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The signals of Sputnik 1 continued for 22 days. The Space Age is a period encompassing the activities related to the Space Race, space exploration, space technology, and the cultural developments influenced by these events, beginning with the launch of Sputnik 1 on October 4, 1957,[1] and continuing to the present.This period is characterized by changes in emphasis on particular areas of space exploration and applications. Initially, the United States and the Soviet Union invested unprecedented amounts of resources in breaking records and being first to meet milestones in crewed and uncrewed exploration. The United States established the National Aviation and Space Administration (NASA) and the USSR-established Kosmicheskaya programma SSSR to meet these goals. This period of competition gave way to cooperation between those nations and emphasis on scientific research and commercial applications of space-based technology.[2][3]Eventually other nations became space-fairing. They formed organizations such as the European Space Agency (ESA), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), the Indian Space Research Organization (ISRO), and the China National Space Administration (CNSA). When the USSR dissolved the Russian Federation continued their program as Roscosmos.[2][3]Recently some journalists have used the phrase, “New Space Age” in reference to a resurgence of innovation and public interest in space exploration as well as commercial applications of low Earth orbit (LEO) and more distant destinations. New developments include the participation of billionaires in crewed space travel, including space tourism.[4][5]Table of ContentsHistory[edit]The 1950s-1970s[edit]The 1970s to 2010s[edit]Modern era[edit]Chronology[edit]Earlier suborbital spaceflights[edit]Cultural influences[edit]Arts and architecture[edit]Music[edit]See also[edit]References[edit]External links[edit]Interactive media[edit]History[edit]The 1950s-1970s[edit]The Space Age was an era of new military, political, technological, and scientific developments which began with the Soviet Union’s October 4, 1957, launch of Earth’s first artificial satellite Sputnik 1.[6] Weighing 83.6\u00a0kg (184.3\u00a0lb) and orbiting the Earth once every 98 minutes,.[6][7] The Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union began in 1957 with the launching of the first artificial satellite Sputnik 1. The race resulted in rapid advances in rocketry, materials science, and other areas. One of the underlying motivations for the space race was military. The two nations were also in a nuclear arms race following the Second World War. Both nations made use of German missile technology and scientists from their missile program. The advantages, in aviation and rocketry, required for delivery systems were seen as necessary for national security and political superiority.[8]The cold war era competition between the United States and Soviet Union is one of the reasons the space age happened at that time. Since then the space age continues for the generation of scientific knowledge, the innovation and creation of markets, inspiration, and agreements between the space-fairing nations.[9] Other reasons for the continuation of the space age are defending Earth from hazardous objects like asteroids and comets.[10]Much of the technology developed for space applications has been spun off and found additional uses, such as memory foam. In 1958 the United States launched its first satellite, Explorer 1. The same year President Dwight D. Eisenhower created the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, commonly known as NASA.[11]Prior to the first attempted human spaceflight, various animals were flown into outer space to identify potential detrimental effects of high g-forces in takeoff and landing, microgravity, and radiation exposure at high altitudes.[12]The Space Race reached its peak with the Apollo program that captured the imagination of much of the world’s population.[13] From 1961 to 1964, NASA\u2019s budget was increased almost 500 percent, and the lunar landing program eventually involved some 34,000 NASA employees and 375,000 employees of industrial and university contractors. The Soviet Union proceeded tentatively with its own lunar landing program which it did not publicly acknowledge, partly due to internal debate over its necessity and the untimely death (in January 1966) of Sergey Korolev, chief engineer of the Soviet space program.[11]The landing of Apollo 11 was watched by over 500 million people around the world and is widely recognized as one of the defining moments of the 20th century. Since then, public attention has largely moved to other areas.