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in the world. With Orville Wright at the controls, lying prone on the lower wing with his hips in the cradle that operated the wing-warping mechanism, the first successful powered flight took place. Wilbur Wright, seen running alongside to balance the machine, has just released his hold on the forward upright of the right wing. The starting rail, the wing rest, a coil box, and other items needed for flight preparation are visible behind the machine. This flight was the result of years of experiments and design by the Wright brothers, who were operators of a
bicycle repair shop and factory in Dayton, Ohio. The brothers continued their flying experiments in Ohio and in Fort Myer, Virginia, and were granted a patent for the plane in 1906. In 1908 and 1909, they traveled to Europe and drew attention to their invention by flying in France, Italy, England, and Germany. In 1909, they started a company to manufacture Wright airplanes and began their successful fight against patent suits by Glenn Curtis and other competitors. Wilbur died of typhoid fever in 1912, and Orville sold his interest in the Wright Airplane Company in 1915. The Wright brothers were aware of the important relationship of photography to their
work, both scientifically and historically. Accordingly, they recorded their experiments photographically and, later, on film. The Wrights asked John T. Daniels of the Kill Devil Hills Life Saving Station, who was among the spectators, to snap the camera for them just at the moment the machine had reached the end of the takeoff rail and had risen two feet into the air. Before attempting the flight, Orville had placed the camera on a tripod, aimed at a point he hoped the machine would reach when it left the track. The shot was successful, and the negative was developed by Orville on his return to Dayton. (Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Negative LC-W861-35)
Cover photo: Since 1915, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), transformed into NASA in 1958, has performed cutting-edge research to solve the problems of flight. Using a Grumman F4F-3 Wildcat during World War II, NACA engineers at the Langley Aeronautical Laboratory (now Langley Research Center) in Hampton, Virginia, used this aircraft to investigate the cuffs on the propeller blades to determine their efficiency. While not built to the full production standard of other Grumman Wildcats, research on this aircraft, the second F4F-3, proved most successful in advancing knowledge of the aerodynamics of this engine and propeller system. This photo shows a close-up of the propeller blades with Curtiss Electric Propellers logo.
Acknowledgments: writers/historians/reviewers, Judy Baker, Roger Launius, Tom Crouch, Ned Preston,Roger Miller, Louise Alstork, Tony Springer, John Childress, Bill Anderson, Sherry Foster, Phil Milstead, Steve Garber, Leslye Mogford, and Mike Gorn; brochure concept, Thom Pinelli; editors, Susan Hurd and Lisa Jirousek; photo researcher, Mark Sutton; designers, Heather Grimstead and Melissa Kennedy. Printed fall 2002.
1783
June 4 Montgolfier brothers launched the first public balloon flight. November 21 Piltre de Rozier and the Marquis DArlandes were the first humans to fly in an untethered balloon. 1400 Printing press invented
Copyright 2001, Jeff Dean, Big Blue flown by Above & Beyond Balloon Co., Carmel, Indiana, http://www.intheair-online.com
1162
A man in Constantinople fashioned sail-like wings from a fabric gathered into pleats and folds. He plummeted from the top of a tower and died. 1100 Gunpowder used to build rockets
2500 B.C.
An Inca Founder (Auca) was winged and could fly. 2560 B.C. Great Pyramid of Khufu built
Daedalus carefully instructed his son to fly a middle course, safely between the water that might weigh down the feathers if it sprayed on them and the Sun, which could melt the wax that held the feathers in place. Icarus, thrilled by the freedom of his flight and curious to explore the heavens above him, soared higher and higher, until the heat of the Sun destroyed his wings and he plunged to his death in the sea. The story of Icarus and Daedalus was told and retold through the centuries, inspiring human beings to fly and cautioning those who dared to dream of trespassing on the domain of the gods.
Hindu mythology tells of the bird deity Garuda, often depicted in art as having the body of a man but the head and wings of an eagle. This great and powerful flying god-bird lent his body as a vehicle to the Hindu god Vishnu, with whom he is worshiped. Garudas image can be seen in sculpture, paintings, and architecture, especially that of royal residences.
1993; image from the WorldBank Collection CDROM, by Aztech New Media Corporation, in cooperation with BC Pictures
1784
June 4 Elisabeth Thible was the first woman to make a balloon flight. June 24 In a tethered flight from Baltimore, Maryland, thirteen-year-old Edward Warren was the first to fly in a balloon from American soil. 1775 American Revolutionary War began
1785
January 7 Dr. John Jeffries, an American physician living in London, accompanied the French aeronaut Jean-Pierre Blanchard on the first flight across the English Channel. 1797 First parachute jump
With public enthusiasm approaching a peak, the Montgolfier brothers designed a large balloon that carried the first human passengers aloft. On 21 November 1783, Piltre de Rozier and the Marquis dArlandes fed a fire of burning straw that filled the canopy of the balloon with hot air, lifting them about 330 feet into the Paris skies. Their flight lasted under 30 minutes. J. A. C. Charles and a companion, M. N. Robert Millbrook, became the first people to fly aboard a gas balloon on 1 December 1783. Balloons captured the imagination of Europeans and Americans alike. Peter Carnes, a lawyer and tavern keeper in Bladensburg, Maryland, sent the first American, thirteen-year-old Edward Warren, into the air on a tethered flight from Baltimore, Maryland, in June 1784. Early the following year, another American, Dr. John Jeffries, accompanied aeronaut Jean-Pierre Blanchard on the first flight across the English Channel. Gas balloons continued in use throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, offering scientists a means of exploring the upper atmosphere and providing military officers with an aerial perch from which to observe the enemy.
Hot-air balloons became popular once again after World War II, when the advent of new materials and propanefired burners offered sportsmen a new way to venture aloft. In 1999, after a twenty-day, nonstop flight, Bertrand Piccard and Brian Jones became the first balloonists to complete a nonstop circumnavigation of the globe. The last solo balloon hurdle was crossed in 2002 when Steve Fossett circumnavigated the world by balloon alone. Today, colorful hot-air balloons of fanciful designs are seen floating in the skies all over the world. Those who see them might agree with Joseph Montgolfier, who long ago instructed his brother to prepare the materials for their first balloonand you will see one of the most incredible things in the world.
Winging It
For hundreds of years, human beings attached all manner of wing-like structures to their arms, flung themselves from the tops of towers and other high places, and attempted to fly. Most of these would-be aviators sought to fly with ornithopters, machines that beat their wings like birds. Even the brilliant Italian artist, scientist, and engineer Leonardo da Vinci,
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who understood some of the basic principles of flight as early as the 1480s, could only dream of flying ornithopter and helicopter designs that could never have left the ground. He and others of his time failed to realize that human beings lacked the necessary muscle power to imitate bird flight. Almost four hundred years after Leonardo, French inventor Gustave Trouv designed an ornithopter that was powered by an internal combustion engine. In 1870, Trouvs model successfully flew a distance of 70 meters in a demonstration before the French Academy of Sciences. Another Frenchman, Alphonse Pnaud, pioneered the
use of rubber-band-powered motors in a small ornithopter built and flown in 1874. Today, ornithopter designs are still on the minds, as well as the drawing boards, of adventurous and imaginative people determined to achieve the old dream of flight with flapping wings.
