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China's Space Program - From Conception to Manned Spaceflight: Springer Praxis Books

Autor Brian Harvey
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 aug 2004
In October 2003 Yang Liwei made history as the first Chinese citizen in space, orbiting the globe 14 times in the Shenzhou 5.  The Chinese space program has sometimes been called the last of the secret space programs. Although it is far less secretive now than formerly, fascinating revelations are still being made. Brian Harvey examines the history of the Chinese space program, from it's earliest times to the historic breakthrough of manned flight.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781852335663
ISBN-10: 1852335661
Pagini: 350
Ilustrații: XXII, 350 p.
Dimensiuni: 170 x 250 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:2004
Editura: SPRINGER LONDON
Colecția Springer
Seriile Springer Praxis Books, Space Exploration

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Popular/general

Cuprins

Author’s Preface and Acknowledgements.- Flight of the Shenzhou.- Origins - The Fiery Dragon.- Dong Fang Hong - The East is Red.- Expanding the Space Programme.- Communications and Conspiracies.- Applying the Space Programme.- Behind the Scenes.- Launch Centres, Rockets and their Engines.- Shuguang - False Dawn.- The Shenzhou Precursor Mission.- Future of China in Space.- Listing of Chinese Satellite Launches.- Milestones in the Development of the Chinese Space Programme.- Glossary.- Bibliography, Further Reading and Websites.- Index.

Recenzii

From the reviews:
"...China's Space Program is perhaps the best single-volume summary of Chinese space efforts, at least among those written in English."
--Jeff Foust, THE SPACE REVIEW
Astronomy (February 2005)
Review by James Oberg, Former NASA Mission Controller
"… Harvey’s book gives any space-flight enthusiast a thorough overview of China’s space activities while comparing them to other nations’ efforts. What’s more, Harvey has succeeded in an even greater challenge: collecting disorganized and unrelated information and formulating it into coherent chapters that address themes, activities, and intentions in a lucid, logical sequence. This book goes well beyond cataloging what it covers. It has good stories, too. Harvey’s description of the early years of the Chinese program, when it was bedeviled by material shortages and political interference, is as dramatic as any other space-development saga in the world. He also makes excellent use of new biographical material about the father of the Chinese space program, Tsien Hsue Shen. … Harvey achieves a good blend of engineering descriptions and human-interest stories. Equally important, he gives the reader helpful guidance regarding reliability by describing how information on the Chinese program comes to light while other material concerning it remains buried in secrecy. Finally, Harvey uses obscure Chinese reports and speeches to map out the future options for this nation, now a major player in outer space. … China may well come to dominate some phases of human space exploration in the years ahead. If that comes to pass, this book will have told you how it happened."
"A super book by any measure. Anyone with an interest in rockets will find it a treat and similar in lay out and text as Patrick Moore’s Yearbook. 10 out of 10." (Tony O’ Connell, Astronomy & Space, May, 2005)
"An important book and essential reading for those interestedin space history, the history of technology, and the current state of military and civilian space technologies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers; lower-division undergraduates through professionals." (A.M. Strauss, CHOICE, Vol. 42 (5), January, 2005)
"Harvey’s book gives any space-flight enthusiast a thorough overview of China’s space activities while comparing them to other nation’s efforts. What’s more, Harvey has succeeded in an even greater challenge: collecting disorganized and unrelated information and formulating it into coherent chapters that address themes, activities, and intentions in a lucid, logical sequence. This book goes well beyond cataloging what it covers. It has good stories, too. … Harvey achieves a good blend of engineering descriptions … . Equally important, he gives the reader helpful guidance … ." (James Oberg, Astronomy, October, 2003)
"This is an expanded and revised version of a book first published in 1998 … . It is a well-written, detailed and impressive tale … ." (Paul Murdin, Times Higher Education Supplement, March, 2005)
"The original edition of this book was published in 1998 under a slightly different title … . Each chapter concludes with a summary and suggested further reading. There is also a listing of Chinese satellite launches, a chronology of significant events, a glossary, and a bibliography. All in all, this is probably the best one-stop source of information on the Chinese space programme to appear to date." (Liftoff, Issue 229, September/October, 2005)

Notă biografică

Author of ‘Race into space - the Soviet space programme’ (1988), ‘The new Russian space programme’ (1994), ‘Russia in space - the failed frontier?’ (2001), ‘Two roads into space - the Japanese and Indian space programmes’ (1998), ‘The Chinese space programme - from conception to future capabilities’ (1997), ‘The Chinese space programme - from conception to manned spaceflight’ (2004), ‘Europe’s space programme’ (2003), ‘Two roads to the moon’ (with Dave Shayler)(forthcoming), ‘Russian planetary exploration’ (forthcoming), ‘Latest in space 2007’ (forthcoming), all Praxis titles. Writer on articles on spaceflight for Astronomy Now, Orbit, Spaceflight, Journal of the British Interplanetary Society (JBIS), Space Chronicle, Astronomy & Space, Sunday Press, Quest, Irish Independent. Broadcaster for RTE, BBC (Radio 4, World Service), Canadian Broadcasting.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

The Chinese space program has sometimes been called the last of the secret
space programs. Although it is far less secretive now than formerly,
fascinating revelations are still being made.
This book is the history of the Chinese space program from its earliest
times to the historic breakthrough of manned flight. Significant events
include
EUR Middle Ages: the inventon of the rocket
EUR 1956: the establishment of the space program
EUR 1970: the launch of its first Earth satellite
EUR 1975: the launch into orbit and recovery of a satellite
EUR 1984: the first communications satellite is put into 24hr orbit
EUR 2003: China's first yuhangyuan, Yang Liwei, orbits the Earth
EUR 2007 (planned): first probe to the Moon
China¹s Space Program gives China the prominence it deserves as Asia¹s
leading spacefaring nation.

Caracteristici

This will be the first coverage in book form to follow the first manned all-Chinese space flight The only book to predict future Chinese space development Contains the most up-to-date summary of developments in the Chinese space programme The only English language history of the Chinese space programme Sets the Chinese space programme in its scientific, historical, engineering and political context