|
Du bist hier: Referate Datenbank | Physik
| Space
Space
SPACE
Englisch Referat am 18.
10.1997
Andreas Liszt, 5BK
From our small world, called Earth - the blue planet, we
have gazed upon the cosmic ocean for untold thousands of years. Ancient
astronomers observed points of light that appeared to move among the stars. They
called these objects planets, meaning wanderers, and named them after Roman
deities - Jupiter, king of the gods; Mars, the god of war; Mercury, messenger of
the gods; Venus, the god of love and beauty, and Saturn, father of Jupiter and
god of agriculture. The stargazers also observed comets with sparkling tails,
and meteors or shooting stars apparently falling from the sky.
Science flourished during the European Renaissance.
Fundamental physical laws governing planetary motion were discovered, and the
orbits of the planets around the Sun were calculated. In the 17th century,
astronomers pointed a new device called the telescope at the heavens and made
startling discoveries.
But the years since 1959 have amounted to a golden age of
solar system exploration. Advancements in rocketry after World War II enabled
our machines to break the grip of Earth´s gravity and travel to the Moon
and to other planets.
The United States has sent automated spacecraft, then
human-crewed expeditions, to explore the Moon. Our automated machines have
orbited and landed on Venus and Mars, explored the Sun´s environment,
observed comets, and asteroids, and made close-range surveys while flying past
Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
These travelers brought a quantum leap in our knowledge and
understanding of the solar system. Through the electronic sight and other
“senses” of our automated spacecraft, color and complexion have been
given to worlds that for centuries appeared to Earth-bound eyes as fuzzy disks
or indistinct points of light. And dozen of previously unknown objects have been
discovered.
Future historians will likely view these pioneering flights
through the solar system as some of the most remarkable achievements of the 20th
century.
But from the moment we knew that we are only a small point
in a gigantic galaxis we had one question. And this question is still
unanswered: Are we alone ? Is something out there ?
It was a long way to reach the point on which we are today.
The rocket was not developed as a research tool. No - it was a weapon. The
earliest solid rocket fuel was a form of gunpowder, and the earliest recorded
mention of gunpowder comes from China late in the third century before Christ.
There were a lot of trials to start a rocket, but most of
them failed or crashed a view kilometers from the launch site.
On 3rd October 1942 a rocket roared aloft from Peenemuende,
followed ist programmed trajectory perfectly, and landed on target 193
kilometers away. This launch can fairly be said to mark the beginning of the
space age. The A4, this was the name of the rocket, the first succesful
ballistic rocket, ist the ancestor of practically every rocket flown in the
world today. Production of the A4 began in 1943 and the first A4s, now renamed
V2s, were launched against London in September 1944. The V-2 offensive came too
late to affect the course of the war. By April 1945, the German Army was in full
retreat everywhere and Hitler had committed suicide in his bunker in Berlin. The
rocket team had been ordered by Hitler to be exuecuted prevent their capture.
But they contacted the American forces before Hitlers´s SS henchmen could
reach the rocket team. On May 2, the same day Berlin fell to the Soviet Army,
von Braun and his rocket team entered American lines and safety. Fact is: Adolf
Hitler takes a big part in the developing of rockets.
Now I will give you a chronological overview of space
Exploration.
CHRONOLOGY OF
SPACE EXPLORATION
1912 Balloon flight - Discovered cosmic rays
(Europe)
1946 NRL V-2 rocket (USA)
1957 SPUTNIK 1 - First artificial satellite
(USSR)
1969 APOLLO 11 - First manned lunar landing
(USA)
1970 LUNA 17 - USSR Lunar Lander and
Rover
1973 SKYLAB - America´s first Space
Station
1990 Hubble Space Telescope (USA and
Europe)
1996 MARS 96
Future Missions
1998 Planet B - Japan Mars Orbiter
1999 STARDUST - USA Comet Sample
Return
2001 Pluto-Express (USA Pluto Flyby)
This was only a short overview of space explorations. It may
take over an hour to discuss all explorations. There were more than 150 trials
to explore our space. But almost 20% of them failed. A long time the USSR and
the U.S.A. didn´t work together. Each of them wanted to be better and
faster than the other. For example: the first man on the moon. The Americans won
this “competition”. Today, they work together, and it´s the
better way. There are no two parallel projects. This saves a lot of time and
money.
