Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel
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1
9780309085489 - Zimmerman, Robert: Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel.
Zimmerman, Robert

Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel. (2003)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland ~EN US

ISBN: 9780309085489 bzw. 0309085489, vermutlich in Englisch, Washington, D.C. : Joseph Henry Press, gebraucht, guter Zustand.

15,98 + Versand: 3,50 = 19,48
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Versandkosten in die BRD.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Antiquariat Peda, 06188 Landsberg.
xiii + 528 pp.; Ill.; Bibl.; index, graph. Darst., Illustrationen, 24 cm, gebundene Ausgabe, Leinen mit Original-Umschlag, Zustand: leichte Gebrauchsspuren, Einband/Schutzumschlag gering berieben, gutes Exemplar. Text / Sprache: Englisch, Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel. Includes bibliographical references (p. 467-508) and index. Contents: Skyscrapers in the sky, Salyut : "I wanted him to come home", Skylab : a glorious forgotten triumph, The early Salyuts : "the prize of all the people", Salyut 6 : the end of isolation, Salyut 7 : phoenix in space, Freedom : "you’ve got to put on your management hat ...", Mir : a year in space, Mir : the road to capitalism, Mir : the joys of freedom, Mir : almost touching, Mir : culture shock, Mir : spin city, International Space Station : ships passing in the night. Drawing on his vast store of knowledge about space travel, as well as hundreds of interviews with cosmonauts, astronauts, and scientists, Zimmerman superbly captures the excitement and suspense of our recent space-traveling past. Charged with the ever-present potential for danger and occasionally punctuated by terrible moments of disaster, the history of space exploration has been keenly dramatic. The recent disaster of the Space Shuttle Columbia was a sad but certain reminder that space travel is an extraordinarily dangerous occupation. Oddly enough, it often takes a tragic accident to remind us that we still have a presence in space. In the decades between triumph and tragedy we tend to ignore the fact that there have been scores of space pioneers who have risked their lives to explore our solar system. Indeed, the International Space Station is sometimes referred to as a /Alpha,a a moniker that implies that it is our first real permanent presence in space. But this notion is frowned upon by the Russians a " and for good reason. Prior to the construction of the controversial International Space Station, a host of daring Russian cosmonauts, and a smaller number of intrepid American astronauts, were living in space for months, some of them for over a year. In this definitive account of mana (TM)s quest to become citizens of the cosmos, noted space historian Robert Zimmerman reveals the great global gamesmanship between Russian and American political leaders that drove us to the stars. Beaten to the Moon by their Cold War enemies, the Russians were intent on being first to the planets. They believed that manned space stations held the greatest promise for reaching other worlds and worked feverishly to build a viable space station program a " one that would dwarf American efforts and allow the Russians to claim the vast territories of space as their own. Although unthinkable at the time, the ponderously bureaucratic Soviet Union actually managed to overtake the United States in the space station race. Leveraging their propaganda machine and tyrannical politics to launch a series of daring, dangerous, and scientifically brilliant space exploits, their efforts not only put them far ahead of NASA, they also helped to reshape their own society, transforming it from dictatorship to democracy. At the same time, the American space program at NASA was also evolving, but not necessarily for the better. In fact, the two programs were slowly but inexorably trading places. Drawing on his vast store of knowledge about space travel, as well as hundreds of interviews with cosmonauts, astronauts, and scientists, Zimmerman has superbly captured the excitement and suspense of our recent space-traveling past. For space and history enthusiasts alike, Leaving Earth describes a rich heritage of adventure, exploration, research, and discovery. 18781A ISBN 0309085489 Versand D: 3,50 EUR Robert Zimmerman, Leaving Earth, Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, Quest for Interplanetary Travel, Astronomie Raumforschung Raumfahrt, Exploration of outer space, Mir, NASA , Russland, USA, Angelegt am: 21.09.2018.
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9780309085489 - Robert Zimmerman; Joseph Henry Press: Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel
Robert Zimmerman; Joseph Henry Press

Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel (2003)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Schweiz EN HC NW

ISBN: 9780309085489 bzw. 0309085489, in Englisch, Joseph Henry Pr, gebundenes Buch, neu.

