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Early visions
of human space flight spanned centuries and continents. In 1929, Austrian
Army officer Hermann Noordung envisioned and designed a multi-component
space station in orbit around Earth. Its three parts consisted of a disk-shaped
habitat with a large solar mirror, a dish-like machine room suspended
some distance away, and a smaller can-shaped astronomical observatory.
"Space
Travel is Utter Bilge"
So said
astronomer Sir Richard Wooley in 1956. In 2002, a JPL scientist pays tribute
to the visionaries who, in the face of skepticism and gravity, opened
the way to interplanetary flight
By Donald
Yeomans
Until a few
decades ago, interplanetary travel was the stuff of dreams and fantasy.
But it was a fantasy in which the dreamers often turned out to be uncannily
farsighted and correct, while the predictions of some eminent scientists
proved to be far too conservative. Successful space travel would actually
come about, in large part, through the efforts of engineers and scientists
who were also dreamers. In the end, it would be a handful of these individuals,
existing on the fringe of contemporary science, largely ignored and sometimes
derided by the experts of their day, who carried forward the
torch of interplanetary travel and manned space flight. For centuries,
they predicted that an era would come when mankind would venture into
space. That fortunate era is now.
While the conquest of the skies via heavier-than-air vehicles did not
arrive until the Wright brothers historic flights in 1903, earlier
dreamers needed only to point to the birds to demonstrate that the air
would one day support human flight. But travel to the space beyond Earth
was only accessible through their flights of imagination.

Johannes
Kepler
Early in
the 17th century, the noted astronomer, Johannes Kepler, penned a treatise
entitled The Dream (Somnium), in which the central character,
Duracotus, takes a voyage to the moon. The story is based loosely upon
Keplers own life, and the lunar voyage is facilitated by Duracotuss
mother. She is in league with lunar demons that can, on occasion, provide
the necessary transportation to the moon. Once in space, Duracotus protects
himself from the rarefied air by applying damp sponges to his nostrils,
while noting that the pushing supplied by the lunar demons is no longer
necessary once he has ascended beyond Earths orb. Kepler, who would
be remembered for his laws of planetary motion, did not dare publish the
book during his lifetime. However it was read in manuscript form and was
partially responsible for his mothers being tried as a witch. Fortunately,
she was freed in October 1621 after spending 14 months in custody.
The English
bishop Francis Godwin published another lunar fantasy entitled The Man
in the Moone in 1638. Its hero, a shipwrecked mariner named Domingo Gonzales,
wishes only to escape the uninhabited island on which he is stranded.
He trains a flock of 30 wild swans to fly him back to civilization but
the birds migration season has begun, and their home turns out to
be . . . on the moon. After a 12-day voyage, our hero arrives at the moon
to find the inhabitants there to be much larger than those on Earth. The
lunarians are an average of 28 feet tall. Despite his puny stature, Domingo
is well-treated by the lunarians and after enjoying their company, he
returns to Earth safely, although two of his 30 swans have died and the
rest began to droope.
In 1827,
in an early example of American science fiction, George Tucker, writing
under the pen name Joseph Atterlay, wrote A Voyage to the Moon.
The spacecraft was a copper vessel loaded with scientific equipment and
powered by lunarium, an anti-gravity metal with no more validity than
wild swans.

Konstantin
Tsiolkovsky
It was a
Russian schoolteacher, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, who would be the first
to seriously consider realistic means for achieving space flight. Born
on September 17, 1857, 100 years and 17 days before his countrymen launched
Sputnik, Tsiolkovsky contracted scarlet fever as a child and became nearly
deaf. Unable to attend the local schools, he began an intensive course
of self-study into the natural sciences. In 1879, he passed his teaching
examinations without having attended any of the lectures and began teaching
outside Moscow in Kaluga province. What spare time he had was devoted
to research into aeronautics.
At age 26,
he published a short treatise entitled Free Space and stated
that the path to space was through rocket propulsion. Rockets were certainly
not a new concept, having been invented by the Chinese by the thirteenth
century, but Tsiolkovsky was the first to note that only rockets could
serve the needs of space travel. He is also credited with a variety of
forward-thinking ideas on space flight, including a theory of rocket travel
that took into account the rockets changing mass; the use of liquid
hydrogen and oxygen for rocket fuel; multistage launch vehicles; the effects
of atmospheric drag and solar light pressure on space vehicles; the nature
of weightlessness in space; and geosynchronous orbits, whereby a satellite
could always remain above a single location on the Earths surface.
