Happy Cosmonautics Day for everyone!

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Profile Raistmer
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Message 1096461 - Posted: 12 Apr 2011, 9:10:10 UTC

50 years from first man, Yury Gagarin, in space (and humans still alive ;) )
Congratulations with so remarkable date!
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Message 1096470 - Posted: 12 Apr 2011, 10:29:30 UTC - in response to Message 1096461.  
Last modified: 12 Apr 2011, 10:31:38 UTC

Hard to belive that day was 50 years ago. I do remember it well.

Here is a link to the NASA picture of the day.... http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/

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Message 1096474 - Posted: 12 Apr 2011, 10:49:41 UTC - in response to Message 1096470.  

Hard to belive that day was 50 years ago. I do remember it well.

Here is a link to the NASA picture of the day.... http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/


made link clickable
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Message 1096483 - Posted: 12 Apr 2011, 12:09:56 UTC

I was allmost 9 years old and I rembember. 50 years wow.

That picture of Earth is awesome. But I bet seeing it for real was off the scale beautiful.
[/quote]

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Message 1096672 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 3:58:50 UTC

Yes, hard to believe it was so long ago. I fondly remember and miss the excitement every launch generated back then. I will have to break out the Stolichnaya to properly toast the anniversary of Mr. Gagarin's great achievement. :-)
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Message 1096816 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 14:09:28 UTC - in response to Message 1096672.  
Last modified: 13 Apr 2011, 14:13:41 UTC

It's amazing the risks both space race nations took. All for national glory. We are probably lucky more good men didn't die for the cause.

I think the most astounding thing is that all of NASA had less computing power than a common PC today. I would assume the Soviet system had even less.


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Message 1096861 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 17:06:51 UTC

And if the space race were begun today it would have failure to start.

OSHA (Ocupational Safety and Health Association) would never allow it because of the risk to human lives.
Boinc....Boinc....Boinc....Boinc....
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Message 1096865 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 17:29:40 UTC - in response to Message 1096861.  

And if the space race were begun today it would have failure to start.

OSHA (Ocupational Safety and Health Association) would never allow it because of the risk to human lives.


Actually, US Federal Regulation 1910.5(b) states:

None of the standards in this part shall apply to working conditions of employees with respect to which Federal agencies other than the Department of Labor, or State agencies acting under section 274 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2021), exercise statutory authority to prescribe or enforce standards or regulations affecting occupational safety or health.

NASA has written and published several standards concerning Federally operated and privately operated space vehicles, including human-rating of these vehicles. As per 1910.5(b), this trumps any OSHA involvement in the field. Several commercially designed, privately funded human-rated space vehicles are in development today.

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Message 1096884 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 19:09:51 UTC - in response to Message 1096816.  
Last modified: 13 Apr 2011, 19:11:59 UTC

It's amazing the risks both space race nations took. All for national glory. We are probably lucky more good men didn't die for the cause.

I think the most astounding thing is that all of NASA had less computing power than a common PC today. I would assume the Soviet system had even less.


I'm not sure if I would call it national glory. That's the way they want it written now in history books. Then it was all about sputnik "spying" on us and the fear associated with something orbiting the Earth WE didn't have control of. Oh no they launched a man first, if they get to the moon and claim it they could have a highly strategic position, etc. etc. At the time it was due to fear, the space race was just another aspect of the cold war. Hence the reason we planted the flags, often you hear the moon astronauts talking of world peace and "for all mankind", they were trying to show this isn't a military move, and it wasn't in the forward facing sense. Of course a lot of their researched moved towards military uses lol. People always forget too, there was a documentary on it, that the Russians had landed a moon mission before us, unmanned, but it crashed into the moon instead of landing. I think if Kennedy wouldn't have made his speech we probably would have been beaten to the moon. But in the end does it really matter? Who knows what would be different in the world, if anything.

Either way the accomplishments they achieved(both sides) during that time and even now are astounding. The men and women, are truly daredevils sitting on top of the worlds largest bombs. Something that sadly is coming to an end, the shuttle, has done as much for world peace and working together with other countries, than most politicians could ever hope for, hopefully we will have another program soon enough.