[14]The last major leap of the Space Age was the Skylab and Salyute programs, which established the first space stations for the U.S. and USSR in Earth Orbit following termination of both country’s moon programs.The 1970s to 2010s[edit]At the concluson of the Apollo program, crewed flights from the United States were rare, then ended while the shuttle program was getting ready to kick into gear, and the space race had been over since the Apollo-Soyuz test project of 1975, started a period of U.S.\u2013Soviet co-operation. The Soviet Union continued using the Soyuz spacecraft.The shuttle program restored spaceflight to the U.S. following the Skylab program, but the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster in 1986 marked a significant decline in crewed Shuttle launches. Following the disaster, NASA grounded all Shuttles for safety concerns until 1988.[15] During the 1990s funding for space-related programs fell sharply as the remaining structures of the now-dissolved Soviet Union disintegrated and NASA no longer had any direct competition.Since then, participation in space launches has increasingly widened to include more governments and commercial interests. Since the 1990s, the public perception of space exploration and space-related technologies has been that such endeavors are increasingly commonplace.[16]NASA permanently grounded all U.S. Space Shuttles in 2011. NASA has since relied on Russia and SpaceX to take American astronauts to and from the International Space Station.[16][17]Modern era[edit] In the early 21st century, the Ansari X Prize competition was set up to help jump-start private spaceflight.[18] The winner, Space Ship One in 2004, became the first spaceship not funded by a government agency.[19]Several countries now have space programs; from related technology ventures to full-fledged space programs with launch facilities.[20] There are many scientific and commercial satellites in use today, with thousands of satellites in orbit, and several countries have plans to send humans into space.[21][22] Some of the countries joining this new race are France, India, China, Israel and the United Kingdom, all of which have employed surveillance satellites. There are several other countries with less extensive space programs, including Brazil, Germany, Ukraine, and Spain.[23]As for the United States space program, NASA is currently constructing a deep-space crew capsule named the Orion. NASA’s goal with this new space capsule is to carry humans to Mars. The Orion spacecraft is due to be completed in the early 2020s. NASA is hoping that this mission will \u201cusher in a new era of space exploration.\u201d[23]Another major factor affecting the current Space Age is the privatization of space flight.[24] A significant private spaceflight company is SpaceX which became the proprietor of one of world’s most capable operational launch vehicle when they launched their current largest rocket, the Falcon Heavy in 2018. Elon Musk, the founder and CEO of SpaceX, has put forward the goal of establishing a colony of one million people on Mars by 2050 and the company is developing its Starship launch vehicle to facilitate this. Since the Demo-2 mission for NASA in 2020 in which SpaceX launched astronauts for the first time to the International Space Station, the company has maintained an orbital human spaceflight capability. Blue Origin, a private company founded by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, is developing rockets for use in space tourism, commercial satellite launches, and eventual missions to the Moon and beyond.[25]Richard Branson’s company Virgin Galactic is concentrating on launch vehicles for space tourism.[26] A spinoff company, Virgin Orbit, air-launches small satellites with their LauncherOne rocket. Another small-satellite launcher, Rocket Lab, has developed the Electron rocket and the Photon satellite bus for sending spacecraft further into the Solar System.Elon Musk has the stated that the main reason he founded SpaceX is to make humanity a multiplanetary species, and cites reasons for doing it including: To ensure the long-term continuation of our species and protecting the “light of consciousness”.[27][28] He also said, You want to wake up in the morning and think the future is going to be great – and that\u2019s what being a spacefaring civilization is all about. It\u2019s about believing in the future and thinking that the future will be better than the past. And I can\u2019t think of anything more exciting than going out there and being among the stars.