33,54 (Fr. 35,90)¹ + Versand: 16,82 (Fr. 18,00)¹ = 50,36 (Fr. 53,90)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Schweiz, wird besorgt, Lieferzeit unbekannt.
Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel, After losing the race to the moon, the Soviet Union responded by launching an ambitious program to build the first space stations. Leaving Earth is the definitive account of the human race´s first tentative steps in the permanent habitation of space. The commander of the International Space Station´s first crew, Bill Shepard, refers to his orbiting home as ´´Alpha.´´ It is a moniker frowned upon by the Russians--and for good reason. It is not, as Shepard implies with his unofficial but inaccurate designation, the first space station. Not only did the Soviet Union successfully inhabit a series of six different Salyut space stations between 1971 and 1986, the Soviets maintained a human presence on Mir for more than 14 years. Indeed, the remarkable history explored in Leaving Earth makes it clear that the Soviet´s vital and dynamic space program has ultimately surpassed our own comparatively tentative, tiptoeing efforts into the cosmos. Visionaries like Wernher von Braun and Willy Ley wrote in the 1950s that the first step in colonizing the heavens was the deployment of orbiting, self-sufficient ´´space stations.´´ They certainly understood the dangers inherent in dealing with the harsh reality of a new and untested environment in which man was not a natural presence. The events that would follow in successive decades would prove that space was not always a hospitable home for human beings. Fraught with the potential for danger and occasionally punctuated by terrible moments of disaster, the history of space exploration has been keenly dramatic. But neither von Braun nor Ley--or for that matter NASA--dreamt that the ponderously bureaucratic Soviet Union would actually manage to overtake theUnited States in the space station race, leveraging its propaganda machine and tyrannical politics to launch a series of daring, dangerous, and scientifically brilliant space exploits that would put the Soviet Union far ahead of NASA. For while the change from dictatorship to, gebundene Ausgabe, 01.10.2003.
3
9780309085489 - Zimmerman, Robert: Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel.
Zimmerman, Robert

Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel. (2003)

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland ~EN US

ISBN: 9780309085489 bzw. 0309085489, vermutlich in Englisch, Washington, D.C. : Joseph Henry Press, gebraucht.

15,98 + Versand: 2,50 = 18,48
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Versandkosten in die BRD.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Antiquariat Peda, 06188 Landsberg.
xiii + 528 pp.; Ill.; Bibl.; index, graph. Darst., Illustrationen, 24 cm, gebundene Ausgabe, Leinen mit Original-Umschlag, Zustand: leichte Gebrauchsspuren, Einband/Schutzumschlag gering berieben, gutes Exemplar. Text / Sprache: Englisch, Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel. Includes bibliographical references (p. 467-508) and index. Contents: Skyscrapers in the sky, Salyut : "I wanted him to come home", Skylab : a glorious forgotten triumph, The early Salyuts : "the prize of all the people", Salyut 6 : the end of isolation, Salyut 7 : phoenix in space, Freedom : "you´ve got to put on your management hat ...", Mir : a year in space, Mir : the road to capitalism, Mir : the joys of freedom, Mir : almost touching, Mir : culture shock, Mir : spin city, International Space Station : ships passing in the night. Drawing on his vast store of knowledge about space travel, as well as hundreds of interviews with cosmonauts, astronauts, and scientists, Zimmerman superbly captures the excitement and suspense of our recent space-traveling past. Charged with the ever-present potential for danger and occasionally punctuated by terrible moments of disaster, the history of space exploration has been keenly dramatic. The recent disaster of the Space Shuttle Columbia was a sad but certain reminder that space travel is an extraordinarily dangerous occupation. Oddly enough, it often takes a tragic accident to remind us that we still have a presence in space. In the decades between triumph and tragedy we tend to ignore the fact that there have been scores of space pioneers who have risked their lives to explore our solar system. Indeed, the International Space Station is sometimes referred to as a /Alpha,a a moniker that implies that it is our first real permanent presence in space. But this notion is frowned upon by the Russians a " and for good reason. Prior to the construction of the controversial International Space Station, a host of daring Russian cosmonauts, and a smaller number of intrepid American astronauts, were living in space for months, some of them for over a year. In this definitive account of mana (TM)s quest to become citizens of the cosmos, noted space historian Robert Zimmerman reveals the great global gamesmanship between Russian and American political leaders that drove us to the stars. Beaten to the Moon by their Cold War enemies, the Russians were intent on being first to the planets. They believed that manned space stations held the greatest promise for reaching other worlds and worked feverishly to build a viable space station program a " one that would dwarf American efforts and allow the Russians to claim the vast territories of space as their own. Although unthinkable at the time, the ponderously bureaucratic Soviet Union actually managed to overtake the United States in the space station race. Leveraging their propaganda machine and tyrannical politics to launch a series of daring, dangerous, and scientifically brilliant space exploits, their efforts not only put them far ahead of NASA, they also helped to reshape their own society, transforming it from dictatorship to democracy. At the same time, the American space program at NASA was also evolving, but not necessarily for the better. In fact, the two programs were slowly but inexorably trading places. Drawing on his vast store of knowledge about space travel, as well as hundreds of interviews with cosmonauts, astronauts, and scientists, Zimmerman has superbly captured the excitement and suspense of our recent space-traveling past. For space and history enthusiasts alike, Leaving Earth describes a rich heritage of adventure, exploration, research, and discovery. 18781A ISBN 0309085489 Versand D: 2,50 EUR Robert Zimmerman, Leaving Earth, Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, Quest for Interplanetary Travel, Astronomie Raumforschung Raumfahrt, Exploration of outer space, Mir, NASA , Russland, USA.
4
9780309085489 - Zimmerman, Robert: Leaving Earth
Zimmerman, Robert

