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Animals in Space: From Research Rockets to the Space Shuttle

Colin Burgess Chris Dubbs

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

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Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-0-387-36053-9

ISBN electrónico

978-0-387-49678-8

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Praxis Publishing Ltd, Chichester, UK 2007

Tabla de contenidos

End of an era

Colin Burgess; Chris Dubbs

At an ever-intensifying rate, animals, insects and other forms of biological life were fired into space in the 1960s and 1970s. Many perplexing questions needed to be resolved about survival in space, and these two decades would see creatures from nations such as China, France, the United States and the Soviet Union sent on missions of increasing complexity in order to answer these questions.

Pp. 307-336

Shuttling into space

Colin Burgess; Chris Dubbs

The advent of the space shuttle, which flew for the first time in 1981, presented researchers with an ideal platform for the study of animal and plant life in space, as hundreds of biological experiments could be carried aloft, examined or pursued in relative comfort.

Pp. 337-371

Epilogue

Colin Burgess; Chris Dubbs

There was a particularly intense decade in the use of animals in the development of space travel, from 1951 to 1961. It was a period of transition, from the first successful suborbital flight of the Soviet dogs Tsygan and Dezik to the orbital flight of the U.S. schimpanzee Enos.

Pp. 373-374