[29]The Space Age marked a major comeback and return with the launch of NASA’s Space Launch system during the Artemis 1 mission on November 16, 2022; it marked the first time a human rated spacecraft had been to the Moon in nearly 50 years, as well as the return of United States capability to get astronauts to the Moon with the Space Launch System and Orion.[30]Chronology[edit]DateFirstProjectParticipantCountrySeptember 30, 1929Successful public flight of a crewed rocket-powered aircraft (Opel RAK.1)[31]Opel-RAK, world’s first large-scale rocket program[31]Julius Hatry (designer), Fritz von Opel (pilot and program head), Max Valier (program head)GermanyJune 20, 1944Artificial object in outer space, i.e. beyond the K\u00e1rm\u00e1n lineV-2 rocket MW 18014 test flight[32]\u2013 N\/AGermanyOctober 24, 1946Pictures from space (105\u00a0km)[33][34][35]U.S.-launched V-2 rocket from White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico.\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesFebruary 20, 1947Animals in spaceU.S.-launched V-2 rocket on 20 February 1947 from White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico.[36][37][38]– fruit fliesUnited StatesOctober 4, 1957Artificial satelliteSputnik 1[39]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionNovember 3, 1957[40]Animal in orbitSputnik 2[41]Laika the dogSoviet UnionJanuary 2, 1959Lunar flyby, spacecraft to achieve a heliocentric orbitLuna 1[42]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionSeptember 12, 1959Impact on the Lunar surface; thereby becoming the first human object to reach another celestial bodyLuna 2[43]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionOctober 7, 1959Pictures of the far side of the MoonLuna 3[44]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionJanuary 31, 1961Hominidae in spaceMercury-Redstone 2[45]Ham (chimpanzee)United StatesApril 12, 1961Human in spaceVostok 1[46][47]Yuri GagarinSoviet UnionMay 5, 1961Manual orientation of crewed spacecraft.Freedom 7 (Mercury-Redstone 3)[48]Alan ShepardUnited StatesDecember 14, 1962Successful flyby of another planet (Venus closest approach 34,773 kilometers)Mariner 2[49]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesMarch 18, 1965SpacewalkVoskhod 2[50][51]Alexei LeonovSoviet UnionDecember 15, 1965Space rendezvousGemini 6A[52] and Gemini 7[52]Schirra, Stafford, Borman, LovellUnited StatesFebruary 3, 1966Soft landing on the Moon by a spacecraftLuna 9[53][54]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionMarch 1, 1966Human-made object to impact another planetVenera 3[55][56]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionMarch 16, 1966Orbital docking between two spacecraftGemini 8[57] & Agena Target Vehicle[58]Neil Armstrong, David ScottUnited StatesApril 3, 1966Artificial satellite of another celestial body (other than the Sun)Luna 10[59]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionOctober 18, 1967Telemetry from the atmosphere of another planetVenera 4[60]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionDecember 21\u201327, 1968Humans to orbit the MoonApollo 8Borman, Lovell, AndersUnited StatesJuly 20, 1969Humans land and walk on the MoonApollo 11[61]Neil Armstrong, Buzz AldrinUnited StatesDecember 15, 1970Telemetry from the surface of another planetVenera 7[62]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionApril 19, 1971Operational space stationSalyut 1[63][64]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionJune 7, 1971Resident crewSoyuz 11 (Salyut 1)Georgy Dobrovolsky, Vladislav Volkov, Viktor PatsayevSoviet UnionJuly 20, 1976Pictures from the surface of MarsViking 1[65]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesApril 12, 1981Reusable orbital spaceshipSTS-1[66]Young, CrippenUnited StatesFebruary 19, 1986Long-duration space stationMir[67]\u2013 N\/ASoviet UnionFebruary 14, 1990Photograph of the whole Solar System[68]Voyager 1[69]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesNovember 20, 1998Current space stationInternational Space Station[70]\u2013 N\/ARussiaAugust 25, 2012Interstellar space probeVoyager 1[71]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesNovember 12, 2014Artificial probe to soft-land on a comet (67P\/Churyumov\u2013Gerasimenko)[72]Rosetta[73]\u2013 N\/AEuropean Space AgencyJuly 14, 2015Space probes to explore all major planets recognized in 1981[74]New Horizons[75]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesDecember 20, 2015Vertical landing of an orbital rocket booster on a ground pad.