84 days). After the SL-4 crew returned to the Earth in 1974 plans were made to refurbish Skylab, but delays with the Space Shuttle program proved fatal, and the station re-entered Earth's atmosphere and disintegrated in 1979. Dating from just prior to the station's deployment in 1973, this informative book was originally published by NASA to explain Skylab's mission to the public. Featuring chapters detailing the station's history, design, components, operation, and research projects, it presents an important overview of the Skylab program.

The Problem of Space Travel - The Rocket Motor (NASA History Series No. SP-4026) (Paperback): Hermann Noordung The Problem of Space Travel - The Rocket Motor (NASA History Series No. SP-4026) (Paperback)
Hermann Noordung; Edited by Ernst Stuhlinger; Preface by J. D Hunley
R739 Discovery Miles 7 390 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This is an English translation of Noordung's 'Das Problem der Befahrung des Weltraums'. It is a part of the NASA History Series. The book provides Noordung's insight as to how a space station might be constructed. Keep in mind that the author passed away in 1929. It contains ideas that were criticized for faults and those that were acclaimed for their potentially successful ingenuity. Profusely illustrated throughout.

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