Leaving Earth

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika EN US

ISBN: 9780309085489 bzw. 0309085489, in Englisch, Joseph Henry Pr, Joseph Henry Press, Joseph Henry Press, gebraucht.

82,91 ($ 87,80)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, zzgl. Versandkosten, in-stock.
After losing the race to the moon, the Soviet Union responded by launching an ambitious program to build the first space stations. Leaving Earth is the definitive account of the human race's first tentative steps in the permanent habitation of space. The commander of the International Space Station's first crew, Bill Shepard, refers to his orbiting home as Alpha. It is a moniker frowned upon by the Russians-and for good reason. It is not, as Shepard implies with his unofficial but inaccurate designation, the first space station. Not only did the Soviet Union successfully inhabit a series of six different Salyut space stations between 1971 and 1986, the Soviets maintained a human presence on Mir for more than 14 years. Indeed, the remarkable history explored in Leaving Earth makes it clear that the Soviet's vital and dynamic space program has ultimately surpassed our own comparatively tentative, tiptoeing efforts into the cosmos. Visionaries like Wernher von Braun and Willy Ley wrote in the 1950s that the first step in colonizing the heavens was the deployment of orbiting, self-sufficient space stations. They certainly understood the dangers inherent in dealing with the harsh reality of a new and untested environment in which man was not a natural presence. The events that would follow in successive decades would prove that space was not always a hospitable home for human beings. Fraught with the potential for danger and occasionally punctuated by terrible moments of disaster, the history of space exploration has been keenly dramatic. But neither von Braun nor Ley-or for that matter NASA-dreamt that the ponderously bureaucratic Soviet Union would actually manage to overtake theUnited States in the space station race, leveraging its propaganda machine and tyrannical politics to launch a series of daring, dangerous, and scientifically brilliant space exploits that would put the Soviet Union far ahead of NASA. For while the change from dictatorship to democracy f.
5
9780309085489 - Robert Zimmerman; Joseph Henry Press: Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel
Robert Zimmerman; Joseph Henry Press

Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland EN NW

ISBN: 9780309085489 bzw. 0309085489, in Englisch, National Academy of Sciences, Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, neu.