[76]Falcon 9 flight 20[77]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesApril 8, 2016Vertical landing of an orbital rocket booster on a floating platform at sea.[78]SpaceX CRS-8[79]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesMarch 30, 2017Relaunch and second landing of a used orbital rocket booster.[80]SES-10[81]\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesJanuary 3, 2019Soft landing on the lunar far sideChang’e 4[82][83]\u2013 N\/AChinaMay 30, 2020Human orbital spaceflight launched by a private companyCrew Dragon Demo-2\/Crew Demo-2\/SpaceX Demo-2\/Dragon Crew Demo-2[84]Bob Behnken, Doug HurleyUnited StatesApril 19, 2021First powered controlled extraterrestrial flight by an aircraftIngenuity as part of NASA’s Mars 2020 mission\u2013 N\/AUnited StatesJuly 11, 2021Commercial space tourism flightVirgin Galactic Unity 22[85]David Mackay, Michael Masucci, Sirisha Bandla, Colin Bennet, Beth Moses, Richard BransonUnited StatesOctober 5, 2021Feature-length fiction film shot in space (The Challenge)Soyuz MS-19[86]Anton Shkaplerov, Klim Shipenko, Yulia PeresildRussiaNovember 16, 2022Artemis 1 launch restoring American capability to get humans to the MoonArtemis 1[87]– N\/AUnited StatesEarlier suborbital spaceflights[edit] Opel RAK.1 \u2013 world’s first public flight of a crewed rocket-powered plane on September 30, 1929Some vehicles reached suborbital space much earlier than the launch of Sputnik. In June 1944, a German V-2 rocket became the first manmade object to enter space, albeit only briefly.[88] In March 1926 American rocket pioneer Robert H. Goddard launched the world’s first liquid fuel rocket, but it did not reach outer space.[89] Also in the 1920s the world’s first large-scale experimental rocket program, Opel-RAK, was initiated under the leadership of Fritz von Opel and Max Valier. Speed records for ground and rail vehicles were achieved in 1928 and von Opel piloted the world’s first public flight of a rocket plane, Opel RAK.1.[90] The Great Depression put an end to the Opel-RAK program but it nevertheless had a strong and long-lasting impact on later spaceflight pioneers, in particular on Wernher von Braun who would eventually head the Nazi era V2 program.[91]Since Germans undertook the sub-orbital V-2 rocket flight in secrecy, it was not initially public knowledge. Also, the German launches, as well as the subsequent sounding rocket tests performed in both the United States and the Soviet Union during the late 1940s and early 1950s, were not considered significant enough to define the start of the space age because they did not reach orbit. A rocket powerful enough to reach orbit could also be used as an intercontinental ballistic missile, that could deliver a warhead to any location on Earth. Some commentators claim this is why the orbital standard is commonly used to define when the space age began.[88]Cultural influences[edit]Arts and architecture[edit] Satellite-influenced signage at the Town Motel in Birmingham, Alabama TWA Moonliner II replica atop the restored TWA Corporate Headquarters building in Kansas City, MO, 2007The Space Age is considered to have influenced:Automotive design: Virgil Exner’s Forward Look, 1957-1961Googie architectureSpace Age fashions by Andr\u00e9 Courr\u00e8ges, Pierre Cardin, Paco Rabanne, Rudi Gernreich,[92]Emanuel Ungaro, Jean-Marie Armand,[93]Mich\u00e8le Rosier, and Diana DewFurniture design of the 1950s and ’60s by Eero Saarinen, Arne Jacobsen, Eero Aarnio, and Verner PantonAmusement park attractions, such as TWA Moonliner and Mission: Space.Cold War playground equipmentMusic[edit]The Space Age also inspired musical genres:See also[edit]References[edit]^ Garcia, Mark (October 5, 2017). “60 years ago, the Space Age began”. nasa.gov. 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(September 1, 2004), “The Rocket Men”, Air & Space Forces Magazine, Air & Space Forces Association^ “Fashion for the ’70s: Rudi Gernreich Makes Some Modest Proposals”. Life. Vol.\u00a068, no.\u00a01. 1970-01-09. pp.\u00a0115\u2013118. Retrieved 2022-01-03.^ “Jean-Marie Armand”. Couture Allure Vintage Fashion. 2011-03-08. Retrieved 2021-12-13. His designs were very modern and architectural, much like those of Courreges and Cardin.External links[edit]Wikimedia Commons has media related to Space Age.Look up space age in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.Interactive media[edit]"},{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki40\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Enzyklop\u00e4die"}},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"item":{"@id":"https:\/\/wiki.edu.vn\/en\/wiki40\/space-age-wikipedia\/#breadcrumbitem","name":"Space Age – Wikipedia"}}]}]