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![]() Here I come again, a few weeks after getting a bit of reaction by posting a summary of the second volume of Anton Pervushin's _Bitva za Zvezdy_. Here's a summary of volume 1, speeded along by a couple of cloudy nights at Kitt Peak and fortunately finished just before our classes statr for the fall. Once again, I shamelessly stress material that is new to me or puts familiar events in a different light. Bitva za Zvezdy, tom 1: Raketnye Sistemy Dokosmicheskoi Ery (Battle for the Stars: Rocket Systems Before the Space Age) subtitle page Cosmonautics in the pre-space age 2003, AST (Moscow) (www.ast.ru), ISBN 5-17-015662-6 __________________________________________________ ________________________ Introduction - he comes clean on his particular interest in the projects that never made it to metal, illustrating the point by way of a bit of alternative history: USSR orbits "Sputnik" in 1957. World press yawns, seeing it as simply a response to US Orbiter of 1956. Cognoscento note that it is much larger, carries biological specimens. Korolev follows with actual Sputnik 1 and openly discussed these plans beforehand. It is clearly a prototype spaceplane with space for a pilot.Eisenhower counsels caution, sets meetings and lays out a decade plan, trying to restrain public opinion. Lyndon Johnson pushes for a faster program, including Dyna-Soar. Lavochkin announces a booster - Pobeda - based on an ICBM - which can launch a winged spacecraft fromanywhere on Earth. Vladimir Ilyushin becomes the first man in orbit in 1959, in the 5-ton Krasnaya Zvezda spacecraft. Overshoots landing sote by 1000 km. Eisenhower publicly announces commitement to Dyna-Soar. Meanwhile Ilyushin's world tour causes a global sensation. Six more Vostok booster flights follow in 1959-60. One cosmonaut is lost on re-entry; a second, Sergei Shiborin, dies when retrofire fails and his spacecdraft remains in orbit. USSR showers European press with information and plans, wielding great political influence. Nixon elected in 1960; the space rac isn't a major campaign issue. USSR announces a new kind of armed force, tactical space forces as well as nuclear-armed satellites in high orbit. As a show of force, 15 such military spaceplanes are launched , maneuvering to make clear the potential of targeting New York. Penkovski provides details on the system, executed for treason. US administration panics. Nixon personally pushes Dyna-Soar. 1961 - Cuban fiasco as contras are repulsed. USSR seriusly damages carrier Enterprise with conventional space-based weapons. Their trajectories do not allow determination of a point of origin. Nixon gives a speech on May 25, 1961, arguing in familiar words for the importajce of space to the US. Commits to a lunar progtram. UN discusses treaty on outer space, derailed by US/USSR maneuvers. This leaves territorial claims possible. 1966 - Gemini 2 approaches Karansnaya Zvezda 5, revered by USSR as a hero's tomb, interested in intelligence value. This begins the Lunar War, as ity is foired on by sacepanes iwth Nudelmann cannon. Gemini 2 is destroyed. US attacks and overwhelms Soyuz-3 station in low equatorial orbit. Sotka, B70, and Blackbord all used to launch small spaceplanes as things heat up. 1969 - Nixon announces impending lunarmission. Meanwhile, Gagarin and Leonov become first on Moon, declare it a soviet socialist republic. Bases are established, USSR announces relocation of its strategic deterrent to lunar surface. Young US Communist Dennis Tito gains notoriety as first American to work at Soviet Selena-1 base, becvomes as well known as Elvis, who sings "Cosmonaut Love". NASA moves forward with LUNEX plan on its own. USAF pushed "High Frontier" program, commencing with (failed) Apollo-X mission to attack Soviet lunar assets. President Johnson hopes to gain in next step, announcesw NERVA mission to Mars. But again - Gagarin and Leonov ride what's basically a pair of Salyuts there, proclaim anotherSSR. Meanwhile, in the US, the Presidency is won in 1976 bu the candidate of the Communist Party, Dennis Tito, and a new aera in world relations begins... (hmm, Pat Flannery might have trouble topping that - and it's way too dense for me to have done justice so tersely) He notes that this whole scheme involves space systems that were seriously proposed and designed). __________________________________________________ ________________________ ch 1 - spaceships before the space age Reviews early SF, especially from Russian authors. Loving details on how they imagined the technology, with a uniforlmy drawn set of cross-sections and views. Starts with discourse on where space begins, arguing that intent is important in looking at plans and schemes. Says he traces ideas more than names, but does bring up a slew of Russian writers I was unfamiliar with. Jules Verne and the Columbiad Le Faure (?) and Graf's three space cannon novels Cosmic slings (catapults) Graffin's cosmic ballista Andrei Platonov's 1926 lunar passenger projectile centrifugally launched Aerostats and dirigibles (mentioned how little understood was extent of our atmosphere). Sokovnin's jet dirigible Gravitational shields Dumas, HG Wells Alexander Bogdanov