Did Tsiolkovskys
advanced ideas find easy acceptance or support? They did not. Up to the
time of the Russian Revolution in 1917, he was either ignored or considered
a crazy inventor and rootless dreamer by the recognized scientific community
of tsarist Russia. However, his ideas for using technology to overcome
gravity meshed with the Marxist philosophy that machines are indispensable
to the construction of Communist society. Thus in 1919, the now-ruling
Communist Party yanked Tsiolkovsky from obscurity and appointed him to
the Socialist Academy, which later became the Soviet Academy of Sciences.
In 1921, at the age of 64, he was given a personal pension, which allowed
him to devote himself entirely to his scientific research. While he still
worked alone, he now had government assistance to publish his works and
to republish some that had appeared earlier as very limited issues published
at his own expense. In the 1920s his work on space flight began to receive
international recognition.
There are
many similarities between Tsiolkovskys life and that of the American
rocket pioneer, Robert Hutchings Goddard. Goddard also worked in relative
obscurity, and he did not receive the credit due him until after his death
in 1945. Like Tsiolkovsky, Goddard taught schoolhe was a professor
at Clark University in Massachusetts. But whereas Tsiolkovsky never attempted
to actually build a rocket, Goddard developed and flew various rockets,
as well as conceiving many new ideas in the theory of rocket flight.
Goddard published
the first of two important monographs in the January 1920 Smithsonian
Miscellaneous Collections. In a slim paper entitled A Method of
Reaching Extreme Altitudes, he discussed his theories and experiments
concerning the efficiency of the ordinary rocket. He provided calculations
on the minimum rocket mass needed to raise one pound to various altitudes
in the atmosphere and calculations on the minimum mass required to raise
one pound to escape the earth. In an effort to demonstrate that a rocket
could escape Earth and reach the moon, Goddard had worked out how much
flash powder an observer on Earth would see through a one-foot aperture
telescope when the rocket crashed into a dark region of the lunar surface.
But he was completely unprepared for the publicity that greeted this scenario.
The press termed him the moon man, and made him the butt of
jokes. Never an outgoing person to begin with, Goddard responded by withdrawing
further into professional and private seclusion, so that his work was
generally not well known during his lifetime.
Goddard demonstrated
the first flight of a liquid fuel rocket in Auburn, Massachusetts in March
1926. The rocket reached an altitude of 41 feet and covered a mostly horizontal
distance of 184 feet, roughly comparable with the distance covered by
the second flight of the Wright brothers airplane in 1903. Like
Tsiolkovsky before him, Goddard realized the liquid-fuel rockets were
more efficient than those powered with dry, or solid, fuels. The 1926
rocket flight was documented ten years later as part of Goddards
second significant publication entitled Liquid-Propellant Rocket
Development.
Goddards
extraordinary achievements did not go entirely unnoticed. The aviator
Charles Lindbergh and the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, Charles
Abbot, were influential in helping him secure a $50,000 grant from the
Guggenheim Fund for the promotion of aeronautics. Using this substantial
award, Goddard, his wife, and four assistants established a research area
near Roswell, New Mexico. There in the desert, between 1930 and 1941,
they undertook one of the most amazing lone-wolf efforts in the history
of technology. In tests conducted at this site, Goddards liquid-fuel
rockets reached speeds of 700 mph and altitudes above 8,000 feet. His
innovations included the use of fuel- injection systems, regenerative
cooling of combustion chambers, gyroscopic stabilization and control,
instrumented payloads and recovery systems, guidance vanes in the exhaust
plume, gimbaled and clustered engines, and aluminum fuel and oxidizer
pumps.

American
rocket pioneer Robert
Goddard in 1915, standing beside
one of his early liquid-fueled rockets.
By the early
20th century, the works of Tsiolkovsky and Goddard had clearly shown that
space flights were theoretically possible. Assuming that a sufficiently
powerful rocket-thruster could be developed, Isaac Newtons 17th-century
formulation that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction
provided the basis for rocket flight. Nevertheless, there continued to
be a commonly held belief in the impossibility of flying a rocket in space,
where there was nothing for the rocket to push against. Many
who did understand that rockets need not push on anything simply denied
that rocket technology would ever advance to a point where enough power
could be generated to achieve the 11.2 km/s velocity required to escape
the earths gravity.
Fortunately,
none of these objections was enough to deter a new generation of dreamers,
many of them in Germany, who, like Goddard, combined technical training
and expertise with a commitment to furthering the possibilities of space
flight.
One of them
was Hermann Oberth, who from boyhood was fascinated by the possibility
of space travel. By 1920, he had derived the formulas for calculating
the impulse necessary to achieve escape velocity. Born in Transylvania
Hungary, in 1894, Oberth produced a treatise on rockets and interplanetary
travel as his doctoral dissertation at the University of Heidelberg. But
since neither his advisor, the well-known astronomer Max Wolf, nor anyone
else on the faculty would declare themselves competent in this subject,
he was unable to submit it for a degree. His thesis was also rejected
20 times by various publishers before the firm of Oldenburg agreed to
issue it, with the proviso that Oberth pay for the printing costs himself.
