
Animals in Space
From Research Rockets to the Space Shuttle
By:Ā Colin Burgess, Chris Dubbs
Paperback | 22 December 2006
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458 Pages
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Many readers will doubtless be astonished to learn that animals were being fired aloft in U.S. and Soviet research rockets in the late 1940s. In fact most people not only believe that the Russian space dog Laika was the first canine to be launched into space, but also that the high-profile, precursory Mercury flights of chimps Ham and Enos were the only primate flights conducted by the United States. In fact, both countries had sent literally dozens of animals aloft for many years prior to these events and continued to do so for many years after. Other latter-day space nations, such as France and China, would also begin to use animals in their own space research.
Animals in Space will explain why dogs, primates, mice and other rodents were chosen and tested, at a time when dedicated scientists from both space nations were determined to establish the survivability of human subjects on both ballistic and orbital space flights. It will also recount the way this happened; the secrecy involved and the methods employed, and offer an objective analysis of how the role of animals as spaceflight test subjects not only evolved, but subsequently changed over the years in response to a public outcry led by animal activists. It will explore the ways in which animal high-altitude and space flight research impacted on space flight biomedicine and technology, and how the results - both successful and disappointing - allowed human beings to then undertake that same hazardous journey with far greater understanding and confidence.
This book is intended as a detailed yet highly readable and balanced account of the history of animal space flights, and the resultant application of hard-won research to space technology and astrobiology. It will undoubtedly become the ultimate authority on animal space flights.
Industry Reviews
From the reviews:
"Animals in Space, a relentlessly factual account of animal endeavours in near Earth orbit. ... The programme and its relationship to animal rights is surely fertile material for any future popular science work on the subject. ... the history of animal space flight is long and fascinating. It deserves its place alongside the human stories of Vostok 1, Apollo 11 and Challenger." (New Scientist, April, 2007)
"Animals in Space is an extremely detailed, yet absorbing, history of animals used in the space programs around the world. ... In addition to a list of references at the end of each chapter, the book's documentation includes photos, charts, and lists of the U.S., Soviet, Chinese, French and international space missions (including Bion and International Space Station) that utilized animals as test and research subjects. ... the book will surely serve as a standard on the subject for years to come." (Advocacy for Animals, November, 2007)
Authors' preface | p. xvii |
Acknowledgements | p. xxiii |
Foreword | p. xxv |
List of figures | p. xxxi |
List of abbreviations and acronyms | p. xxxvii |
Prologue | p. xliii |
Taming the rockets: From wrath to research | p. 1 |
The man behind the vision | p. 1 |
Dreams of tomorrow | p. 2 |
Rocket man | p. 2 |
A minimum rocket | p. 3 |
The work begins | p. 4 |
Creating the rockets | p. 4 |
Higher and heavier | p. 5 |
Von Braun and Peenemunde | p. 5 |
Developing the A-5 | p. 6 |
Birth of the "terror weapon" | p. 6 |
Severe setbacks and relocation | p. 7 |
From Peenemunde to prison | p. 9 |
Learning the secrets | p. 9 |
A rocket named Waterfall | p. 10 |
The Resistance and the rocket | p. 10 |
The devastation begins | p. 11 |