and his 1908 minus-material Kurt Lasswitz's Martian polar stations Light-powered craft Boris Krasnogorskii's "On Ether Waves" Electric craft Radioactive propulsion The emperor's rockets and Wan Hu A short history of ancient/mediaeval rockets Rocket-powered planes Interplanetary rockets (I seem to recall a story about Pushkin - the writer, not some sort of artillery - witnessing a demonstration of military rockets being fired from a submerged craft in a Russian river circa 1840, an invention which was still sadly lacking any means to navigate underwater. Where is an index when you need one, so I could be sure that's what was reported?) __________________________________________________ ________________________ 2. The Third Cosmic Reich Grip of their engineers on the imagination illustrated by a tabloid piece originally in English, but which seems to have real legs in Russia: "On April 2, 1991 (there are no chance dates in mythology) a US Coast Guard cutter fished out of the Atlantic a downed space capsule with a crew of three. Imagine their surprise to discover that the crew were Luftwaffe officers who had left our planet 47 years earlier at the height of World Ear II. The flight was undertaken on Hitler's direct orders, using a modified V-2. They spent all 47 years in suspended animation" This attests to the fascination with the admitted technical prowess of the Reich's engineers. VfR, HermannOberth Max Walse's rocket planes Franz von Heft's rockets Rocket-powered planes and Fritz von Opel's rocket glider Frau im Mond VfR to Raketenflugplatz Peenemunde (it was here that I realized what the "Fau-2" mentioned here and there was, a phonetic expression of the German V-2) V-1 and V-2 in test and in war A-3s were regularly recovered for reuse Piloted rockets, rumors of a few launched A-9/10s based on mystery agents with radios killed in boats off US East Coast V-3 long-range artillery Heinkel experimental rocket planes (He-176) Glider Institute rocket planes Messerschmidt, Me-163 development Competing rocket planes Arado E-348 Bachem BP-20, which became the Natter Saenger space bomber Flying disks of the Third Reich circular-winged craft date at least to 1915 in US; in 1909, Anatoli Ufimtsev built (but never successfully flew) the Spheroplane 1/2. In Germany: Schreiver and Gabermol built model 1 ("winged wheel"), with test flight in Feb 1941 near Prague. Model 2 ("vertical plane" or V-7), larger, space for two prone pilots, test flown 17 May 1944 Reached 288 km/hr, near record, 200 horizontally. Another variant ("Diskolyot") was built by the Chesko Morava factory, using Walter rocket engines. Model 3 (Bellontse disk) (Bellontse, Schriever, and Mite). Huge design, diameters 38 and 68 meters, to use 12 jet engines (probably Jumo-04 or BMW-003). Looks just like the C-57D or Jupiter II. a Describes first and last test flight on Feb 19, 1945. Claims 15 km altitude and 2200 mn/s after 3 minutes, and during flight it was maneuvering back and forth The multimillion RM object was destroyed at war's end. In 1958, the engine builder Schauberger wrote that the model which had flown was destroyed by explosives experts. Mentions reported extremely-high-performance disk Haunebu 2, which resembled nothing so much as the Millennium Falcon. "Alternative 1 - Nazis in space?" - concludes that any alternate history in which the first in space were Nazis would be unrecognizably different from ours, no matter what the UFOlogists say. (alright, stop that chortling and humming tunes from Tom Lehrer in the back row!) __________________________________________________ ________________________ ch. 4 - Rockets and rocket planes of Soviet Russia USSR was already worried by mid-1930s about aerial bombardment, since existing fighter planes could not reach even then-current bombing altitudes within feasible warning times. Several groups worked at rocket-powered boost gliders or rocket-boosted piston fighters. These projects were all, as they say in this part of the US, snakebit. The RNII winged rockets, with Korolev playing a key role, are described in great detail. The piloted RP-318 suffered an amazing series of setbacks - above all, the arrest of key engineers during the Stalinist terror. Moving on to the BI-1 rocket interceptor, whose development was interrupted by relocation of the factory and personnel beyond the Urals, it was given a piloted flight test by Bakhchivandzhi in May 1942, which was successful as a flight but ended with a flaming plane after a landing-gear failure. Development continued, claiming the life of Bakhchivandzhi in 1943 (for which he was made Hero of the Soviet Union 30 years later). Additional models (up to BI-7) were built up to the end of the war, but the military situation gave little need for the unique point-defense role of rocket interceptors by that time. (Oddly enough, the final models were glide-tested being dropped from a Lend-Lease B-25J). GIRD also developed a rocket interceptor, the 302, which was developped through drop tests from a Tu-2 and B-25. Attempts to boost aircraft performance continued with a rocket-assisted bomber, the twin-engine Pe-2. Variants with rockets in the tail or added to the wind engine pods were examined. Similar modifications