Drawings, left to right: da Vinci air screw sketch, Pnaud sketch.
National Air and Space Museum 2002 Smithsonian Institution
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A bird is an instrument working according to mathematical law . . . which it is within the capacity of man to reproduce. Leonardo da Vinci
1794
June 26 The French used a tethered balloon to observe a battlefield and direct artillery fire.
1804
Sir George Cayley, Englands father of aeronautics, built and flew the worlds first successful model glider. 1813 Steam locomotive invented
Inventing Wings
Early in the nineteenth century, the age of dreams had given way to serious attempts to understand the principles of flight and to apply the lessons learned to the design of real flying machines. Cautious experimenters tested their ideas with powered models, while the more daring sampled the delights and the dangers of gliding flight. Their successes and their failures helped move human beings toward what some considered impossible and others considered inevitablepiloted, powered flight.
Above, left to right: Sir George Cayley (17731857); Octave Chanute (18321910); Otto Lilienthal (18481896). Below: Sketch by George Cayley.
National Air and Space Museum #96-15394, #A-21147-B, SI-A-39013, #00102 2002 Smithsonian Institution
Aviation Pioneers
Sir George Cayley, a nineteenthcentury English baronet, richly deserves to be remembered as the father of aeronautics. His insatiable curiosity led him to conduct the first real experiments designed to uncover the basic principles of flight. He discovered that the arched shape of a birds wing was one of the secrets of bird flight and reasoned that a similar shape on a fixed-wing machine might likewise allow it to fly. Cayley designed, built, and flew the worlds first model glider in 1804. He continued his experiments throughout his long life and is said to have sent
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his coachman on a short glide across a shallow valley near his home, Brompton Hall, in 1853. Legend has it that the frightened servant resigned on the spot, explaining that he had been hired to drive, not to fly. Sir George Cayleys many contributions to aviation include the understanding that a successful heavier-than-air flying machine would have to feature separate systems for lift, propulsion, and control. He explained the importance of streamlining, described the way in which stability and control could be achieved, and underscored the need for a lightweight power plant. The first person to link the evolving processes of science and engineering with aviation, he opened the door to the future. Otto Lilienthal built on both the experiments and information provided by Sir George Cayley. He published the results of his ground-based research, Birdflight as the Basis of Aviation, in 1890; he then began to apply what he had learned to the design of the gliders with which he would continue his work. Between 1890 and the time of his death in a glider crash in August 1896, Lilienthal made as many as 2,000 flights in eighteen different designs, including both monoplanes (single-wing) and biplanes. All his craft were hang gliders, controlled in the air by movements of the pilots body, which hung beneath the machine. The work of Otto Lilienthal provided the starting point for the experimenters who would take the final critical steps toward the invention of the airplane.
1868
Matthew Boulton obtained a British patent on a design for ailerons as control surfaces.
1884
Horatio Phillips of England designed a wing with a curved airfoil shape.
1899
May 30 Wilbur Wright wrote the Smithsonian Institution and affirmed his belief that human flight was possible.
1878
Bishop Wright gave his sons, Orville and Wilbur, a toy helicopter. 1868 First transcontinental railroad
1896
May 6 Samuel P Langley launched the first reasonably . large, steam-powered model aircraft. 1897 Spanish-American War
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1900
The Wright brothers flew their first of several gliders, a biplane that soared for 300 feet. 1899 Aspirin first manufactured
be controlled, they were the first powered, significantly large models to fly. The War Department then provided Secretary Langley with $50,000 to design and build a full-scale aerodrome capable of carrying a pilot. He tested his machine in October and December of 1903. On both occasions, the structure collapsed when catapulted into the air from a houseboat anchored in the Potomac River. It flew, one reporter observed, like a handful of mortar. Pilot Charles Manly survived both trials, but the aeronautical career of Samuel Langley was at an end.
Above left: Lilienthal blueprint depicting the glider Lilienthal considered the most successful. Above: Otto Lilienthal on one of his gliders. National Air and Space Museum 2002 Smithsonian Institution
Octave Chanute, a self-taught American engineer, became interested in aeronautics in the 1870s. Corresponding with flying machine experimenters around the globe, he quickly emerged as the focal point of an international community of engineers who were attempting to fly. An admirer of Lilienthal, Chanute sponsored a series of glider trials on the sand dunes at the southern tip of Lake Michigan in the summer of 1896. The trials produced a triplane/biplane hang glider that represented a distinct improvement over the Lilienthal designs. A passionate promoter of aviation who believed in the importance of collecting information about the progress being
made in the field and then sharing it with others who could carry on its development, Chanute inspired and stimulated other aviation experimenters, including a pair of brothers from Dayton, Ohio. Octave Chanute attracted the American scientist Samuel P Langley to aeronautics. . Appointed Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution in 1887, Langley conducted extensive research into the principles of flight, then began his design experiments with small rubber-band-powered models that he called aerodromes. In 1896, Langley completed two flights of up to 4,200 feet with model steam-powered aerodromes. While the aerodromes were too small to carry a pilot and could not
Interesting Reading
Bilstein, Roger E. Flight in America: From the Wrights to the Astronauts. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001 (revised paperback edition). Corn, Joseph J. The Winged Gospel: Americas Romance with Aviation, 19001950. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002 (revised paperback edition).
Crouch, Tom D. The Bishops Boys: A Life of Wilbur and Orville Wright. New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 1989. Heppenheimer, T. A. A Brief History of Flight: From Balloons to Mach 3 and Beyond. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 2001. Kolb, Rocky. Blind Watchers of the Sky: The People and Ideas That Shaped Our View of the Universe. Reading, MA: Helix Books, Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., 1996. Launius, Roger D. Frontiers of Space Exploration. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998.
Lopez, Donald S. Aviation: A Smithsonian Guide. New York: Macmillan, 1995. Millbrooke, Ann. Aviation History. Englewood, Colorado: Jeppeson, Sanderson, 2000. Spangenburg, Ray, and Diane Moser. The Story of Americas Air Transportation. New York: Facts on File, 1992. Wohl, Robert. A Passion for Wings: Aviation and the Western Imagination, 19081918. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1994.
To invent an airplane is nothing. To build one is something. To fly is everything. Otto Lilienthal
1901
Using existing aerodynamics tables, the Wright brothers constructed new wings for a larger glider. However, its flight was marginal, so they tested the tables by analyzing model wings in a wind tunnel. The tables proved to be wrong, and the Wrights painstakingly computed new ones. 1901 First transatlantic radio signal
1902
Using tables created in 1901, the Wrights built a glider that had almost twice the efficiency of their previous ones and made more than 1,000 flights that year at Kill Devil Hills near Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. 1902 Aswan Dam in Egypt completed
1903
December 8 Samuel P Langleys man-carrying Great . Aerodrome collapsed right after takeoff. December 17 The Wright brothers completed the first powered, piloted, heavier-than-air, controlled flight. 1903 Ford Motor Company founded
Above: Facsimile of the telegram sent by Orville Wright on 17 December 1903, reproduced in commemoration of the ninetieth anniversary of piloted, controlled, powered flight. Note the error in the spelling of Orville Wrights name and the error in listing the air time. The longest flight was actually 59 seconds.
