Something New Under the Sun Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age

In this, the first history of artifical satellites and their uses, Helen Gavaghan shows how the idea of putting an object in orbit around the earth changed from science fiction to indespensible technology in the twinkling of an eye. Thanks to satellites, we can now send data and images anywhere in t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gavaghan, Helen
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, NY Springer New York 1998, 1998
Edition:1st ed. 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer Book Archives -2004 - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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245 0 0 |a Something New Under the Sun  |h Elektronische Ressource  |b Satellites and the Beginning of the Space Age  |c by Helen Gavaghan 
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300 |a XIX, 300 p  |b online resource 
505 0 |a Prologue The Seed -- One New Moon -- Two Cocktails and the Blues -- Three Follow That Moon -- Four The Space Age -- 1 Navigation -- Five Polaris and Transit -- Six Heady Days -- Seven Pursuit of Orbit -- Eight FromSputnik IIto Transit -- Nine Kershner’s Roulette -- Ten The Realities of Space Exploration -- Eleven Move Over, Sputnik -- 2 Meteorology -- Twelve A Time of Turbulence -- Thirteen The Bird’s-Eye View -- Fourteen Keep it Simple, Suomi -- Fifteen Storm Patrol -- 3 Communications -- Sixteen The Players -- Seventeen Of Moons and Balloons -- Eighteen Telstar -- Nineteen The Whippersnapper -- Twenty Syncom -- Twenty-One Epilogue -- Chronology -- Notes and Sources 
653 |a Astronomy, Observations and Techniques 
653 |a Astrophysics and Astroparticles 
653 |a Communications Engineering, Networks 
653 |a Electrical engineering 
653 |a Observations, Astronomical 
653 |a Astronomy—Observations 
653 |a Astrophysics 
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520 |a In this, the first history of artifical satellites and their uses, Helen Gavaghan shows how the idea of putting an object in orbit around the earth changed from science fiction to indespensible technology in the twinkling of an eye. Thanks to satellites, we can now send data and images anywhere in the world in an instant. The satellite-based navigational system can pinpoint your exact location anywhere in the world; it is so precise that, from outer space, it can detect the sag on an airplane's wing. Focusing on three major areas of development - navigational satellites, communications, and weather observation and forecasting - Gavaghan tells the remarkable inside story of how obscure men and women, often laboring under strict secrecy, made the extraordinary scientific and technological discoveries needed to make these miracles happen. Written by a science journalist with support from the Sloane Foundation, the book describes the birth of the modern scientific era in the twentieth century, with creation of satellite technology. The narrative is part history - beginning with the Russian-U.S. contest with the launch of Sputnik; part politics, as scientists and visionary engineers compete for scarce funding that will bring their dreams to reality; partly the story of the singular and fascinating individuals who were present at the creation of our modern technological era