were tested on the La-7 fighter as well. Ts-1 (or LL-1 flying laboratory) rocket plane. Verions with forward and backsewpt wings were tested. Mikoyan's bureau enjoyed some suucess with their I-270 (Zh-1) rocket interceptor, except that by the time it performed satisfactorily, the Mig-15 had similar speed and altitude and much greater endurance. D-346 inherited from German scientists, was a sleek swept-wing vehicle intended for supersonic flight. At various times, its glide tests sued drops from a Ju-388, Tu-4, and B-29 (some kind of international record). There's a photo under the starboard wing of what's described as a B-29, although I certainly couldn't tell the difference from a Tu-4. This reached 950 km/hr, and may have gone supersonic during divs in its final flights (1951). Pervushin also muses about a difference in historical approach - in the USSR, the way to the stars clearly began on wings. Alternative 2 - the aerospace forces of Comrade Stalin? Nope, way to many "ifs". __________________________________________________ ________________________ ch. 5 - The race for leadership The impact of Sputnik 1, East and West. Russian citizens now tend to see this as a triumphal human achievement, forgetting that at the time thre was a purely political spin. He quotes a Steven King novel attesting to the impact in the West, and wonders whether the Americans' sense of entitlement blinds them to reality, even to missing the areas in which they didn't have to gloss over anything. He makes what is either a grossly misleading generalization or an insightful observation (perhaps both) about the reaction to SF tales of space flight, claiming that while in the USSR fan clubs understood themselves to be about literary criticism, in the US they were about dreaming of making the unreal real. (Actually his spin on the US situation is less flattering than that phrase, maybe more like deliberate confusion of fantasy with reality). Goddard's work, patents, and his striking lack of influence on US rocket development in spite of having his name on a space flight center, medal, and all over the history books. The role of what became JPL. WAC-Corporal flights, Viking, Bumper. Vanguard and Explorer 1. He describes many of these launches in Novosti Kosmonavtiki-level detail. __________________________________________________ ________________________ ch. 6 - on the question of priority The first satellite, revised version. Eisenhower and the problem of satellite overflight and national sovereignty (and why should he worry about overflights after authorizing the U-2 program over the USSR?). He certainly underestimated the impact of the first satellite on world opinion - and so, for that matter, did the Soviet leadership. So back in the USSR - the role of captured V-2 parts and their reconstruction on Korolev et al., as they were still struggling with rocket planes. This experience and a visit to postwar Germany redirected Korolev's interest to "pure" rockets. Ten years of Soviet rocket development, starting with the V-2 analog R-1. The 1952 programs Geran' and Generator, which studied the spread of radioactive materials by exploding R-2 warheads over northeast Kazakhstan and studying the dispersal of liquid or pelletized radioactive tracers. The G-series rockets and their origins with the competing efforts by USSR and USA to gather in Germany the harvest of wartime technology. Korolev, Glushko, and Chelomei are already important players. Geophysical rockets in the USSR, 1949-1970. Those odd things on the sides of the intermediate models must be the separable-in-flight instrument units. One of these, a V-5A, reached a single-stage altitude record of 473 km in February 1958. Dogs were first (hmm, our black Lab seems to perk up his extensive ears at that). Beginning, apparently, with a V-1V in 1951 carrying Dezik and Tsygan to 101 km and their parachute descent. Later flights woth the V-1D tested high-altitude ejection and parachute descent. Some dogs were flown multiple times (Otvazhnaya four times), and showed that their physiological reactions were less stressed on later flights. Belyanka and Pestraya reached 473 km, and were examined very closely with electrocardiograms and X-rays (today we can forget how little was known and how much was feared about physiological reactions to even brief journeys into space). In addition to dogs, they also flew rabbits,white rats, and mice (which were especially used in reaction-time and response tests) in the suborbital program. The R-7 on the ground and in flight. Construction of the Baikonur facilities as the R-7 was developed into an operational missile system. Satellites "Object D", PS-1, and PS-2, and Korolev's campaign to prepare and launch one after Vanguard was announced. Pervushin reports that the September 1956 US launch in fact carried a satellite secretly but a third-stage failure kept it from orbit. (Doesn't everyone else claim that it was a dummy weight and was not intended as an orbital attempt??) In fact, on the next page, he writes that it was unconnected with the US space effort and was a purely military test of the Jupiter-C. (I'm confused). The Soviet tradition of placing electronics in pressurized vessels goes