ABSTRACT
This book explores Russia's stunning success of ushering in the space age by launching Sputnik and beating the United States into space. It also examines the formation of NASA, the race for human exploration of the moon, the reality of global satellite communications, and a new generation of scientific spacecraft that began exploring the universe. An introductory essay by Pulitzer Prize winner Walter A. McDougall sets the context for Sputnik and its significance at the end of the twentieth century.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |7 pages
Part 1—Space Flight in the Soviet Union
part |7 pages
Part 2—A Setting for the International Geophysical Year
part |7 pages
Part 3—Ramifications and Reactions