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LEADER: 03163nam a2200337Ia 4500
001 012849830-7
005 20140910154256.0
008 110210s2011 nyua b 001 0 eng d
020 $a9781441978974 (pbk.)
020 $a1441978976 (pbk.)
035 0 $aocn751534401
043 $ae-ur---
090 $aTL1097$b.H86 2011
100 1 $aHuntress, Welsey T.
245 10 $aSoviet robots in the solar system :$bmission technologies and discoveries /$cWelsey T. Huntress and Mikhail Ya. Marov.
260 $aNew York ;$aLondon :$bSpringer,$c2011.
300 $axx, 453 p.$bill. (some col.) ;$c24 cm.
490 1 $aSpringer-Praxis books in space exploration
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [443]-448) and index.
505 0 $aIllustrations -- Author's Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Part 1: The pieces: people, institutions, rockets and spacecraft -- Chapter 1: Space race -- Chapter 2: Key players -- Chapter 3: Key institutions -- Chapter 4: Rockets -- Chapter 5: Spacecraft -- Part II: Putting the pieces together: flying to the Moon, Venus, and Mars -- Chapter 6: Breaking free of Earth -- Chapter 7: Launching to Mars and Venus -- Chapter 8: New spacecraft, new failures -- Chapter 9: Three more years of frustration -- Chapter 10: Finally success at the Moon and Venus, but Mars eludes -- Chapter 11: Robotic achievements in the shadow of Apollo -- Chapter 12: Landing on the Moon, Venus, and Mars -- Chapter 13: Closeouts on a Venus spacecraft, a Moon rocket, and desperation at Mars -- Chapter14: Turning from the Moon and Mars to Venus -- Chapter 15: Repeating success at Venus -- Chapter 16: Back to Venus again -- Chapter 17: And back to Venus yet again -- Chapter 18: The International Comet Halley campaign -- Chapter 19: Another try at Mars and its moon Phobos -- Chapter 20: The last gasp: Mars-96 -- Chapter 21: The Soviet lunar and planetary exploration legacy -- Appendices -- Bibliography -- Index.
520 $aThe Soviet robotic space exploration program began in a spirit of bold adventure and technical genius. It ended after the fall of the Soviet Union and the failure of its last mission to Mars in 1996. Soviet Robots in the Solar System chronicles the scientific and engineering accomplishments of this enterprise from its infancy to its demise. Each flight campaign is set into context of national politics and international competition with the United States. Together with its many detailed illustrations and images, Soviet Robots in the Solar System presents the most detailed technical description of Soviet robotic space flights provides a unique insight into programmatic, engineering, and scientific issues covers mission objectives, spacecraft engineering, flight details, scientific payload and results describes in technical depth Soviet lunar and planetary probes
651 0 $aOuter space$xExploration$zSoviet Union.
650 0 $aSpace robotics$zSoviet Union.
650 0 $aAstronautics.
650 0 $aAstronomy.
650 0 $aPhysics.
700 1 $aMarov, Mikhail I︠A︡kovlevich.
830 0 $aSpringer-Praxis books in space exploration.
988 $a20110810
049 $aHLSS
906 $0MH