Success!
The great moment arrived on a windy winter morning on a North Carolina beach, the result of the work of two brothers with a passion for bicycling and an insatiable curiosity. The Wright brothers introduced the era of powered flight, and men and women everywhere were anxious to follow them into the air. Steady improvements in the design of engines and aircraft structures produced a new generation of aircraft capable of flying higher, faster, and farther.
1904
Returning to Ohio, the Wright brothers experimented with new planes and motors and flew an improved Flyer II.
1906
The Wrights were granted a patent for the airplane control system.
1908
The Wrights finally began to receive credit and attention for their invention. Submitting a bid to the Army for a military flying machine, Orville brought a Flyer to Fort Myer, Virginia; passed the trials; and won a contract for the worlds first military airplane. Later that year, the plane crashed after a propeller failure, seriously injuring Orville and killing his passenger, Lieutenant Thomas Selfridge. 1908 C. F. Cross invented cellophane
1905
The Wrights Flyer III became the worlds first practical airplane but attracted little attention. 1905 Albert Einstein published theory of special relativity
1907
November 13 Paul Cornu, a French inventor, flew the first helicopter. The flight lasted only 20 seconds and hovered just 1 foot (30 cm) above the ground. 1906 San Francisco earthquake occurred
were, for the most part, wild and inaccurate reports on the front pages of major newspapers from coast to coast. When they did not follow up with public flights in 1904, the press assumed that the Kitty Hawk story had been an exaggeration, if not a hoax. Wilbur and Orville Wright pressed ahead, moving their experiments closer to their Dayton, Ohio, home. There, in 1904, in a meadow called Huffman Prairie, they built the Wright Flyer II, the first airplane to fly a circle in the air. The Flyer III followed in 1905, a plane that could stay in the air for over half an hour, turn, bank, and fly figure eights. The Wrights were determined not to fly in public until they had received the protection of a patent and
had signed contracts for the sale of their machine. They ceased flying completely in the fall of 1905 and concentrated on finding buyers for their technology. In 1908, the Wright brothers finally received due acclaim when Wilbur made public flights in Europe, amazing spectators with his flying skill and the maneuverability of the Wright Model A biplane. That same year, Orville took a plane to Fort Myer, Virginia, where he demonstrated the Flyer. In 1909, they returned to Fort Myer and sold the worlds first military plane. By 1909, the Wright Company was turning out four planes a month, making it the largest airplane
manufacturer in the world. They also formed one of the earliest exhibition teams, flying in various venues where they could publicize and market their planes. Orville continued to fly through 13 May 1918, six years after Wilburs death from typhoid fever. He sold his interest in their business in 1915 but remained actively engaged in other related pursuits, among them an ongoing disagreement with the Smithsonian Institution over who had been the first capable of flight, the Wrights or Samuel Langley. The Smithsonian had originally given the nod to Langley but later acquiesced in favor of the Wright brothers. When Orville Wright died in 1948, he had seen many of the advances in aviation that were a direct result of the work he and his brother had accomplished.
Left: Orville Wright; right: Wilbur Wright. NASA Langley Research Center. Below: Wilbur Wright attempted the first powered flight on 14 December 1903.
National Air and Space Museum #A-38618A 2002 Smithsonian Institution
For some years I have been afflicted with the belief that flight is possible to man. Wilbur Wright
1909
July 25 The first flight across the English Channel by Louis Blriot. The U.S. Army accepted delivery of the first military plane and paid the Wright brothers $30,000 for it. 1909 NAACP founded
1911
September 29 Walter Brookins set American record by flying 192 miles from Chicago to Springfield, Illinois, making two stops. December 10 Cal Rodgers completed the first transcontinental flight in the Wright EX Vin Fiz. 1911 Ragtime popularized for mass audiences
1912
April 16 American Harriet Quimby became the first female pilot to fly a plane across the English Channel. May 30 Wilbur Wright died of typhoid fever. 1912 Girl Scouts chartered
Britains Sopwith Camel, a single-seat fighter introduced in 1917, was armed with two guns and could also carry four small bombs. The Camel scored more victories against German aircraft than any other Allied plane in World War I. National Air & Space Museum #85-11071 2002 Smithsonian Institution
Airmail stamps.
1914
January The St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line became the worlds first regularly scheduled airline service. Two-way radio contact was accomplished between pilot and ground control. 1914 Panama Canal opened
1915
March 3 The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), the first U.S. government-sponsored organization in support of aviation research and development, was formed. Orville Wright sold his interest in the Wright Company, then retired. 1916 Lincoln Logs invented
1918
May The United States Post Office inaugurated airmail service from the Polo Grounds, Washington, DC. 1917 U.S. entered World War I
Brown, to reshape the air routes. Exercising near-dictatorial powers, Brown engineered the merger of several carriers to create a national air system. From these mergers, the four major U.S. airlines TWA, American Airlines, United Airlines, and Northwest Airlinesemerged and established an integrated transcontinental route system. Income from airmail contracts breathed life into the countrys fledgling commercial aviation industry in the 1920s and 1930s. Despite the Great Depression, the expansion continued through the World War II era, partly as a result of technological improvements in aircraft that allowed more economical operations. Today, airmail is still an important market for the air transport industry, and airliners continue to carry mail as part of their cargo. every American aircraft produced during this time. NACA engineers and scientists were responsible for the basic and applied research that led to the development of aircraft structures, safety, fluid dynamics, aerodynamics, ground test facilities (including the slotted-throat wind tunnel), flighttesting, high-speed flight from theory to practice (including the area rule to the X-1 and lifting body aircraft). The NACA was to make advancements and contributions in every field associated with aeronautics and the fledgling field of spaceflight.
During the 1920s and 1930s, NACA engineers built a reputation for excellence in research and achieved a host of critical breakthroughs resulting in increased performance. The NACA contributed to victory in WWII and pioneered the postwar research that transformed the airplane into a high-speed, high-altitude aerospace vehicle. NACA would expand to encompass three research centers: Langley, Ames Research Center in California, and Lewis Research Center in Ohio; by 1958, these would employ over 8,000 people with a budget of over $117 million. They would contribute to the development or improvement of
Airmail was an impractical sort of fad and had no place in the serious job of postal transportation. Col. Paul Henderson, U.S. 2nd Asst. Postmaster General, 1919
1923
May 23 First nonstop coast-to-coast airplane flight took place between New York and San Diego26 hours, 50 minutes. June 27 First in-flight refueling occurred over San Diego, California.
1920
February 22 The first transcontinental mail service arrived in New York from San Francisco.
1921
June 15 Bessie Coleman became the first African American woman to receive a Fdration Aronautique Internationale (FAI) pilots license.
Lindbergh and his exploits inspired movies, books, plays, musical compositions, and all manner of other memorabilia. Poems were written, and hundreds of songs such as Lucky Lindy became popular.
