Prix bas
CHF53.60
L'exemplaire sera recherché pour vous.
Pas de droit de retour !
Over the past 35 years more than 100 individual astronauts and cosmonauts have performed nearly 200 EVAs, (spacewalks), either singularly or in teams in Earth orbit, deep space or on the Moon. In 'Walking in Space: Development of Space Walking Techniques' author, Dave Shayler, shows how hardware and crew members are prepared for, protected and supported during every EVA. He demonstrates how past experiences have led to improved training techniques and how this, in turn, has provided many successes and future developments.
First comprehensive review and analysis of spacewalking techniques and activities available in book form Shows the reader how EVA techniques have developed from the first such activities in the 1960s to the important role that these are playing today in the ongoing construction of the international space station Brings to life for the first time the meticulous training needed for the hubble space telescope servicing missions, and the careful execution of the EVAs carried out during those missions, widely agreed to be the most complex of such operations ever successfully completed Includes firsthand accounts of EVAs obtained from personal interviews with astronauts who have actually carried out EVAs, thus conveying to the reader what such a unique experience is really like
Auteur
Over the past 35 years more than 100 individual astronauts and cosmonauts
have performed nearly 200 EVAs, (spacewalks), either singularly or in
teams in Earth orbit, deep space or on the Moon. In 'Walking in Space:
Development of Space Walking Techniques' author, Dave Shayler, shows how
hardware and crew members are prepared for, protected and supported during
every EVA. He demonstrates how past experiences have led to improved
training techniques and how this, in turn, has provided many successes and
future developments.
Texte du rabat
On 18 March 1965, just four years after Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space Alexei Leonov left his Voskhod 2 spacecraft and became the first person to perform a space walk. It was on 20 July 1969 that Neil Armstrong took his giant leap for mankind onto the surface of the moon. Then on 7 February 1984 Bruce McCandless became the first human satellite as he flew an untethered manned manoeuvring unit, 300 feet from the shuttle. Five months later on 25 July 1984 Svetlana Savitskaya became the first woman to walk in space. All this was accomplished in less than 20 years.
Two decades later space walking had become an integral part of space operations and will continue be in the forefront of future manned spaceflight activity. We still await the 13th person to step on the moon and the first person to place their footprint on the red plains of Mars. But what does it take to prepare for and conduct a period of activity outside the spacecraft?
In Walking in Space David Shayler explores the development of space walking techniques and support hardware. In a comprehensive but highly readerable review the author draws upon original documentation, personal interviews and official post flight reports revealing the very personal experience of exploring space and the development of training techniques devised in the gravity environment of Earth for work in the vacuum of space, on the moon and eventually on Mars.
Contenu
Dedication.- Foreword by Dr. Jeffery A. Hoffman.- Authors preface.- Acknowledgements, glossary, notes.- List of tables.- List of illustrations.- Prologue.- Theory put to the test.- Gemini pioneering the technique.- Planning for EVA.- Tools of the trade.- Practise makes perfect.- Surface exploration.- Service calls.- Helping Hubble.- Station support.- Constructing ISS.- Next steps.- Conclusion.- Appendix, Bibliography and references, Index.