right back to PS-1 (whose launch also inaugurated the tradition of satellite boosters giving the controllers quite enough glitches to worry about). Oddly enough, like the Soviet leadership, even the people of OKB-1 didn't realize at first what a strong resonance the launch would produce worldwide, making space achievements, at least for a time, more important than ICBMs. PS-2 carried Laika shortly thereafter, and the "double" of object D made it the next year (after the original was lost in a launch failure on April 28). Alternative-3: The first American satellite. Could the US have orbited the first satellite? He feels Eisenhower made only one mistake, the huge one of not relying on von Braun's talent and experience. In his view, the American sense of entitlement (that could lead to the Pentahon plan for "closed skies" by orbiting myriads of metal shards to make satellites unworkable) also led to a failure of imagination and perception. Still, the perceived economic advantage of the US might have meant that Soviet reaction would have been muted, but their first satellite might then have been "Object D". Further reactions are sheer speculation - and it doesn't matter, since in the real world the space age was announced to all the world by that high-pitched call of "BEEP...BEEP...BEEP..." --------------------------------------------------------------------------- William C. Keel 205-348-1641 (office) Physics and Astronomy 205-348-5051 (fax) Box 870324 205-348-5050 (dept.) University of Alabama http://www.astr.ua.edu/keel Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0324 --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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![]() William C. Keel wrote: Flying disks of the Third Reich Hang on tight, and prepare to meet the Fuerballs, Kugelblitzs, and Flugelrads that make Nazi UFO bull**** so fun to read about: http://www.magonia.demon.co.uk/abwat.../naziufo1.html "Mein Fuhrer! I can FLY!" _________________________________________________ _________________________ ch. 4 - Rockets and rocket planes of Soviet Russia Lots of good data on them over at Mark Wade's site: http://www.astronautix.com/craftfam/ruslanes.htm Pat |
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On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 03:07:24 -0500, Pat Flannery
wrote: Hang on tight, and prepare to meet the Fuerballs, Kugelblitzs, and Flugelrads that make Nazi UFO bull**** so fun to read about: http://www.magonia.demon.co.uk/abwat.../naziufo1.html ....Oh yeah, and they even bring up the Vril Society. Roy Thomas had fun with that one over in _All Star Squadron_, back when DC had respect for Earth WWII and all that. OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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![]() OM wrote: ...Oh yeah, and they even bring up the Vril Society. Roy Thomas had fun with that one over in _All Star Squadron_, back when DC had respect for Earth WWII and all that. Yeah, until modern Russia and _its_ present news media, the Nazis had the gold medal for a crazy world view. Say, given _our_ media, and his Fox connections, maybe it's time for Rand to head to the Time Vortex at the South Pole: http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/...xperiment.html If we could _prevent_ Rupert Murdoch from being born.....Rupert's dad was at Gallipoli (where he wrote a news story saying that British troops were engaging in cannibalism, IIRC)....and one well-placed "Turkish" LAW round.... I'll get the the anti-tank rocket and the Delorean; you get the Fezzes and the coffee cups...it's time to change history! In the new and slightly different future, Rand Simberg will find himself as the voice of Homer Blimpson on Ted Turner's Fox Channel's "The Blimpsons"- a hilarious cartoon program about a none-too-bright family man who works at the Goodyear passenger dirigible factory: Bart Blimpson: "Ay carumba, dad! You filled her up with hydrogen by mistake!" Mr. Hindenburns: "Blimpson, for this I'll impale you on the Zeppelin mast atop the Empire State Skyscraper..." Homer Blimpson: "D'oh....when I catch up with that Right-Way Corrigan..." (cut to scene of Empire State Skyscraper with Mighty Joe Young climbing it, carrying Mae West in his hand) Mae: "When I asked you to come up and see me some time, I didn't mean quite this high up, big boy...oh.... you got a whole lot of "personality" down there, don't ya? Looks like it might be time to peel me a banana..." :-) Pat |
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On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 12:03:16 -0500, Pat Flannery
wrote: Say, given _our_ media, and his Fox connections, maybe it's time for Rand to head to the Time Vortex at the South Pole: ....Nah, he'd just fall into that big hole, wind up in Skartaris, and get eaten by a T-Rex. [thinks] ....So, can we get the paypal account going so we can send Rand *and* Jay, then? OM -- "No ******* ever won a war by dying for | http://www.io.com/~o_m his country. He won it by making the other | Sergeant-At-Arms poor dumb ******* die for his country." | Human O-Ring Society - General George S. Patton, Jr |
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