Operation Paperclip | p. 12 |
A brutal bombardment | p. 13 |
Means of escape | p. 13 |
Death in a Berlin bunker | p. 15 |
Beating the Russians to the spoils of war | p. 15 |
A covert operation | p. 16 |
Operation Backfire | p. 17 |
V-2 rockets launched by the Allies | p. 18 |
An agreement with the Allies | p. 18 |
Working for the Americans | p. 19 |
A close-won race | p. 19 |
Sent to the steppes | p. 19 |
An engineer named Korolev | p. 20 |
Russia and the V-2 | p. 22 |
References | p. 22 |
Holloman and the Albert Hall of Fame | p. 25 |
An inauspicious start | p. 25 |
Punching a hole in the sand | p. 27 |
The coming of the missiles | p. 27 |
America takes over | p. 27 |
Thunder across the desert | p. 27 |
Holloman is born | p. 28 |
A place known as White Sands | p. 29 |
A prime testing facility | p. 29 |
Putting the pieces together | p. 30 |
A smaller sounding rocket | p. 30 |
A rocket for science, not war | p. 30 |
Expanding the scope | p. 30 |
Jumping on the bandwagon | p. 31 |
Project Blossom | p. 31 |
Animals to ride the rockets | p. 32 |
Unwilling but essential test subjects | p. 32 |
The programme's guiding spirit | p. 33 |
A unique proposal | p. 34 |
Exploring the possibilities | p. 35 |
An irresistible challenge | p. 36 |
The men, the mission and the monkeys | p. 37 |
Right place, right time | p. 37 |
A wonderful opportunity | p. 37 |
Project Albert | p. 38 |
Finding a way | p. 38 |
A suitable flight subject | p. 39 |
Training - with a note of caution | p. 40 |
The Albert capsule | p. 40 |
Too much monkey business | p. 41 |
The Albert flights begin | p. 41 |
Preparing Albert for flight | p. 42 |
Straps, supports and steel springs | p. 42 |
An end before a beginning | p. 45 |
"Disturbed about the whole thing" | p. 45 |
Identifying the problems | p. 46 |
Trying to find some answers | p. 46 |
Another monkey called Albert | p. 46 |
Henry and Simons try again | p. 47 |
If at first | p. 47 |
Simons departs, and solutions are sought | p. 48 |
The frustration of failure | p. 50 |
The final animal flight | p. 50 |
"The V-2 clobbered in" | p. 50 |
Aerobee flies | p. 51 |
Overcoming the difficulties | p. 51 |
A successor vehicle | p. 52 |
Partial success | p. 52 |
Breakthroughs at last | p. 54 |
Patricia and Michael | p. 55 |
A great milestone achieved | p. 55 |
Analysing the results | p. 55 |
The sad saga of an ill-tempered monkey | p. 58 |
References | p. 58 |
Pioneers of destiny: The suborbital dog flights | p. 61 |
Have you ever seen a rocket being launched? | p. 61 |
A programme in its infancy | p. 62 |
Preparing for biological flights | p. 62 |
Which animals would fly on rockets? | p. 63 |
Selecting the first animal cosmonauts | p. 63 |
Training dogs to fly in rockets | p. 64 |
"Return with victory": the first dog flight | p. 66 |
Tsygan and Dezik lead the way | p. 66 |
Launch time draws near | p. 67 |
Shaken but not stirred | p. 68 |
The life of a space dog | p. 68 |
Monitoring the health of the dogs | p. 69 |
The second series of dog flights | p. 70 |
Spacesuits and life-support systems | p. 70 |
One small step at a time | p. 73 |
Things change in 1956 | p. 74 |
Devising the best recovery system | p. 74 |
The West, and the worst kept secret | p. 75 |
Oleg Gazenko becomes involved | p. 76 |
A new and more powerful rocket | p. 77 |
The first R-2A dogs | p. 78 |
Creating a biological, orbital satellite | p. 81 |
A programme ends, another begins | p. 82 |
References | p. 84 |
High-altitude research | p. 85 |
A curious phenomenon | p. 85 |
First animal passengers | p. 86 |
On fire, but safe | p. 86 |
The hazards of high-altitude flight | p. 87 |
A fatal error | p. 88 |
Research balloons and rockets | p. 89 |
Conducting experiments with cosmic radiation | p. 89 |
The return of David Simons | p. 91 |
Problems continue | p. 92 |