Bella Landauer Sheet Music Collection, SIL7-1-023a National Air and Space Museum 2002 Smithsonian Institution
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1928
May 31June 9 Charles Kingsford Smith and Charles T. P Ulm made the first trans-Pacific flight . from California to Australia. 1927 Television invented
Bendix Trophy.
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Thompson Trophy.
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Rheims, France, provided the setting for the first international aviation meet in 1909, a competition that attracted numerous flyers from Europe and one American entry, Glenn Curtiss, who had his eye on the Gordon Bennett Trophy. In his Rheims Racer, Curtiss set a new world record, making his speed run at 46.5 miles per hour. By beating his closest competition, Frenchman Louis Blriot, by a mere six seconds, Curtiss won the trophy he desired. Other air races and trophies beckoned other pilots. In 1913, the Schneider Trophy lured high-speed seaplanes to a course that covered 350 kilometers. With an average speed of 46 miles per hour, France won the first of these races. American Jimmy Doolittle won in 1925 with a speed of 233 miles per hour. When Great Britain won the trophy in 1931, the average speed had increased to 340 miles per hour. The drive to win helped propel technical improvements and the development of sleeker, faster aircraft. The Pulitzer races of the 1920s were a showcase for the U.S. Armed Forces, but it was the Bendix races in the 1930s that gave female aviators their chance to shine and, in some cases, to outshine their
Tickets and programs like these were prized by aviation fans throughout the 1920s and 1930s.
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male competitors. In 1936, Louise Thaden flew between Los Angeles and Cleveland in just under 15 hours to take the prize. Jackie Cochran won the race in 1938, beating nine men. Between 1929 and 1949, the Cleveland Air Races attracted such names as Charles Lindbergh, Jimmy Doolittle, Jackie Cochran, Amelia Earhart, and Wiley Post to the skies over this Ohio citys airport. There, giants of the air competed for the Thompson and Bendix trophies, thrilling the crowds and helping to define aviation during its golden age. Air races are still held throughout the world today.
I dont believe in taking foolish chances, but nothing can be accomplished without taking any chance at all. Charles A. Lindbergh, after his transatlantic flight
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1928
June 2829 Albert Hegenberger and Lester Maitland accomplished the first nonstop crossing of the Pacific.
1929
Fritz von Opel of Germany flew the first rocket-powered plane for 1 minute, 15 seconds. William Green developed the first automatic pilot used on an airliner. 1929 Great Depression began with stock market crash
1931
June 23July 1 Wiley Post and Harold Gatty completed the first circumnavigation of the world by a lone aircraft.
1929
November 2829 Commander Richard E. Byrd completed the first flight over the South Pole. 1928 First scheduled television broadcast
1932
May 2021 Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic. 1931 Empire State Building completed
The role women have played in the progress of aviation is punctuated by the achievements, many of them firsts, of hundreds of brave and determined aeronautical pioneers. These pioneers included women like Juanita Pritchard Bailey, the first woman to fly a plane solo from the United States to Panama, and Evelyn Bobbi Trout, who, in 1929, became the first woman to complete an all-night flight. The following year, Amy Johnson, considered by many to be Britains most famous female pilot, became the first woman to fly alone from England to Australia. In 1931, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, wife of Charles Lindbergh,
became the first woman to receive a glider pilots license. But even before the considerable accomplishments of these women, Alabama-born Katherine Stinson was well on her way to a series of firsts all her own. In 1912, Stinson became the fourth woman to be issued a pilots license. In 1913, she became the first woman to carry the U.S. mail; in 1915, she became the first woman to perform an aerial loop-the-loop. That same year, Stinson became the first woman to skywrite. The honor of being the first woman to fly across the Atlantic belongs to Amelia Earhart, although on the first trip, she was a passenger. In 1932, however, she was at the controls and became the first woman to make the trip solo. Later, she was also the first woman to earn the Distinguished Flying Cross.
Amelia Earhart, nicknamed Lady Lindy, proved her skill by becoming the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic. National Air and Space Museum #381-1431 2002 Smithsonian Institution
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1935 1935
November 22 Pan American Airways made the first Pacific mail service route, leaving San Francisco with 111,000 letters. 1935 Watson Watt built RADAR device December The first Douglas DC-3 flew. By 1938, it carried the bulk of American air traffic. December 1 The first airway traffic control center went into operation. 1936 Margaret Mitchell wrote Gone with the Wind
1939
June 28 Pan American Airways flew the first transatlantic passenger service. 1939 World War II began
In 1937, Earhart embarked upon a journey that, had it been successful, would have given her the distinction of being the first woman to fly around the world. The mystery of her disappearance during that flight, along with that of her navigator and plane, remains to this day a matter of debate. It was Geraldine Mock who, in 1964, flying a single-engine Cessna 180, completed this circumnavigation, becoming the first woman to do so. Amelia Earhart also has the distinction of being the first president of The NinetyNines, an organization that was formed in 1929 and still exists today. The name comes from the total number of the groups charter members, licensed female pilots who came together to create an entity that would help advance aviation and provide a vehicle for female pilots to support each other. Today, The Ninety-Nines, Inc., boasts over 6,500 members worldwide. Jackie Cochran, a former beautician from Florida, served as president of the Ninety-Nines between 1941 and 1943. She was also the first female pilot to ferry a bomber across the Atlantic, and in 1943, she was appointed director of the Womens Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs). The WASPs were approximately 1,000 civilian women who, as the United States entered World War II, delivered aircraft to combat areas all over the world. Though the program was deactivated only sixteen months after its inception, it was and still is considered a success. Cochran was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal and the USAF Legion of Merit for her service. Rightfully called Americas leading female pilot, Cochran is also remembered
Left: Bessie Coleman became the first African American female pilot when she received her pilots license from the Fdration Aronautique Internationale.
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Right: Eileen Collins was the first female pilot of the Space Shuttle (missions STS-63 and STS-84) and the first female commander of the Space Shuttle (mission STS-93).
as the first woman to break the sound barrier; she did that in 1953. Years before this, in 1921, Bessie Coleman broke the color barrier and became the first African American female pilot. Texas-born Coleman, who had grown up amidst poverty and discrimination, overcame two major hurdles in her goal to become a pilot: she was a woman and she was African American. Undeterred, she went to France, where a more liberal outlook prevailed. In 1921, the Fdration Aronautique Internationale awarded her the pilots license she had dreamed about. For Earhart, Cochran, Coleman, and the many other women who achieved so much in aerospacefrom Valentina Tereshkova, the first woman in space, to Eileen Collins, the first female pilot and commander of the Space Shuttleperhaps it is Harriet Quimby to whom they all owe a debt of gratitude. In 1911, Quimby became the first American woman to receive a pilots license. In 1912, she was the first woman to fly across the English Channel, a trip she made in just over an hour. Today, of the approximately 635,000 pilots in the United States, over 37,000 of them are women, enthusiasti-
cally taking up the challenges to which Harriet Quimby opened the door. Each of them has helped prove what President Roosevelt said in 1935 when Amelia Earhart became the first woman to successfully fly from Hawaii to California: Aviation is a science which cannot be limited to men only. And it hasnt been.