Lieferung aus: Deutschland, Versandfertig innerhalb von 3 Wochen.
Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel, After losing the race to the moon, the Soviet Union responded by launching an ambitious program to build the first space stations. Leaving Earth is the definitive account of the human race's first tentative steps in the permanent habitation of space. The commander of the International Space Station's first crew, Bill Shepard, refers to his orbiting home as "Alpha." It is a moniker frowned upon by the Russians--and for good reason. It is not, as Shepard implies with his unofficial but inaccurate designation, the first space station. Not only did the Soviet Union successfully inhabit a series of six different Salyut space stations between 1971 and 1986, the Soviets maintained a human presence on Mir for more than 14 years. Indeed, the remarkable history explored in Leaving Earth makes it clear that the Soviet's vital and dynamic space program has ultimately surpassed our own comparatively tentative, tiptoeing efforts into the cosmos. Visionaries like Wernher von Braun and Willy Ley wrote in the 1950s that the first step in colonizing the heavens was the deployment of orbiting, self-sufficient "space stations." They certainly understood the dangers inherent in dealing with the harsh reality of a new and untested environment in which man was not a natural presence. The events that would follow in successive decades would prove that space was not always a hospitable home for human beings. Fraught with the potential for danger and occasionally punctuated by terrible moments of disaster, the history of space exploration has been keenly dramatic. But neither von Braun nor Ley--or for that matter NASA--dreamt that the ponderously bureaucratic Soviet Union would actually manage to overtake theUnited States in the space station race, leveraging its propaganda machine and tyrannical politics to launch a series of daring, dangerous, and scientifically brilliant space exploits that would put the Soviet Union far ahead of NASA. For while the change from dictatorship to.
6
9780309085489 - Zimmerman, Robert / Robert Zimmerman: Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel
Zimmerman, Robert / Robert Zimmerman

Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika EN

ISBN: 9780309085489 bzw. 0309085489, in Englisch, Joseph Henry Press.

3,73 ($ 3,95)¹
unverbindlich
Lieferung aus: Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika, Lagernd, zzgl. Versandkosten.
Leaving Earth: Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel Zimmerman, Robert / Robert Zimmerman, After losing the race to the moon, the Soviet Union responded by launching an ambitious program to build the first space stations. Leaving Earth is the definitive account of the human race's first tentative steps in the permanent habitation of space. The commander of the International Space Station's first crew, Bill Shepard, refers to his orbiting home as "Alpha." It is a moniker frowned upon by the Russians--and for good reason. It is not, as Shepard implies with his unofficial but inaccurate designation, the first space station. Not only did the Soviet Union successfully inhabit a series of six different Salyut space stations between 1971 and 1986, the Soviets maintained a human presence on Mir for more than 14 years. Indeed, the remarkable history explored in Leaving Earth makes it clear that the Soviet's vital and dynamic space program has ultimately surpassed our own comparatively tentative, tiptoeing efforts into the cosmos. Visionaries like Wernher von Braun and Willy Ley wrote in the 1950s that the first step in colonizing the heavens was the deployment of orbiting, self-sufficient "space stations." They certainly understood the dangers inherent in dealing with the harsh reality of a new and untested environment in which man was not a natural presence. The events that would follow in successive decades would prove that space was not always a hospitable home for human beings. Fraught with the potential for danger and occasionally punctuated by terrible moments of disaster, the history of space exploration has been keenly dramatic. But neither von Braun nor Ley--or for that matter NASA--dreamt that the ponderously bureaucratic Soviet Union would actually manage to overtake theUnited States in the space station race, leveraging its propaganda machine and tyrannical politics to launch a series of daring, dangerous, and scientifically brilliant space exploits that would put the Soviet Union far ahead of NASA. For while the change from dictatorship to democracy finally gave the cosmonauts freedom to determine their ownfate in space, American astronauts were evolving into robotic extensions of the ground controllers at NASA, an increasingly cumbersome organization that was slowly but inexorably metamorphasizing into a Western version of the old and inefficient Soviet machine. The two space programs were effectively trading personas. In this sweeping history of space exploration and global politics, acclaimed science writer Robert Zimmerman shows how the advent of space stations has pushed history in unexpected directions. Leaving Earth details the rich heritage of adventure, exploration, research, and discovery.
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0309085489 - Zimmerman, Robert: Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel.
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Zimmerman, Robert

Leaving Earth : Space Stations, Rival Superpowers, and the Quest for Interplanetary Travel.

Lieferung erfolgt aus/von: Deutschland ~EN

ISBN: 0309085489 bzw. 9780309085489, vermutlich in Englisch, National Academy of Sciences, Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika.

15,98 + Versand: 2,60 = 18,58
unverbindlich
Von Händler/Antiquariat, Antiquariat Peda.
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