Monkeys on instalment plans | p. 93 |
Summarising the flights | p. 94 |
Project Man High is born | p. 96 |
A man and a monkey? | p. 98 |
German rockets for science | p. 98 |
Kumulus and Cirrus rockets take to the skies | p. 99 |
Gerhard Zucker and his problem rockets | p. 100 |
"The Fastest Man Alive" | p. 101 |
Understanding forces that can kill | p. 101 |
On the path to medical research | p. 102 |
John Paul Stapp's "Gee-Whizz" machine | p. 103 |
The sad saga of the Holloman hogs | p. 103 |
Fast rides and fractures | p. 106 |
A sled called Sonic Wind | p. 106 |
The chimps and Project Whoosh | p. 107 |
Animals, humans and g-forces | p. 108 |
Faster than a speeding bullet | p. 109 |
First to volunteer | p. 109 |
Faster and still faster | p. 111 |
Forty times the pull of gravity | p. 112 |
Days of the Daisy Track | p. 113 |
Animal research continues | p. 114 |
The rocket sled bears | p. 115 |
An application to automobile safety | p. 115 |
Stapp's work continues at Holloman | p. 116 |
Chimpanzees begin training for space flight | p. 117 |
References | p. 118 |
Able and Baker lead the way | p. 121 |
NASA and the ARPA | p. 121 |
Project Mouse-In-Able | p. 121 |
A very small unit with limited space | p. 122 |
A victim of the space age | p. 125 |
Training the satellite mice | p. 125 |
Project "Down to Earth" | p. 126 |
The Army looks to space | p. 126 |
Gordo, a.k.a. Old Reliable | p. 127 |
Creating a Bioflight capsule | p. 127 |
Gordo blazes a trail | p. 127 |
Ready for lift-off | p. 128 |
Gordo takes flight | p. 129 |
Able and Baker | p. 130 |
The U.S. Navy joins in | p. 130 |
A monkey is chosen | p. 131 |
Miss Baker | p. 133 |
A ride aboard a Jupiter | p. 134 |
Preparations continue | p. 134 |
Set for launch | p. 136 |
"Are the monkeys safe?" | p. 136 |
Flight results come in | p. 138 |
Losing Able | p. 138 |
Miss Baker makes friends | p. 139 |
Moving on | p. 139 |
A much-loved monkey | p. 141 |
References | p. 141 |
The most famous dog in history | p. 143 |
A "simple" satellite | p. 143 |
Getting the R-7 to fly | p. 144 |
Space dogs move centre stage | p. 145 |
One very busy month | p. 147 |
Cutting corners on Sputnik 2 | p. 147 |
Selecting the dog to make history | p. 150 |
Preparing dogs for space travel | p. 151 |
Which dog would fly? | p. 153 |
Flight preparations | p. 155 |
A sense of excitement | p. 156 |
Pre-launch | p. 157 |
Laika makes history | p. 160 |
Sputnik 2 achieves orbit | p. 160 |
Critical problems arise | p. 161 |
The world takes note of the accomplishment | p. 162 |
Prayers and protests for an unnamed dog | p. 162 |
Hiding the facts | p. 163 |
Laika's legacy | p. 164 |
References | p. 165 |
Prelude to manned space flight | p. 169 |
SAM, or the School of Aviation Medicine | p. 169 |
Devising an escape rocket | p. 170 |
An animal space programme takes shape | p. 170 |
A monkey gets a name | p. 171 |
Sam rides a Little Joe | p. 172 |
Locating the capsule | p. 172 |
Tracking Sam | p. 172 |
An exemplary job | p. 175 |
The second flight | p. 176 |
From Sam to Miss Sam | p. 177 |
One fast, hot and crushing ride | p. 177 |
Of mice and men | p. 179 |
A meticulous sham | p. 179 |
Background history of Project Corona | p. 181 |
Setting things in place | p. 181 |
First flight of Discoverer | p. 182 |
A near-polar orbit and a predicament | p. 183 |
The mice that soared | p. 184 |
The first Corona camera | p. 185 |
A troubled programme | p. 187 |
Discoverer finally makes headway | p. 188 |
Making plans for primates | p. 188 |
Too much monkey business | p. 189 |
"X" marks the monkey | p. 190 |
Supervised training begins | p. 190 |
Conducting tests of the biopack | p. 191 |
The vanishing programme | p. 195 |
End of a mission | p. 195 |
Plans on hold | p. 197 |
A cover story revealed | p. 198 |