In the last weeks we have heard a lot of news of the Russion
space-station MIR. The mir module was launched on 19 February 1986. During the
ten years MIR has been orbiting earth, it has been home to 62 people from 24
crews, from more than a dozen countries including Afghanistan, Austria,
Bulgaria, France, Germany, Japan, Syria, United Kingdom and the United States.
One of these, Russian cosmonaut Dr. Valeri Polyakov, has spent a total of 22
months in space and holds the record for th longest consecutive days in space.
By now the technical instruments have been updated. In the last weeks there were
a lot of errors and malfunctions on board.
But why do we spent thousands of millions for such projects?
Only to get stones from the moon or mars of which we are not able to make
practical use? Space exploration seems to be unuseful. But there are a lot of
products developed in the space. For example our mobile telephones. First they
were use for space exploration, then for war and now every 7th person has an own
handy. But are not only technical by-products of space explorations. Medicaments
also are produced in the space.
Another question is how we can justify all the expeditions
on space-programmes when, we are still unable to feed all the people on our own
planet? I think money is not the point in this problem. It’s our society,
we wouldn’t life in a 1st world country, if we didn’t spend a lot of
money in our research departements.
There will be a lot of trials in the future and I am sure
that we will make greater discoveres than we have ever made. In the future we
will be able to use a higher, better and faster technology. Today we have
reached a point, where we are able to leave our planet without problems. But in
the future we will be able to reach a new dimension of space
exploration.
Quellennachweis:
NASA/JPL information summary “Our Solar System
at a Glance.”
Internet SPACE - History
USSR - History Reports
MIR Space
Station
U.S.A. - Government (official
reports)
UNO - International Space Center
(Vienna)
Chronik - “Das waren die achtziger Jahre”
(Bilder)
Guinnes Buch der Rekorde 1993 und 1995
(Bilder)S P A C
E
VOCABULARIES
ancestor........Vorfahre/-gänger
ancient.........aus alter
Zeit
to
fail.................fehlschlagen
to gaze..............starren
to launch a rocket.....eine
Rakete zünden
malfunction......Fehlfunktion
to
observe.......beobachten/überwachen/studieren
quantum leop......riesiger
Sprung
sparkling......funkelnd
suicide............Selbstmord
From our small world, called Earth - the blue planet, we
have gazed upon the cosmic ocean for untold thousands of years. Ancient
astronomers observed points of light that appeared to move among the stars. They
called these objects planets, meaning wanderers, and named them after Roman
deities -
Jupiter, king of the gods
Mars, the god of war
Mercury, messenger of the gods
Venus, the god of love and beauty
Saturn, father of Jupiter and god of
agriculture
The stargazers also observed comets with sparkling tails,
and meteors or shooting stars apparently falling from the sky.
Science flourished during the European Renaissance.
Fundamental physical laws governing planetary motion were discovered, and the
orbits of the planets around the Sun were calculated. In the 17th century,
astronomers pointed a new device called the telescope at the heavens and made
startling discoveries.
But the years since 1959 have amounted to a golden age of
solar system exploration. Advancements in rocketry after World War II enabled
our machines to break the grip of Earth´s gravity and travel to the Moon
and to other planets.
The United States has sent automated spacecraft, then
human-crewed expeditions, to explore the Moon. Our automated machines have
orbited and landed on Venus and Mars, explored the Sun´s environment,
observed comets, and asteroids, and made close-range surveys while flying past
Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
These travelers brought a quantum leap in our knowledge and
understanding of the solar system. Through the electronic sight and other
“senses” of our automated spacecraft, color and complexion have been
given to worlds that for centuries appeared to Earth-bound eyes as fuzzy disks
or indistinct points of light. And dozen of previously unknown objects have been
discovered.
Future historians will likely view these pioneering flights
through the solar system as some of the most remarkable achievements of the 20th
century.