Jackie Cochran was awarded medals for her work with the WASPs. Referring to her experience with the group, she said, We landed planes like the Hurricane and the Spitfire in fields where I wouldnt land my Lodestar today if I could avoid it.
National Air and Space Museum #80-16081 2002 Smithsonian Institution
Flying might not be all plain sailing, but the fun of it is worth the price. Amelia Earhart
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1941
June 20 The United States Army Air Forces were formed. The Tuskegee Airmen, the first Black fighter squadron in the United States Armed Forces, was formed. Until that time, Blacks had been forbidden to receive pilot training. 1941 Cheerios invented
Not all bombs that fell from airplanes during the war were destructive. One in particular, the Monroe Bomb, named after its inventor, U.S. Army Air Force Captain James Monroe, employed the weapons of psychological warfarepropaganda leafletsdropping hundreds of thousands of them over broad areas from planes like the B-17 and B24.
By Day and by Night, with United Strength, from the World War II propaganda leaflet collection of Hans Moonen; see http://www.cobweb.nl/jmoonen/
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1943 1942
July 19 The Messerschmitt 262, the worlds first operational jet-powered fighter, took to the air with Fritz Wendel at the controls. 1942 Electronic computer developed in U.S. January Franklin D. Roosevelt boarded a Boeing 314 flying boat in Miami, Florida, and became the first chief executive to make a wartime flight while in office. The Womens Airforce Service Pilots (WASP) was formed to ferry military planes and perform other noncombat operations for the U.S. military in World War II. 1943 Slinky toy invented
Although outnumbered in the early months of the war in the Pacific, American airmen of the USAAF and U.S. Navy fought gallantly against the Japanese in the Philippines and the Southwest Pacific. On 18 April 1942, the U.S. struck back when Lieutenant Colonel Jimmy Doolittle led sixteen USAAF B-25s from the deck of an aircraft carrier and bombed Japan. Meanwhile, in China, the American Volunteer Group, the Flying Tigers, under General Claire Chennault, flying shark-mouthed Curtiss P-40s, bested the Japanese air force. It was in China, too, that U.S. transport aircraft flew the Hump over the highest mountains of the world, keeping China in the war and dramatizing the importance of global air transport, perhaps the greatest development of air power during the war. In June 1942, the Japanese suffered a key defeat in the Battle of Midway Island, in which U.S. Navy dive bombers sank four Japanese aircraft carriers. The Battle of Midway and subsequent fighting at Guadalcanal, which broke the back of Japanese air power, proved decisive. During the first week of March 1943, Japan was dealt a crushing blow in the Battle of the Bismarck Sea, when aircraft of General George Kenneys Fifth Air Force destroyed an entire Japanese convoy. The Japanese never
really recovered from this defeat. Subsequently, General Kenneys Allied Air Forces, under theater commander General Douglas MacArthur, supported the drive north and westward along the north coast of New Guinea and then played a major role in the invasion of the Philippines. This was the famous island-hopping campaign, which left substantial Japanese forces isolated on islands, only to wither on the vine. The final act was the bombing of the Japanese homeland by B-29 Superfortresses, a strategic offensive that, along with the naval blockade, brought Japan to the brink of catastrophe in the summer of 1945. With the dropping of atomic bombs by B-29s on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan was forced to surrender on 2 September 1945, thereby writing a final, dramatic chapter to World War II.
ground. These volunteer civilians kept a close watch for enemy aircraft that might appear in the skies overhead, skies that were sometimes filled with planes flying from one point to another on training missions or to and from bases. It was an important aspect of defense to be able to distinguish quickly and accurately between friendly and enemy aircraft. Spotters used spotter cards to help them do the job.
Because spotters never knew from which direction airplanes would come, they were trained to quickly look for the shape of the wing, the number of engines, the forward profile, and any other markings on the plane that would enable them to quickly identify it. Each spotter card showed several perspectives of the plane it represented, along with the planes markings.
Air power is like poker. A second-best hand is like none at allit will cost you dough and win you nothing. General George Kenney
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1944
V-2 rocket first used in combat.
1947
September 18 United States Air Force formed as a separate service. October 14 Captain Charles E. Yeager flew faster than the speed of sound for the first time in the rocketpowered Bell X-1. 1945 World War II ended
1948
The Berlin Blockade and airlift proved the power of airplanes to help resolve diplomatic crises.
1945
August 6 B-29 Enola Gay dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
1949
March 2 Lucky Lady II: This Boeing B-50A made the first nonstop around-the-world flight. 1950 Korean War began
No matter what nickname they go by, modern helicopters are amazingly versatile aircraft with the ability to lift directly off the ground and fly without the need for a runway. The concept of vertical flight can be traced to the Chinese top, a toy first used around 400 B.C. By the mid1500s, Leonardo da Vinci was sketching helicopter-like machines. In 1907, French engineer Paul Cornu managed to lift a helicopter he designed into the air for 20 seconds. Though not a long flight, it was enough to stimulate other designers, who made great advances in helicopter design. It was not until 1939 that the first successful helicopter flight took place in the
United States. Igor Sikorsky, a Russianborn U.S. citizen who is known as the Father of the Helicopter, flew his VS300 and launched a lucrative business that provided helicopters for World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Today, helicopters are used for transporting accident victims, crop seeding, traffic reports, aerial photography, fighting forest fires, rescues at sea, lifting heavy construction materials for skyscraper construction, and hundreds of other practical applications. This fascinating machine that can take off and land vertically; hover in midair; and fly forward, backward, sideways, or straight up and down is as indispensable as it is versatile.
In 1939, the first successful flight of a helicopter was accomplished in the United States by Igor Sikorsky.
National Air and Space Museum #00089138 2002 Smithsonian Institution
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1954 1953
November 20 Scott Crossfield became the first pilot to fly at Mach 2 in the D-558 research plane. Jackie Cochran became the first woman to fly faster than sound. 1953 Color television introduced in the U.S. The U.S. Air Force Academy was created. July 15 The Boeing Dash 80 (prototype of 707) first test flight occurred.
1957
January 1518 A jet flew around the world for the first time. October 4 The Russians launched Sputnik I, the first artificial Earth satellite. 1957 Dr. Seuss published The Cat in the Hat
1955
August 4 The U-2 reconnaissance prototype first flew. 1955 Disneyland opened in California
Passenger Jets
Through the 1940s, the U.S. led the passenger transport business; however, in 1952, British Airways challenged that lead with the introduction of the worlds first jet airliner. The Comet was designed to fly at 35,000 feet and higher, thus dramatically reducing fuel consumption. But at these altitudes, there was another problem to be solved: creating a pressurized cabin in which passengers could breathe without oxygen masks. Once the issue of cabin pressurization was resolved, the Comet was ready to be introduced to the public, and they loved it. The original Comets lifespan was cut short because of structural problems. The Boeing 707, based on a jet tanker design built for the U.S. Air Force, followed the Comet in 1954, not only addressing the structural problems that doomed the first jetliner, but also boasting a newly designed airframe that offered a smoother, faster ride with room for more passengers. This airliner sparked Douglas Aircraft to produce the DC-8, a plane with greater range and more cabin width, which allowed an extra passenger seat in each row. With a seating capacity of up to 550 passengers, Boeings 747 was the worlds first and largest commercial jumbo jet, a plane over 230 feet long with a wingspan of almost 200 feet.