Sally, Amy and Moe | p. 199 |
Safely recovered | p. 199 |
Tests and more tests | p. 199 |
References | p. 200 |
Pioneers in a weightless world | p. 203 |
A crop of satellite dogs | p. 203 |
Perfecting the hardware for manned flight | p. 204 |
Developing Vostok | p. 204 |
Belka and Strelka orbit the Earth and return | p. 204 |
Dog watch | p. 205 |
Publicising space flights | p. 207 |
The race to put a man in orbit | p. 207 |
The Nedelin disaster | p. 208 |
Pchelka and Mushka | p. 209 |
Siberian weather and self-destruct mechanisms | p. 210 |
The final hurdles | p. 212 |
Ivan Ivanovich flies | p. 212 |
Dress rehearsal for a manned flight | p. 213 |
The final canine mission | p. 215 |
The passing of Korolev | p. 216 |
Twenty-two days in space | p. 217 |
The French Space Connection | p. 219 |
Rats and cats and pig-tail monkeys | p. 219 |
The Veronique rockets | p. 220 |
Establishing CERMA | p. 220 |
The first flights | p. 222 |
A programme begins with Hector | p. 222 |
Pollux takes to the skies | p. 225 |
A cat named Felicette | p. 225 |
Safe recovery | p. 227 |
Monkeys in the flight line | p. 228 |
Selecting the candidates | p. 229 |
Martine lifts off | p. 230 |
Polish rocketry | p. 234 |
Biological studies on mice | p. 234 |
References | p. 236 |
Biting the hand | p. 239 |
Ed Dittmer and the chimpanzees | p. 239 |
An "innovative experience" | p. 239 |
A demonstration flight required | p. 241 |
Setting up the chain of responsibility | p. 241 |
Mercury-Redstone 2 | p. 242 |
Training the candidates | p. 242 |
Trick or treat on the training machine | p. 243 |
Chimpanzee subject 65 | p. 244 |
Choosing the best candidates | p. 245 |
Ham is given the task | p. 249 |
Into the unknown | p. 249 |
Ham prepares to make history | p. 249 |
MR-2 and a primate passenger | p. 251 |
Delays and more delays | p. 251 |
Lift-off! | p. 251 |
Monitoring the flight | p. 252 |
Heading for a splashdown | p. 253 |
Recovering the capsule | p. 253 |
A little shaken but safe | p. 255 |
Back home again | p. 255 |
Enough of the glory | p. 255 |
Death of a true space pioneer | p. 257 |
A much beloved chimpanzee | p. 258 |
Understanding Enos | p. 259 |
Beaten to the punch | p. 259 |
Defeat, and the road to recovery | p. 260 |
An American in orbit | p. 260 |
The space chimps go back into training | p. 260 |
Enos: man or chimpanzee? | p. 261 |
One troublesome primate | p. 262 |
A chimp behaving badly | p. 263 |
Enos in orbit | p. 264 |
The reluctant chimponaut | p. 265 |
Countdown and lift-off | p. 265 |
A voice from orbit | p. 267 |
One very irritated space traveller | p. 268 |
Retrofire, and the journey home | p. 268 |
Facing the press | p. 268 |
Paving the way for John Glenn | p. 269 |
A one-time space traveller | p. 269 |
Results of the chimpanzee flights | p. 269 |
Goliath and Scatback | p. 270 |
The mighty Atlas rocket | p. 270 |
A rocket to carry men into space | p. 271 |
Test flights | p. 271 |
Overcoming a bad reputation | p. 272 |
The sad saga of Goliath | p. 272 |
Victim of a failure | p. 272 |
A monkey called Scatback | p. 273 |
Lost at sea | p. 273 |
Further failures | p. 274 |
References | p. 275 |
Cosmos/Bion: The age of the biosatellites | p. 277 |
Dogs spend 22 days in space | p. 277 |
The effects of space flight | p. 278 |
Studying the biomedical problems of space flight | p. 279 |
Life sciences comes to Ames Research Center | p. 279 |
NASA'S biosatellites | p. 280 |
Space biology gets more scientific | p. 280 |
The first primate biosatellite | p. 282 |
Cold War collaboration | p. 284 |
American participation in Cosmos/Bion | p. 285 |
Experiments on Cosmos/Bion 782 | p. 287 |
Cosmos 782 findings | p. 289 |
Cosmos 936 and 1129 | p. 290 |
Novel experiments on rats | p. 290 |
Cosmos continues despite Cold War | p. 292 |
Monkeys fly on Cosmos | p. 293 |