But from the moment we knew that we are only a small point
in a gigantic galaxis we had one question. And this question is still
unanswered: Are we alone ? Is something out there ?
It was a long way to reach the point on which we are today.
The rocket was not developed as a research tool. No - it was a weapon. The
earliest solid rocket fuel was a form of gunpowder, and the earliest recorded
mention of gunpowder comes from China late in the third century before Christ.
There were a lot of trials to start a rocket, but most of
them failed or crashed a view kilometers from the launch site.
On 3rd October 1942 a rocket roared aloft from Peenemuende,
followed ist programmed trajectory perfectly, and landed on target 193
kilometers away. This launch can fairly be said to mark the beginning of the
space age. The A4, this was the name of the rocket, the first succesful
ballistic rocket, ist the ancestor of practically every rocket flown in the
world today. Production of the A4 began in 1943 and the first A4s, now renamed
V2s, were launched against London in September 1944. The V-2 offensive came too
late to affect the course of the war. By April 1945, the German Army was in full
retreat everywhere and Hitler had committed suicide in his bunker in Berlin. The
rocket team had been ordered by Hitler to be exuecuted prevent their capture.
But they contacted the American forces before Hitlers´s SS henchmen could
reach the rocket team. On May 2, the same day Berlin fell to the Soviet Army,
von Braun and his rocket team entered American lines and safety. Fact is: Adolf
Hitler takes a big part in the developing of rockets.
Now I will give you a chronological overview of space
Exploration.
This was only a short overview of space explorations. It may
take over an hour to discuss all explorations. There were more than 150 trials
to explore our space. But almost 20% of them failed. A long time the USSR and
the U.S.A. didn´t work together. Each of them wanted to be better and
faster than the other. For example: the first man on the moon. The Americans won
this “competition”. Today, they work together, and it´s the
better way. There are no two parallel projects. This saves a lot of time and
money.
In the last weeks we have heard a lot of news of the Russion
space-station MIR. The mir module was launched on 19 February 1986. During the
ten years MIR has been orbiting earth, it has been home to 62 people from 24
crews, from more than a dozen countries including Afghanistan, Austria,
Bulgaria, France, Germany, Japan, Syria, United Kingdom and the United States.
One of these, Russian cosmonaut Dr. Valeri Polyakov, has spent a total of 22
months in space and holds the record for th longest consecutive days in space.
By now the technical instruments have been updated. In the last weeks there were
a lot of errors and malfunctions on board.
But why do we spent thousands of millions for such projects?
Only to get stones from the moon or mars of which we are not able to make
practical use? Space exploration seems to be unuseful. But there are a lot of
products developed in the space. For example our mobile telephones. First they
were use for space exploration, then for war and now every 7th person has an own
handy. But are not only technical by-products of space explorations. Medicaments
also are produced in the space.
Another question is how we can justify all the expeditions
on space-programmes when, we are still unable to feed all the people on our own
planet? I think money is not the point in this problem. It’s our society,
we wouldn’t life in a 1st world country, if we didn’t spend a lot of
money in our research departements.
There will be a lot of trials in the future and I am sure
that we will make greater discoveres than we have ever made. In the future we
will be able to use a higher, better and faster technology. Today we have
reached a point, where we are able to leave our planet without problems. But in
the future we will be able to reach a
new dimension of space exploration.
SPACE
Andreas Liszt, 5BK
From our small world, called Earth - the blue planet,
we have gazed upon the cosmic ocean for untold thousands of years. Ancient
astronomers observed points of light that appeared to move among the stars. They
called these objects planets, meaning wanderers, and named them after Roman
deities - Jupiter, king of the gods; Mars, the god of war; Mercury, messenger of
the gods; Venus, the god of love and beauty, and Saturn, father of Jupiter and
god of agriculture. The stargazers also observed comets with sparkling tails,
and meteors or shooting stars apparently falling from the sky.
Science flourished during the European Renaissance.
Fundamental physical laws governing planetary motion were discovered, and the
orbits of the planets around the Sun were calculated. In the 17th century,
astronomers pointed a new device called the telescope at the heavens and made
startling discoveries.