Today The Rocket into Interplanetary Space is recognized as a classic
in the early theory of space flight. In it Oberth established that a rocket
could operate in a void and could travel faster than the velocity of its
own exhaust. He also discussed the merits of alcohol and hydrogen as rocket
fuels and outlined a type of rocket that he felt could be used to explore
the upper atmosphere.
In the only
section that was relatively free of complex equations, Oberth dealt with
the physiological and psychological problems of manned flight, including
acceleration, weightlessness, loneliness, and claustrophobia. He also
discussed the possibilities for satellites, space stations, and space
mirrors that could beam sunlight to the dark side of the earth.
Like Tsiolkovsky
and Goddard before him, Oberth had been inspired as a youth by the rich
stories of Jules Verne, particularly by Vernes 1865 work From the
Earth to the Moon. Unlike them, he worked hard to publicize rocketry in
general and his own work in particular. In 1930, he became a technical
advisor to the Fritz Lang movie Girl in the Moon. As a publicity stunt
for the film, Oberth and his assistants were asked to design, build, and
launch a rocket. For all his theoretical genius, Oberth was not a rocket
engineer and, like the movie itself (a silent film in an era of talkies),
the rocket was unsuccessful. It never left the ground.
In the 1920s,
while the work of Oberth in Europe was being discussed within a small
circle of followers, and the work of Goddard was closely followed by an
even smaller group of American dreamers, the general public remained mostly
unaware of the work being done to free the human race of the earths
grasp. In Germany, however, the spark of interplanetary travel continued
to be fanned by two other dreamersWalter Hohmann and Hermann Noordung.

Hermann Oberth
Born in 1880,
Hohmann became the city architect in Essen, near the German-Dutch border,
in 1912. While his day job was that of a civil engineer, he spent all
his free time investigating the possibilities of space travel. His The
Attainability of the Heavenly Bodies, published in 1925, was prescient
for the ideas it advanced, and many of them seem remarkably modern even
today. Among them are the variable-pitch wing for dynamical control of
the spacecraft during landing, the use of nose cones and parachutes for
successful landings, the manufacture of rocket fuel from planetary resources
to save weight, and the use of a surface lander that would detach from
a planetary orbiter. However, Hohmann is best-remembered for what is known
today as the Hohmann trajectorythe formulation that the optimal
energy transfer orbit between planets is an ellipse that is just tangent
to the orbits of both planets.
Ironically,
Hohmann, who did not participate in the intensive rocket development projects
in Germany during World War II, was killed in an allied bombing raid on
Essen in 1945, just two months before the war ended.
Hermann Noordung,
whose real name was Herman Potocnik, was an Austrian army officer. Although
his life was cut short by tuberculosis in 1929 (he was 38), the year of
his death saw the publication of his classic The Problem of Space Travel.
Though much of the book was based upon Oberths 1923 work, Noordung
proposed an impressive number of innovative ideas, particularly with regard
to space stations. He suggested placing a space station in geosynchronous
orbit and using air locks and space suits for walks in space. He also
envisioned radio communication between Earth and space stations, and suggested
that momentum wheels could be used to maintain control of a spacecrafts
orientation in space. Finally, Noordung proposed several possible uses
for a space nation: as a site for doing physical and chemical experiments
in the absence of gravity and heat; as an astronomical observatory above
Earths atmosphere; and as a platform for a parabolic space mirror
for weather control and military advantage.
In 1927,
Oberth, Hohmann, Wernher von Braun, Willy Ley and other German space enthusiasts
formed the Society for Space Travel (Verein für Raumschiffahrt, or
VfR). Among the research efforts they discussed were those of Robert Goddard,
and their goal was to work toward the day when their rocket technology
could be used to send spacecraft to explore the solar system. However,
this club of rocket enthusiasts was operating at the margins: their research
was largely self-funded and their rocket experiments did not initially
attract the kind of governmental support needed to get past the hobbyist
stage.
Three years
later, across the Atlantic, a group of journalists founded the American
Interplanetary Society. Partly as a result of the ridicule aroused by
the mention of interplanetary travel, the group soon changed its name
to the American Rocket Society; it eventually evolved into todays
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. As with its German counterpart,
funds were shorts, accidents in the course of experiments frequent, and
the group struggled for a time to survive. The reclusive Professor Goddard
was not even an active member.
