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Sons of the Blue Planet
Lev Aleksandrovich Lebedev
Boris Borisovich Lukʹi︠a︡nov
Boris Borisovich Lukʹi͡anov
Aleksandr Romanov
出版
National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Foundation, Washington
, 1973
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=MsgDAAAAIAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
The daring wish of mankind was, and still is, to look at the earth from a sufficient height to be able to encompass the whole of it at a glance, and to find out what lies in the depths beyond the blue dome of the sky. This interest, this desire to apprehend what surrounds the world, is a mighty and unquenchable thirst, which leads humanity from one step in its development to another, higher one. Today when much arm-chair talk is going on about the Apollo Moon missions, the first exciting events toward mastering outer space seem to have lost their glamor. Indeed the beginning of the space era is to be traced to the launching of the first artificial earth satellite into the orbit. Manned flights in spacecraft started with the historic flight of Yuri Gagarin. Since then tremendous advances have been made, many records broken, and new records established in the space race between the world's tow great space giants. This book is devoted to the decade since the day of the historic flight by Yuri Gagarin. The book tells about all the Soviet astronauts, their lives, aspirations and exploits. The matter has been presented in a very lucid narrative style and the authors of the book have established intimated rapport with the astronauts. It also presents short biographical sketches of Russian astronauts. The presence of Gagarin is felt throughout the book because he started the starry hour of humanity's venture into space. His space comrades strive to multiply our successes in understanding and conquering the universe with their efforts and knowledge.