The Lockheed L-1011, McDonnell Douglas DC-10, and Airbus A300 followed. The Boeing 777 is the most recent entrant into the wide-body aircraft market. The Concorde supersonic transport was the result of a partnership between the French and British governments. Only 16 Concordes were built, but given its ability to travel at Mach 2.2 (over twice the speed of sound) at an altitude of 50,000 feet, flying the Concorde became an incredible experience for its passengers. Today, aircraft manufacturers continue to adapt their machines to the markets desire to get there faster, more efficiently, and more comfortably.
The flying machines will eventually be fast; they will be used in sport, but they should not be thought of as commercial carriers. Octave Chanute, 1910
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1958
January 31 Explorer 1 successfully orbited Earth. October 1 NASA was established. December 19 First voice radio broadcast from space occurred. 1958 Public schools integrated in Little Rock, Arkansas
The X-15 rocket-powered aircraft under the wing of a B-52, waiting to be air-launched. This photo was taken from an observation window in the B-52 shortly before dropping the X-15.
gap, and provided the impetus for increased spending for aerospace endeavors, technical and scientific educational programs, and the chartering of new federal agencies to manage research and development. The United States launched its first Earth satellite on 31 January 1958, when Explorer 1, launched atop a modified Redstone, documented the existence of radiation zones encircling Earth. These zones, shaped by Earths magnetic field, came to be called the Van Allen Radiation Belt. This mission began a series of flights to the Moon and planets.
JPL Director William Pickering, astrophysicist James Van Allen, and rocketeer Wernher von Braun hold up a mock-up of Explorer 1.
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1959
September 15 Scott Crossfield first flew the fastest and highest flying aircraft in history, the rocket-powered X-15.
1960
May 17 YF4H-1 Phantom fighter and Douglas DC-8 were unveiled. 1960 John F. Kennedy elected U.S. President
nearly 100 miles. On 3 April 1988, the 69pound Daedalus 88 made the flight between the island of Crete and the island of Santorini, a distance of 115.11 kilometers, or 71.53 miles. Over the next 15 years, the lightweight human-powered aircraft evolved into lightweight, high-altitude, solar-powered aircraft. This series of research aircraft set numerous records, culminating in the recordbreaking flight of the Helios aircraft to 96,863 feet over Hawaii during 2001. This lightweight, unpiloted, propeller-driven, solar-powered, 247-foot-long aircraft is a prototype for future long-duration, highaltitude flights spending days aloft using only the Sun for power, either directly or through new advanced fuel cells that store the Suns energy. This high-flying wing could significantly enhance scientific missions studying Earth, assist farmers, act as a telecommunication platform, enhance weather observation, and provide disaster monitoring and emergency response.
Guy Bluford served on four Shuttle missionsSTS-8, STS-61-A, STS-39, and STS-53.
Its human nature to stretch, to go, to see, to understand. Exploration is not a choice, really; its an imperative. Michael Collins
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1960
April 1 Tiros I was the first weather satellite launched.
1963
August 22 The X-15 aircraft set an altitude record of 67 miles.
1967
Astronauts Gus Grissom, Roger Chaffee, and Ed White died in the Apollo 1 capsule fire during a ground test in preparation for their launch.
1961
April 12 The first human being to travel in space (Major Yuri Gagarin) completed one full orbit of Earth. May 5 Alan Shepard was the first American in space.
1966
March 1617 Neil Armstrong and David Scott performed the first orbital docking. 1963 President Kennedy assassinated
1968
December Apollo 8 circumnavigated the Moon. 1968 Civil rights activist Martin Luther King assassinated
the surface, telling millions on Earth who saw and heard him that it was one small step for [a] manone giant leap for mankind. Aldrin soon followed him out, and the two plodded around the landing site in the lunar gravity (1/6 of Earths) and planted an American flag. Five more landing missions followed at approximately six-month intervals through December 1972 (in addition to the aborted Apollo 13 flight), each of them spending an increasing amount of time on the Moon. The scientific experiments placed on the Moon and the lunar soil samples returned have provided grist for scientific investigations ever since. Apollo left several important legacies: it accomplished its political goals; it was a triumph of management in meeting the enormously difficult systems engineering and technological integration requirements; and it enabled the people of the world, for the first time, to see their home from afara tiny, lovely, and fragile blue marble hanging in the blackness of space.
Buzz Aldrin on the Moon during the Apollo 11 mission, July 1969.
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1969
The Concorde prototype and Boeing 747 first flew. July 20 Apollo 11 landed on the Moon. March 2 The first Concorde flight occurred. 1969 Woodstock Pop Festival held in upstate New York
Pilot Bill Dana looks up at the B-52 mothership cruises over the HL-10 lifting body on Muroc Dry Lake in California.
reached a record peak altitude of 125,907 feet. X-2 research resulted in new construction techniques that contributed to the development of advanced materials for highspeed aircraft such as the XB-70 bomber, the SR-71 spy plane, and the Space Shuttle. One of the most unusual research efforts was the lifting bodya vehicle with no wings that flew because of the aerodynamic lift generated by the body. Beginning in the early 1960s, NASA partnered with the Air
Force and other organizations and developed and flew a series of prototypes or models of future spacecraft that could land like an airplane after enduring the searing heat of reentry from spaceas the Space Shuttle does today. The lifting body configurations varied considerably. Some of these configurations pushed the limits of both design engineers and test pilots capabilities. This work led to the Space Shuttle of today.
service in the late 1950s, and rockets like Atlas, Titan, Minuteman, and Peacekeeper played roles in deterrence. Air power served the U.S. as a platform for electronic and photographic intelligence. Aircraft flew at the periphery of the Soviet Union, photographing installations, collecting signals, and locating radar systems. Aircraft like the U-2 and SR-71 achieved fame until reconnaissance satellites during the 1960s took responsibility for many of these dangerous missions. The U.S. also developed global air transport, enabling it to project power around the world and provide humanitarian airlift to peoples in distress using C-130, C-141, and giant C-5 aircraft. Global air transport demonstrated its importance early during the Berlin Airlift in 194849, when it gave the West its first great victory of the Cold War. The U.S. nuclear advantage and development of air power allowed the economies of the western nations to grow without the excessive burden of military
spending faced by the Soviet Union and its satellites, which maintained huge ground armies throughout the Cold War and, at the same time, attemptedwith considerable successto match U.S. strategic power. The Soviets achieved military parity by the 1970s, but at terrible cost to the Soviet economy. Militarization of the Soviet Union and its satellites stunted economic development and undermined political stability. The decision of the U.S. and its allies to entrust their security to nuclear weapons and air power paid off with the collapse of the Soviet bloc and end of the Cold War in 1991.
