Released from a Russian museum, it will hang nicely from the rafters at our space museum at work.

Manufactured by the Soviet Academy of Sciences — the group that held responsibility for the general scientific leadership of Sputnik and the supply of research instruments — this full-scale shell measures 2’x7’ long.

Sputnik was the first object placed in orbit, back in the U.S.S.R., October 1957. It was the beep-beep-beep heard round the world. Its radio transmitters provided data on the Earth’s ionosphere and on the structure and temperature of the upper atmosphere. More significantly, its creation ignited the historic Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union. Its radio signal was easily detectable by ham radio enthusiasts (20 and 40 MHz), and the 65° orbital inclination and duration of its orbit made its flight path cover virtually the entire inhabited Earth, proving to all that they had done it.

4 responses to “Sputnik”

  1. Such a classic design. Great acquisition!

  2. thx. and now hanging overhead, the way bricks don’t

  3. and for a sense of the Sputnik moment, consider the inspiration it had for the pursuit of science and engineering: Notice Sputnik ’57-58 was a turning point, from the local nadir… to a boom after Kennedy’s moonshot speech in ’62. The Apollo moon landings (’69 to ’72) were the peak. The Shuttle era was a large disappointment… and perhaps the results from Viking ’76 showing no carbon signatures on Mars (now known to be a GCMS sample prep error producing erroneous results, but at the time, the conclusion was that Mars was more "dead" than even our moon). Source: web.mit.edu/dikaiser/www/CWB.html

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