Politics and biosatellites in the 1990s | p. 297 |
The final Bion mission | p. 299 |
Animal rights groups pressure NASA | p. 299 |
Preparing monkeys for Bion 11 | p. 300 |
The tragedy of Bion 11 | p. 301 |
The impact of Bion | p. 302 |
References | p. 303 |
End of an era | p. 307 |
China looks to the future | p. 307 |
The T-7A rocket | p. 308 |
Mission experiments | p. 309 |
Choosing the canine candidates | p. 310 |
Project Gemini | p. 311 |
Early biological experiments | p. 311 |
Tortoises in a race to the moon | p. 312 |
The Zond programme | p. 312 |
Trouble on the outbound journey | p. 313 |
Zond splashes down | p. 313 |
More tortoises to the moon | p. 315 |
The Frog Otolith Experiment | p. 315 |
Preparation for flight | p. 317 |
Of rockets and pocket mice | p. 318 |
Tiny space travellers | p. 319 |
Bound for the moon | p. 320 |
More mice on Skylab | p. 321 |
Weaving webs in space | p. 323 |
Studying spiders | p. 324 |
First fish to fly | p. 324 |
Creating a tangled web | p. 324 |
Return to Earth | p. 326 |
"Surplus to Requirements" | p. 326 |
Coulston takes over | p. 328 |
A new animal facility | p. 329 |
Awareness and protests grow | p. 330 |
Preventable losses | p. 331 |
Formal charges laid | p. 331 |
An "arbitrary and capricious" decision | p. 333 |
End of an anthropoid era | p. 334 |
References | p. 335 |
Shuttling into space | p. 337 |
The era of the Space Shuttle | p. 337 |
Creating suitable habitats | p. 337 |
Solving the problems | p. 338 |
Shuttle life science begins | p. 339 |
Some serious monkey business | p. 341 |
Spacelab experiments | p. 342 |
The no-name monkeys | p. 343 |
Tragedy, and a lengthy hiatus | p. 344 |
Back to business again | p. 344 |
Rats and the meaning of life | p. 345 |
One giant leap for amphibians | p. 345 |
The very reluctant astronaut | p. 346 |
Froggie he did ride | p. 346 |
Some surprising developments | p. 347 |
Unexpected behaviour | p. 347 |
Spacelab and life sciences | p. 347 |
The first Spacelab life sciences mission | p. 348 |
A question of muscular atrophy | p. 348 |
Spacelab flies again | p. 349 |
Rodents lead the way in research | p. 351 |
Astronauts and AstroNewts | p. 351 |
Tanks, tests and transparent fish | p. 352 |
Flying fish and hornworms | p. 354 |
STS-90 Neurolab | p. 354 |
A veritable raft of experiments | p. 354 |
Spacelab, for the final time | p. 355 |
Rats in hiding | p. 357 |
Weightlessness and the development of muscles | p. 358 |
Spacemen and specimens | p. 358 |
A dwindling population | p. 359 |
Post-flight solutions | p. 360 |
Flightless birds and avian experiments | p. 360 |
The Russian quail egg story | p. 361 |
Beatles in orbit? | p. 362 |
China resumes biological flights | p. 363 |
Shenzhou and state secrecy | p. 363 |
Talking of taikonauts | p. 364 |
A second Shenzhou | p. 364 |
A programme shrouded in mystery | p. 365 |
Tragedy strikes again | p. 366 |
Sole survivors | p. 366 |
Not a place for stressed-out scorpions | p. 367 |
Shenzhou flights continue | p. 368 |
References | p. 370 |
Epilogue | p. 373 |
U.S. monkey research flights | p. 375 |
Soviet space dog programme | p. 379 |
U.S. biological rocket flights, 1946-1960 | p. 383 |
French biological rocket flights, 1961-1967 | p. 387 |
Chinese T-7 sounding rocket launches | p. 389 |
Bion research flights | p. 391 |
Space shuttle life science orbital flights | p. 393 |
Index | p. 397 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780387360539
ISBN-10: 0387360530
Series: Springer Praxis Books
Published: 22nd December 2006
Format: Paperback
Language: English
Number of Pages: 458
Audience: College, Tertiary and University
Publisher: Springer Nature B.V.
Country of Publication: US
Dimensions (cm): 24.41 x 16.99 x 2.36
Weight (kg): 0.89
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