Not to mention forget everything else, those crazy Russians land their capsules on land!!!! Ouch you know that landing has to be felt for days!! Brave, crazy, insane, and smart? They pretty much can fit all of the above, are are one of the only groups that can fit all of that into one mission and it still succeed! lol. Amazing things we humans pull off, all in jest, humility, pride, and honor.

It's still about national pride now.
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Message 1096906 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 19:38:20 UTC - in response to Message 1096884.  


I'm not sure if I would call it national glory.

It was national glory regardless what you or other think about this.
Yesterday and today I talked with peoples who remember how it was.
When news arrived it was absolutely spontaneous and not orchestrated by goverment peoples movement on streets, happiness and pride.
Surely space program always had and has now military aspects both in USSR/Russia and USA, but that particular event has much bigger value than just "they spy on us from space" ...
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Message 1096926 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 20:17:26 UTC - in response to Message 1096906.  

Only a military Pilot wouldn't give sitting on the top of a missile a second thought


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Message 1096928 - Posted: 13 Apr 2011, 20:31:50 UTC - in response to Message 1096926.  

Only a military Pilot wouldn't give sitting on the top of a missile a second thought


Lots of other people would line up for it too (including me).

Reminds me of the Chuck Yeager quote from "The Right Stuff". When other military pilots made fun of the civilian NASA trainee astronauts, comparing them to the chimpanzees NASA also used, Yeager pointed out that the chimpanzee doesn't know the rocket might explode.

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Message 1097027 - Posted: 14 Apr 2011, 1:40:21 UTC - in response to Message 1096906.  
Last modified: 14 Apr 2011, 1:44:52 UTC


I'm not sure if I would call it national glory.

It was national glory regardless what you or other think about this.
Yesterday and today I talked with peoples who remember how it was.
When news arrived it was absolutely spontaneous and not orchestrated by goverment peoples movement on streets, happiness and pride.
Surely space program always had and has now military aspects both in USSR/Russia and USA, but that particular event has much bigger value than just "they spy on us from space" ...


Sure, Gagarin's moment was pride for Russia. Obviously you didn't leave in the US during that time. All I'm saying, there was a lot of amazement in it, but always in the back of the head to better it and move forward because the enemy, USSR at the time, simply can not have the lead. Part glory, part fear, mixed with pride. That's all it was.....was it amazing sure! It was still part of the cold war and has a lot more windows than simply expanding knowledge on how space flight works. There was a reason they did it. Both countries, and it wasn't merely for pride. Knowledge is power, this isn't an attack on your country, I'm just putting a bit of perspective on it. There are people in the US now that still don't like Russian's, Vietnamese, Germans, etc. It was much worse then.
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Message 1097618 - Posted: 15 Apr 2011, 21:45:28 UTC - in response to Message 1096926.  

Only a military Pilot wouldn't give sitting on the top of a missile a second thought


That was done on an ill-prepared shot into orbit far too far ahead of a more sensible schedule all for the sake of shooting for an arbitrary political date:

Vladimir Komarov: The Unsung Space Hero

There is a new book coming out next month detailing the life and times of Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space. He was aboard Vostok 1 when it made its historic spaceflight on April 12, 1961. The book is entitled Starman: The Truth Behind the Legend of Yuri Gagarin, and it's generating a bit of buzz not for its purported subject -- Gagarin himself -- but for the account of another doomed spaceflight in 1967 that claimed the life of Gagarin's good friend and fellow cosmonaut, Vladimir Komarov. It's a truly heartbreaking tale. ...


The Mission of Soyuz-1

On April 23, 1967, after a more than two-year gap in the manned space flight, the Soviet Union announced the launch of a new-generation spacecraft called Soyuz-1 ("Union") with a veteran cosmonaut Vladimir Komarov onboard. ...


An analysis of the Soyuz-1 flight

... The intention is to gather technical facts about the flight of Soyuz-1 and in particular try to answer a few questions. ...



Certainly some great and grave daring-do...

A tremendous effort and glory all round, even with the sad mix of disasters.

Keep searchin',
Martin


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