We can lick gravity, but sometimes the paperwork is overwhelming. Attributed to Wernher von Braun
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1970
April Apollo 13 became a successful failure when, despite a ruptured oxygen tank that crippled the spacecraft, the crew returned safely. October 24 The X24A lifting body exceeded Mach 1. 1970 Bar codes introduced for retail use in England
1971
April 19 Soviet Union placed the worlds first space station, Salyut 1, in orbit.
1973
NASA launched the Skylab orbital workshop into orbit.
1972
NASA launched Landsat 1, the first remote sensing satellite. 1972 2.5-million-year-old human skull discovered
1975
Soviet and American spacecraft docked in orbit during the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. 1973 TCP/IP (Internet protocol) designed
Imagine being able to plan an entire trip, home to destination, on the Internet: you drive to your local airportnot the major hub of today; board a small jet aircraft; and, in a matter of hours, arrive at your destination. NASA and industry are
currently involved in a research project to determine the possibility of using small, personal aircraft to create a safe alternative for both business and personal air travel. At the 99 percent of all airports that are currently underused, small aircraft could be used to carry people and products safely and affordably from one local community airport to another. Delays and travel time would be reduced as a result of creating greater air access into more communities in less time. This provides the flying public with jet-like performance at an affordable cost.
The future: new small, efficient jet airplanes that are easy to fly like the Eclipse 500.
Eclipse
Morphing Aircraft
The future of flight may include aircraft capable of responding to changes in speed or environmental conditions by altering or morphing their shape. The wings of these aircraft would sweep back and reconfigure to minimize drag and sonic boom. The engine inlets and nozzles would change to adapt to new conditions. Small jets of air and feather-like surfaces would provide additional control. Morphing would include small and large changes using structures and
fluids for control. NASA and industry researchers are looking closely at the characteristics of flight in birds to develop a new generation of flying machine that changes itself to fly more efficiently. This new type of aircraft would be capable of various modes of flight from supersonic to hover. Some of the current areas of research include developing smart materials, adaptive structures, and biologically inspired flight systems. Instead of the traditional jet engine location on an aircrafts body or wings, scientists are investigating the effects of using multiple small engines to power these aircraft. The results from this research may provide technologies for aerospace vehicles that efficiently adapt to the diverse and varying conditions of flight.
Airplanes of the future will have wings that change shape for greater efficiency, mimicking the flight of birds.
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1977
The Gossamer Condor became the first human-powered airplane.
1979
June 13 The Gossamer Albatross human-powered aircraft crossed the English Channel. The F-16 became the first production military aircraft to incorporate a fly-by-wire flight control system. 1979 M. Thatcher first female elected Prime Minister (U.K.)
1978
October 30 The Airline Deregulation Act was signed into law. 1977 The movie Star Wars was released
vehicle with very large lifting capacity and range). Another possibility is covering the upper surface of the wing with a great many tiny, ultrasimple turbine engines that can run on compressed hydrogen. Theoretically, by using these many hydrogenburning engines, they could allow a 747 to take off in an extremely short distance.
Looking Up
As the nations air traffic increases, the ability of the airspace system to handle the traffic is being stressed. Realizing that we will soon be operating at capacity, NASA and the aviation industry are investigating solutions to the problems of airspace and runway congestion. The Civil Tiltrotor aircraft may provide an answer. Regardless of size, all airplanes require valuable runway space for takeoff and landing. These unique aircraft fly like an airplane but tilt
F-22 Raptor
The most advanced fighter aircraft in the world, the F-22 Raptor, is now being tested at Edwards Air Force Base. The Raptor is a revolutionary leap in aircraft technology that unites advanced capability with reduced maintenance costs and support requirements. The F-22s combination of stealth, advanced avionics, and maneuverability will give pilots a first-look, first-shot, first-kill capability against the aircraft of any potential enemy. The F-22 combines advanced supersonic flight with the ability to fly at slow speeds during combat, pointing its nose in any direction without loss of control. Integrating systems like radar and friend-or-foe identification into one cohesive platform, the Raptor is designed to provide air superiority and dominance to allow quick, decisive victories with few U.S. and allied casualties. This impressive aircraft will replace the F-15 as Americas front-line air fighter.
their wing-mounted engines and propellers, enabling them to take off and land much like a helicopter, thereby reducing the need for runway space to become airborne. The versatility of tiltrotors would meet the needs of short-haul and commuter flights and would free up valuable time on the runway for large aircraft. NASA and industry have developed advanced technologies to make tiltrotor aircraft easier to operate, quieter, more efficient, and safer to use than previous tiltrotors.
Bell/Agusta BA 609 Tiltrotor. Tiltrotors can land in a parking lot and cruise at over 300 miles per hour.
Bell/Agusta
The aeroplane has unveiled for us the true face of the earth. Antoine de Saint-Exupry
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1981
April 1214 The first Space Shuttle orbiter, Columbia, flew into Earth orbit.
1984
December 14 The X-29 forward swept wing aircrafts maiden flight occurred.
1986
December 23 Voyager aircraft completed the first nonstop flight around the world.
1983
Sally Ride became the first American woman to fly in space; Guy Bluford became the first African American to fly in space. 1981 IBM introduced the first personal computer
1986
January 28 Space Shuttle Challenger exploded 73 seconds into its flight, killing seven crewmembers. 1984 Macintosh computer with mouse released
1988
April 22 Daedalus 88, human-powered aircraft, flew from Crete to Santorini. 1988 CDs outsold vinyl records for the first time
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1989
The B-2 Stealth bomber made its first flight.
1990
September 29 The first flight of the YF22 fighter prototype was made by Lockheed test pilot Dave Ferguson. October 11 The first flight of the X-31, YF22, and YF23 took place. 1989 Berlin wall opened; torn down in 1990
1991
August 27 The first flight of the YF23 V-22 Osprey tiltrotor occurred. September 17 The first flight of the McDonnell Douglas C-17 military cargo transport took place. 1991 Gulf War began
The International Space Station promises to become the anchor tenant of a research park in space, contributing critical knowledge necessary to make life on Earth more rewarding and to aid humanitys movement beyond this planet. It is an idea whose time has come.
Space Frontiers
There are certain ideas that many believe to be inherent in the human psyche and integral to American culture: ambition for progress, curiosity about the unknown, the need to pose profound questions and to answer them, the concept of new frontiers thatonce achievedpromise a better quality of life for all people. Space is such a frontier: Earth orbit, the Moon, Earths neighborhood, Mars and the asteroids, eventually the moons of the giant planets of the outer solar system, and someday, more distant worldsthese are collectively the endless, ever-expanding frontier of the night sky under which the human species evolved and toward which the human spirit is inevitably drawn. As part of NASAs vision to improve life here, extend life to there, and find life beyond, NASA is studying advanced technologies that enable the safe, rapid, and affordable exploration of our solar system by humans and robots. Mini-Magnetospheric Plasma Propulsion (M2P2) is an example of a transportation technology that not only attains much higher speeds than are now possible, but also provides an artificial magnetic field to protect the vehicle and its crew from harmful radiation.
M2P2 concept.
Space isnt remote at all. Its only an hours drive away if your car could go straight upwards. Sir Hoyle Fred, British astronomer
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1994
Jeannie Flynn, the first female combat pilot in the U.S. Air Force, finished flight training in the F-15.