While it
would be nice to outline a scenario whereby the fledgling German and American
rocket enthusiasts succeeded in convincing their governments to support
research toward space flight, the reality was far different. The sponsor
who ultimately stepped up to push and pay for the serious development
of rocket flight was the German army. In 1932, the Army hired a number
of VfR members, including Von Braun, and put them to work in the militarys
rocket artillery unit. Von Braun was soon put in charge of an expanding
rocket-building program, and when Hitler and the Nazi Party took over
the government in 1933, he was assigned the task of overseeing long-range
missile system development. Over the next dozen years, he would become
the leading technical engineer for the Nazi rocket program at Peenemunde,
Germany.
Back in the
United States, as nervous observers watched these developments, Robert
Goddard accepted some military contracts to continue his work on rocketry.
It was within Germany, however, that the most rapid strides were taken
to develop a long-range and reliable liquid fuel rocket, culminating in
the V-2 (Vengeance) rockets that Hitler fired into England in the waning
months of the war. It has been pointed out that the 25,000 slave laborers,
forcibly transported to Germany from all over occupied Europe, who perished
in hellish conditions while building the V-2s at the underground Mittelwerk
(Dora) concentration camp were ten times greater in number than the British
civilians killed during the V-2 attacks. Von Brauns role in this
program has been called into question on more than one occasion. A high-ranking
Nazi party member, he also held the rank of major in the SS. Nevertheless,
with an allied victory assured in May 1945, he and his brother Magnus
surrendered to the American military with the expectation that their expertise
would be considered extremely valuable to the United States. And indeed,
the United States made extraordinary efforts to ensure that the cream
of the Nazi rocket scientists would remain in American rather than Soviet
hands once the war was over. To many, the Cold War already seemed imminent,
and the American military was counting on its captured German rocket scientists
to develop the next generation of weapons delivery systems.
Whatever
his principles, von Braun had unquestioned leadership abilities and an
unparalleled grasp of the art of rocket building. The U.S. army put him
to work developing rocket-launch vehicles, but his dream of using rockets
for space flight was to be shelved until the American public and Congress
demanded a response to the Soviet Unions launch of Sputnik in October
1957. Working in relative obscurity, the Soviet chief rocket designer
Sergei Korolev had helped develop an impressive missile program. He and
his colleagues too were aided by some expert Germans engineers from Peenemunde.
The USSR
would successfully put yet another satellite into Earth orbit on November
3, 1957 (this time carrying a dog named Laika) before the United States
successfully launched its own Earth-orbiting satellite, Explorer 1, on
January 31, 1958. In a harbinger of things to come, Explorers key
components were a launch vehicle developed by von Brauns team and
a satellite built under the direction of William Pickering 32, PhD
36, the director of Caltechs Jet Propulsion Laboratory. The
satellite carried a charged-particle detector developed by James van Allen.
This instrument detected charged particles ensnared in the earths
magnetic field, a region now known as the Van Allen radiation belts.
Von Brauns
contemporary Hermann Oberth had not played an active role in the development
of the V-2 rocket during the Second World War, but he was hired by von
Braun in 1955 and worked for the U.S. Army for a time, before returning
to Germany in 1959. He died in 1979, having lived long enough to see his
dream of space travel become a reality.
The great
rocket pioneer Robert Goddard had died four days before the end of World
War II, but with the dawn of the space age, he was at last accorded the
recognition he deserved. NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center was dedicated
on May 1, 1959. The following year, the United States government awarded
Goddards widow, Esther, $1 million in settlement for the governments
use of more than 200 of Goddards patents for rocket hardware.
The race
to outer space was on. In 1961, President Kennedy committed the United
States to landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to
Earth by the end of the decade. The successful Apollo program was
the result, an effort initiated primarily for political posturing but
nevertheless achieving superb scientific goals.
With the
close of the 20th century, our generation has been privileged to witness
several lunar landings and the continued opening of the solar system frontiers,
with the exploration of eight of the nine planets and dozens of natural
satellites, comets, and asteroids.
Centuries
hence, the scientist and science writer Carl Sagan once wrote, when
current social and political problems may seem as remote as the problems
of the Thirty Years War are to us, our age may be remembered chiefly for
one fact: It was the time when the inhabitants of the Earth first made
contact with the vast cosmos in which their small planet is embedded.
Indeed, we
are living in that privileged era that Tsiolkovsky, Oberth, Hohmann, Noordung,
Goddard, and other visionaries hoped would one day come.
Donald
Yeomans is a JPL senior research scientist and supervisor of the Lab's
Solar Systems Dynamics Group. He's also manager of NASA's Near-Earth Object
Program office, and, as such, his is often the voice that the public hears
reassuring them (thus far) that the latest Earth-crossing asteroid to
be spotted is not on a collision course with our planet. A writer
and rare-book collector as well as a scientist, he combined these roles
in his 1991 book Comets: A Chronological History of Observation, Science,
Myth, and Folklore, and he has written and lectured frequently about
the history of space science.
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