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Space Exploration By Gina Wike
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Light from Stars When you see the light from a star, it is light that left it many years ago. Light travels very fast, but the distances in space are so great that it takes years for the light to reach Earth.-sometimes tens of thousands of years. The light and other energy leaving a star are forms of radiation.
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Radiation Remember: radiation is energy transmitted through electromagnetic waves. Because of electric and magnetic properties of this energy, it is called electromagnetic radiation. Electromagnetic waves carry energy through both empty space and matter.
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How do we hear astronauts in space? Sound waves are mechanical waves; they can’t travel through space So, how do we hear astronauts in space?
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How do we hear astronauts in space? When they speak into a microphone, the sound is converted into electromagnetic waves called radio waves. The radio waves travel through space and back to Earth where they are converted back into sound.
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Electromagnetic Spectrum
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All electromagnetic waves have different wavelengths, but the all travel at the speed of light in a vacuum- 300,000 km/s in a vacuum
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2 types of telescopes- optical and radio Optical telescopes produce magnified images of objects; they use the visible light portion of the electromagnetic spectrum Most optical telescopes are housed in buildings called observatories. Radio telescopes are used to study radio waves that are in space.
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Hubble Space Telescope Hubble Space Telescope is an optical telescope that is in space. It was put into space in 1990 by the space shuttle Discovery.
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Hubble Space Telescope The advantage of having a telescope in space is that we do not have to look through Earth’s atmosphere—pictures are much better because of this.
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Hubble Space Telescope When Hubble was first put into space it did not work properly because of an error in the shaping of the mirror; it was repaired by astronauts from the Endeavor in 1993.
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Satellites A satellite is any object that revolves around another object.
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Satellites When an object enters space, it will travel in a straight line until the Earth’s gravity pulls it back toward Earth. Because the satellite is traveling forward and falling toward Earth at the same time, the satellite will travel in a curved path around Earth known as an orbit.
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2 Types of Satellites- Natural & Artificial There are both natural and artificial satellites.
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Natural Satellites The moon is a natural satellite. It orbits the Earth.
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Sputnik- 1 st Artificial Satellite
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Sputnik 1 Sputnik was launched by the Soviets in 1957, marking the beginning of space exploration.
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Space Probes A space probe is an instrument that gathers information and sends it back to Earth. Space probes travel far into space. Examples: Voyager I and II (didn’t land on a planet), Viking (did land), Galileo (dropped probe onto Jupiter)
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Space Program & Important People Yuri Gagarin & President Kennedy
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Yuri Gagarin In 1961, Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space.
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President Kennedy President Kennedy called for the US to put the first man on the moon by the end of the decade.
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Projects that led to man on the moon Project Mercury Project Gemini Project Apollo
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Project Mercury Project Mercury- orbit a crewed spacecraft around Earth and bring it back safely
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Alan Shepard 1961- Alan Shepard became 1st US citizen in space Was not on Apollo 13 because of an ear infection Apollo 14-oldest man on moon (47) Hit golf balls on moon
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John Glenn 1962- John Glenn became the 1st US citizen to orbit the Earth
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Project Gemini Project Gemini- two teams of astronauts met and connected
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Project Gemini
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Project Apollo Project Apollo- July 20, 1969 Apollo 11 landed on the moon Saturn V that launched Apollo 11
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Project Apollo Neil Armstrong was the first man to walk on the man.
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Neil Armstrong “That’s one step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.”
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Apollo 11- Edwin Aldrin Edwin Aldrin was the 2nd man to walk on the moon. He and Armstrong explored for 2 hours.
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Apollo 11- Michael Collins Michael Collins remained in the Command Module. A total of 6 lunar landings brought back 2000 samples of moon rock. The program ended in 1972.
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Space Shuttle A space shuttle is a reusable spacecraft that transports astronauts, satellites, and other materials to and from space.
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Space Shuttle At launch, the space shuttle orbiter stands on end and is connected to an external liquid-fuel tank and two solid-fuel booster engines.
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Space Shuttle When the shuttle reaches an altitude of about 45 km, the emptied solid-fuel booster rockets drop off and parachute back to earth. They are recovered and reused again.
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Space Shuttle The larger liquid fuel tank eventually separates and falls back to Earth. It is not recovered.
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Space Shuttle Once the space shuttle reaches space, it orbits Earth.
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Space Shuttle Landing At the end of a mission, the space shuttle orbiter glides back to Earth and lands like an airplane. The parachute slows it down.
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Space Shuttle Challenger Disaster January 28, 1986 7 crew members died- one of which was teacher Christina McAuliffe Mc Auliffe was first member of the Teachers in Space Program
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Challenger
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Space Stations A space station has living quarters, work and exercise space, and all the equipment and support systems needed to live and work in space.
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Skylab Skylab was a space station put up in 1973. In 1979 it was abandoned and fell back into earth’s atmosphere and burned up
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Skylab Launch
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Mir Mir was a Soviet space station.
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International Space Station International Space Station serves as a research lab for several countries. Permanent crew Scientists on Earth have almost instant access to experiments and can modify when needed
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