1996
January 4 The Boeing Sikorsky Comanche helicopter was unveiled. March 22 Shannon Lucid began her historic journey to Mir. Her stay established the United States single-mission spaceflight endurance record. 1997 First Harry Potter book published in the U.K.
1997
May 17 The first flight of a subscale remotely piloted X36 tailless research aircraft took place.
1995
Norm Thagard was the first American astronaut to serve on the Russian space station Mir. 1994 South Africa held first interracial national election
1998
The first elements of the International Space Station were assembled in orbit. 1998 Frank Sinatra died
Understanding
Why do weather patterns function as they do? Why are there cycles of hot and cold, wet and dry seasons? How is the climate changing over time? What are the causes and consequences? These and myriad other questions have motivated scientific study about this planet for centuries. With the advent of the space age, however, new space-based instruments especially remote sensing satelliteshave allowed humans to monitor Earth as never before. Using Earth-observing satellites, scientists have produced immense benefits to the nation, yielding new knowledge for improved weather forecasting, agriculture, urban and land-use planning, and many other related areas. In concert with other agencies, the global research community, and commercial partners, space-based resources have provided the scientific foundation needed for complex policy choices leading to sustainable development. Meteorological science has also benefited greatly from the opportunity to study the Earth with satellites. The perspective afforded by satellite imaging was a great boon to scientists, who were then able to locate distribution and types of cloud formations, find and measure weather
of humanitys understanding of the largest planet in our system and its moons. More recently, the Hubble Space Telescope, although initially impaired, has returned exceptional images providing critical data on the origins and development of the universe. As only one example of the Hubbles important contributions, in early 1997, NASA scientists announced the discovery of three black holes in three normal galaxies, suggesting that nearly all galaxies may harbor supermassive black holes which once powered quasars (extremely luminous nuclei of galaxies). At the beginning of the twenty-first century, several key spaceflight missions are seeking to answer age-old astronomical questions. As part of the NASA Origins Program, a series of missions will collectively seek to answer such questions as how the universe was formed, what evolutionary process it has followed, and whether we are alone in the cosmos. The future is exciting, for humanity has, for the first time in its history, the tools necessary to explore the answers to these enticing questions more thoroughly than ever before.
26
1999
March 20 The first nonstop circumnavigation of the globe via a balloon took place.
AquaObserving the interactions among Earths oceans, atmosphere, land, ice, snow cover, and vegetation.
2000
The first crew of the International Space Station arrived in orbit. 2000 Closest presidential election in U.S. history
Space Research
Throughout most of history, we human beings viewed gravity as an inescapable constant in anything we designed or did. Even from the start, gravity profoundly affected the way life on Earth evolved. But with the dawn of the space age, access to the microgravity environment of Earth orbit allowed scientists to cancel most of gravitys effects and conduct unprecedented research, thus providing a new tool to apply to long-standing questions in science and technology. Space also poses physical challenges to explorers, who must find ways to withstand space environment hazards for which our evolution on Earth never prepared us. To meet these opportunities and challenges, NASA has led the world in peerreviewed, interdisciplinary, fundamental, and applied research in microgravity. Throughout, NASA and its science teams have been guided by two fundamental questions: What is gravitys role in biological and physical processes? What must we do to enable humans to live and work safely in Earth orbit and to venture beyond Earth orbit? In the search for answers to these questions, NASA has sponsored a multitude of experiments to increase our understanding of both the human experience and natures forces in space. We also devote part of our budget to education and outreach to help inspire and educate the next generation of scientists. Our total effort is transforming the technological foundations not only of the space program, but also of our society. Knowledge from space will make a difference in the health industry. Advances in biology, medicine, physics, and chemistry; associated analytical tools; and information systems are opening an era of unprecedented opportunities to benefit human life on Earth and to extend our reach into space.
Representation of DNA struck by radiation, a key concern for long-duration space travel.
The air, as well as the earth and the ocean, has been subdued by science, and will become a common and convenient highway for mankind. Edgar Allen Poe
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Wanted:
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Aviation Fun!
Do You Wonder Why?
1. 2. 3. 4. Why Why Why Why do do do do they push the plane from the gate? we need oxygen masks in case of emergency? my ears pop as we go up to and come down from cruising altitude? we need to have tray tables up and seats in their upright position for takeoff and landing?
(Find answers at bottom of page.)
This wing demonstrates the great room there is for aeronautics innovation. Can you design a better wing?
8.5"
1
1. Fold 8.5 x 11-inch paper diagonally as shown.
2
2. Make a half-inch fold along the previously folded edge.
3
3. Make a second half-inch fold.
4. Curl the ends of the paper to make a ring and tuck one end into the fold of the other.
5. Gently grasp the V between the two crown points with your thumbs and index fingers and toss the glider lightly forward.
The folds in the paper make an airplane wing where the front end is heavy and the back end is light. Curling the ends to make a ring changes the shape of the wing and improves the wings flight performance.
Scavenger Hunt!!
Why was Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, chosen for the test flights of the Wright brothers? What type of flying vehicle is credited to the father of aeronautics? Who was the first African American woman to receive a Fdration Aronautique Internationale (FAI) license? Who pioneered rubber-band-powered motors called aerodromes in the 1800s? What total distance did the first four powered flights of the Wrights 1903 flyer travel on December 17? What is the name of the remotely piloted aircraft that is being developed to fly at a high altitude for a long duration? How long was Lindberghs flight across the Atlantic? Name two early flight pioneers who used birds as the inspiration for flights using solar power. Who were the first passengers aboard a hot air balloon? Who was the first person to step on another world and when? What was the first commercial jet aircraft?
Answers 1. Most airplanes do not move in reverse and so they need a push. 2. There is less oxygen in the atmosphere at higher altitudes. Airplanes are airtight and pressurized so passengers have the correct mix of air in the cabin. If there is a sudden change in the aircrafts pressurization, a mask would drop to give passengers needed oxygen. 3. Even though the cabin is pressurized, there are still slight changes in pressure as the airplanes altitude changes. 4. So you and others in your row could exit the row and airplane quickly and safely in an emergency.
NASA Publication SP-2002-09-511-HQ National Aeronautics and Space Administration Office of Aerospace Technology NASA Headquarters Washington, DC 20546
NASA and its predecessor, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, have charted the course of aviation and space technology since 1915. NASAs world-renowned achievements, representing a successful investment in the future of all Americans, are accomplished using less than one percent of the Federal budget. http://www.nasa.gov
In its more than 50 years of existence, the Air Force has become the worlds premier aerospace force. Its mission is simple in words, yet awesome in meaningdefend the nation through the control and exploitation of air and space. To learn more about opportunities within the Air Force, call 1-800-423-USAF or visit http://www.airforce.com
The U.S. Centennial of Flight Commission was created by Congress to expand interest in the commemoration of the centennial of powered flight and the Wright brothers achievement. The Commission is coordinating a national outreach campaign and advising the President, Congress, and federal agencies on the most effective ways to encourage participation in 2003. http://www.centennialofflight.gov