But the years since 1959 have amounted to a golden age
of solar system exploration. Advancements in rocketry after World War II enabled
our machines to break the grip of Earth´s gravity and travel to the Moon
and to other planets.
The United States has sent automated spacecraft, then
human-crewed expeditions, to explore the Moon. Our automated machines have
orbited and landed on Venus and Mars, explored the Sun´s environment,
observed comets, and asteroids, and made close-range surveys while flying past
Mercury, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
These travellers brought a quantum leap in our knowledge
and understanding of the solar system. Through the electronic sight and other
“senses” of our automated spacecraft, colour and complexion have
been given to worlds that for centuries appeared to Earth-bound eyes as fuzzy
disks or indistinct points of light. And dozen of previously unknown objects
have been discovered.
Future historians will likely view these pioneering
flights through the solar system as some of the most remarkable achievements of
the 20th century.
But from the moment we knew that we are only a small
point in a gigantic galaxy we had one question. And this question is still
unanswered: Are we alone ? Is something out there ?
It was a long way to reach the point on which we are
today. The rocket was not developed as a research tool. No - it was a weapon.
The earliest solid rocket fuel was a form of gunpowder, and the earliest
recorded mention of gunpowder comes from China late in the third century before
Christ.
There were a lot of trials to start a rocket, but most
of them failed or crashed a view kilometres from the launch
site.
On 3rd October 1942 a rocket roared aloft from
Peenemuende, followed is programmed trajectory perfectly, and landed on target
193 kilometres away. This launch can fairly be said to mark the beginning of the
space age. The A4, this was the name of the rocket, the first successful
ballistic rocket, is the ancestor of practically every rocket flown in the world
today. Production of the A4 began in 1943 and the first A4s, now renamed V2s,
were launched against London in September 1944. The V-2 offensive came too late
to affect the course of the war. By April 1945, the German Army was in full
retreat everywhere and Hitler had committed suicide in his bunker in Berlin. The
rocket team had been ordered by Hitler to be executed prevent their capture. But
they contacted the American forces before Hitlers´s SS henchmen could reach
the rocket team. On May 2, the same day Berlin fell to the Soviet Army, Von
Braun and his rocket team entered American lines and safety. Fact is: Adolf
Hitler takes a big part in the developing of rockets.
It may take over an hour to discuss all explorations.
There were more than 150 trials to explore our space. But almost 20% of them
failed. A long time the USSR and the U.S.A. didn’t work together. Each of
them wanted to be better and faster than the other. For example: the first man
on the moon. The Americans won this “competition”. Today, they work
together, and it’s the better way. There are no two parallel projects.
This saves a lot of time and money.
In the last weeks we have heard a lot of news of the
Russian space-station MIR. The MIR module was launched on 19 February 1986.
During the ten years MIR has been orbiting earth, it has been home to 62 people
from 24 crews, from more than a dozen countries including Afghanistan, Austria,
Bulgaria, France, Germany, Japan, Syria, United Kingdom and the United States.
One of these, Russian cosmonaut Dr. Valeri Polyakov, has spent a total of 22
months in space and holds the record for the longest consecutive days in space.
By now the technical instruments have been updated. In the last weeks there were
a lot of errors and malfunctions on board.
But why do we spent thousands of millions for such
projects? Only to get stones from the moon or mars of which we are not able to
make practical use? Space exploration seems to be unuseful. But there are a lot
of products developed in the space. For example our mobile telephones. First
they were use for space exploration, then for war and now every 7th person has
an own handy. But are not only technical by-products of space explorations.
Medicaments also are produced in the space.
Another question is how we can justify all the
expeditions on space-programmes when, we are still unable to feed all the people
on our own planet? I think money is not the point in this problem. It’s
our society, we wouldn’t life in a 1st world country, if we didn’t
spend a lot of money in our research departments.
There will be a lot of trials in the future and I am
sure that we will make greater discoveries than we have ever made. In the future
we will be able to use a higher, better and faster technology. Today we have
reached a point, where we are able to leave our planet without problems. But in
the future we will be able to reach a new dimension of space
exploration.
|