Search wiki using Sphinx

From The Space Library

Jump to: navigation, search

Displaying 71—80 of 1000 matches for query "American_Interplanetary_Society" retrieved in 0.003 sec with these stats:

  • "american" found 6254 times in 3603 documents
  • "interplanetari" found 4291 times in 1686 documents
  • "societi" found 6622 times in 2554 documents



Volume 21 - 1968 class="wikitable sortable" style="background: d0e5f5" Author style="background: d0e5f5" Co-Authors style="background: d0e5f5" Title style="background: d0e5f5" Page - MEADOWS, A.J. Planetary and space environments 2 - ORO.J. Synthesis of organic molecules by physical agencies 12 - NEEDHAM, A. E. Uniqueness of biological materials 26 - ...
Volume 22 - 1969 class="wikitable sortable" style="background: d0e5f5" Author style="background: d0e5f5" Co-Authors style="background: d0e5f5" Title style="background: d0e5f5" Page - J. B. Scott Black Arrow Flight Sequence and Performance 1 - V. S. Robertson and J. J. Weaver Spacecraft Attitude Control 13 - G. G. Leckie Attitude Reference Systems 39 - J. ...
Volume 23 - 1970 class="wikitable sortable" style="background: d0e5f5" Author style="background: d0e5f5" Co-Authors style="background: d0e5f5" Title style="background: d0e5f5" Page - GODWIN, R. C. and WEARMOUTH, C. The European Launch Vehicle—Its Potential and Use 1 - FRANCIS, R. H. Space Ferry Systems 19 - BONO, P. Expendable Solid and Reusable Liquid ...
... , The American Interplanetary Society'', No. 7, February 1931, p. 1. It is beyond the scope of this treatment to go into the subsequent development of rocket technology by the American Interplanetary Society (later named the American Rocket Society) from its roots as a result of the 1931 Pendray visit. Suffice it to say, American rocketry has several roots.
... in the U.S. and led to the formation of an American counterpart to the VfR, at first called the American Interplanetary Society, or AIS, formed in New York City on 4 April 1930 ... ...” The lack of adequate funding for the VfR (as with their American counterpart, the American Interplanetary Society, from April 1934 called the American Rocket Society, or ARS) remained endemic, particularly since these were the years of ...
... their day, which founded and nurtured spaceflight advocate groups like the VfR, the American Interplanetary Society , and the British Interplanetary Society . That is, details of the works of Tsiolkovsky and Goddard were simply unknown in ... Rocket and the Next War,” ''Bulletin of the American Interplanetary Society'', No. 13, November 1931, pp. 6-10; “Rocket Articles in Recent Periodicals,” ''Bulletin of the American Interplanetary Society'', No. 17, p. 8; David Lasser, “The ...
... as the “Society for Spaceship Travel” but more generally known as the “Society for Space Travel,” or more rarely, “the German Interplanetary Society,” although afterward more popularly (but incorrectly called) the “German Rocket Society” in ... true in the earliest years of the later American Interplanetary Society, founded in 1930 and afterward known as the American Rocket Society, science fiction literature (more specifically, “interplanetary stories”) played a stronger role in attracting new ...
... this period. Yet the Society's mechanized, automatic recorded thrust measurements were quite sophisticated in their day and were never matched by the American Interplanetary Society that later became the American Rocket Society . There is no ... , The American Interplanetary Society'', No. 14, December 1931, pp. 1-6; Ley, ''Missiles, Rockets'', pp. 148-150; G. Edward Pendray , “The German `Repulsor' Makes 1 1/2 Kilometer Vertical Flight,” ''Bulletin, The American Interplanetary Society'', No ...
... , the reported American flight was the first of the American Interplanetary Society and was later identified as American Rocket Society Rocket No. 2, or ARS No. 2, since the Society became known as The American Rocket Society in April 1934. As mentioned, Pendray's American group ...
... in the ''Bulletin'' of the American Interplanetary Society, his (new) employers, the Junkers Airplane Works “objected to his connection with such visionary schemes as rocket flights and interplanetary speculation, and he was forced to ... of Maryland, 2005, p. 38, available on line; G. Edward Pendray, “The German Rockets,” ''Bulletin, American Interplanetary Society'', No. 17, May 1931, p. 5; Rolf Engel, “Spaceflight-Projects (''sic''.) as I saw them ...

Additional database time was 0.307 sec.


Result page: Previous  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  Next 
 
Search in namespaces:

















Powered by Sphinx
Views