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Sputnik

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Sputnik

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The first animal in space, the dog Laika, was launched by the Russians inside Sputnik 2 on 3 November 1958. In a study of the effects of weightlessness the dog was housed in a sealed cabin for seven days and fed on a fluid diet. It did not survive.
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Russian postage stamp showing the first living creature in space, the dog Laika.
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Illustration depicting the orbit of the Russian satellite Sputnik in relation to the path of the moon.
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Sputnik 1, displayed on a stand before its launch. Sputnik was the first man-made object in space.
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The Semiorka R-7 rocket used to launch the Soviet Sputnik satellites.

Series of ten Soviet Earth-orbiting satellites launched from 1957 by R-7 rockets. Sputnik 1 was the first artificial satellite, launched on 4 October 1957. It weighed 84 kg/184 lb, with a 58 cm/23 in diameter, and carried only a simple radio transmitter, which allowed scientists to track the spacecraft as it orbited Earth. It burned up in the atmosphere 92 days later. The Sputnik research team was headed by Sergei Korolev. Sputniks were superseded in the early 1960s by the Cosmos series.

Sputnik 2, launched on 3 November 1957, weighed about 500 kg/1,100 lb and had on board the dog Laika, the first living creature in space. There was no provision for returning the dog to Earth, and it died in space. Later Sputniks were test flights of the Vostok spacecraft.



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Sputnik takes place in the courtyard of the Bluecoat in School Lane today and tomorrow at 11am, 2pm and 4pm.
Sputnik jumped from a skydiving aircraft at an altitude of 4,500m and reached an average speed of 250kph.
RED MOON RISING: Sputnik and the Hidden Rivalries that Ignited the Space Age MATTHEW BRZEZINSKI Following the end of World War II, the United States and Russia, erstwhile allies, began to vie for technological and military supremacy.
 
 
 
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