Post-Cold War, the USSR and US emerged as the world's top two nations that were full of very knowledgeable and powerful scientists and engineers who were able to come up with clever innovations. The USSR and US were fighting, and they wanted to be able to attack the other country by setting off Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) weapons overseas and using satellites in space to spy on each other. However, they became so competitive with each other that it made both teams become "bad sports" in a way when trying to outfight each other for developing improved technologies, which led them to trying to come up with better strategies for eventually winning the Space Race.
The Russians seemed to be the leading nation for the start and majority of the Race. They fired Sputnik I, which was the first satellite that was successfully sent into space. It was a 184 pound, 60 cm metal sphere that carried a radio transmitter and went into orbit about 550 miles upward, where it was able to rotate around Earth every 1.5 hour at a speed of 18,000 miles per hour. Later on, the Russians became the first to launch a living organism, a female dog named Laika, into space, where she lived there for a week. Countries then realized that if a dog could survive in space, then any animal can survive. This leads the countries to take initiative to achieve the next challenge - sending people to do space exploration. On April 12, 1961, Yuri Gagarin, a Russian astronaut, is sent off into space, therefore successfully proving the hypothesis on how people can go to space. The US is falling behind the Race and experiences difficulty in being able to keep up and advance from the USSR's current achievements.
The ultimate challenge for both nations then becomes for being able to get an expedition to visit the moon. The USSR developed the Luna 1 spacecraft; although it accidentally strayed off its intended route to travel and make a stop at the moon, this was still an important milestone for the Soviets and technology, as they were able to design something that could orbit past Earth and around the sun. The US then realized that there were better alternative paths that their engineers could work on in order to advance past the Soviets, ideally accomplishing something that the USSR had never done before.
However, the Cuban Missile Crisis, which occurred a few years later, set an obstacle for the US. The Russians were "cheating" in the Race, for they were hiding weapons that were scattered throughout Cuba so they could attack the nearby US. However because America also had weapons very close to Russia, they realized how destructive it would be if one nation used the weapons, and if the other used them to get revenge -possibly destroying the world. To prevent war, the US moved their weapons away, and this led a period of inactivity.
Weeks later, the intense Race began again, and although America started to gain more momentum to be able to catch up to Russia, they were still not ahead of the game. However, this all changed on July 20, 1969, where finally, the unimaginable had been done: the US has been the first to get people, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong, to land on the Moon. From this, both sides realized that because the US had achieved their goal, there was nothing left to compete over. Russia was congratulatory of the US, but many believe that Russia was actually angry at the US for winning the Race, which has continued to create tension between the two countries. Nevertheless, the Space Race ultimately brought upon several new technological advancements in the field of space exploration.
Wow! I liked how detailed this post was- I had no clue that the first satellite was that small! I'm curious about the alternative paths the US discovered to surpass the USSR in the Space Race. If you're interested found a cool link about the timeline of space exploration, especially right after the Space Race: https://www.archives.gov/research/alic/reference/space-timeline.html
ReplyDeleteGreat post! I did not know that a dog was the first animal in space, and it is also so interesting how even though the space race was a race for improving our knowledge of physics and science, the motivation was really originally for finding ways to send atomic weapons quickly to the enemy country. I wonder if the Russians or the United States had any plans for weaponizing the moon once they landed there since that was the ultimate goal of the race. For more information on the military motives of the space race: https://airandspace.si.edu/exhibitions/space-race/online/sec200/sec200.htm
ReplyDeleteThere are theories published by the B.B.C that the female dog Laika, the first living creature to orbit the earth did not live as long as the Soviet officials had claimed. New evidence suggest that Laika had died of panic and therefore overheating just hours after the launch. Records indicate that Laika's pulse rate went extremely above her resting level during launch therefore increasing the temperature and humidity. And no life signs were received after 5~7 hours of launch.
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