Article 6DJW7 A look at the surprising history of the earliest rocket pioneers

A look at the surprising history of the earliest rocket pioneers

by
Eric Berger
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6DJW7)
earth_to_mars_graphic_novel_full_ebook_j

Enlarge / Cover of the book From the Earth to Mars. (credit: Multiverse Media Inc.)

When did spaceflight begin? There is no single answer.

For newcomers to space, the beginning of time can be traced to as recently as December 2015. That's when SpaceX landed its Falcon 9 rocket successfully for the first time, opening the modern era of rapid, reusable spaceflight. Increasingly, anything that came before feels anachronistic.

But for those with a bit more perspective, the dawn of spaceflight can be pushed further back in time to the 1957 launch of the Soviet Sputnik satellite that shocked the world. This small orbiting spacecraft kicked off the frenetic space race that culminated with NASA's Apollo 11 Moon landing just a dozen years later.

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