Quiz name: Chapter 12 Classwork Assignment Famous Scientist Biography Wernher von Braun

Similar documents
The US Space Global Warfighting System & Global Network Response. Contents. Huntsville: the Dark Past

CHAPTER TEN. A/4 Tail Art Reborn Cuxhaven, Germany

History of Guided Missiles

U.S. Army Ordnance Corps Hall of Fame Nomination

Rockets for War... And Peace: A History of the U.S. Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Force

The Cold War Conflicts

WW2 CIOS and BIOS Military Intelligence Reports on German Wartime Technology

HIGH. Reach for the GROUND. For the 45th Space Wing in Florida, the last Titan launch marked the end of an era. Photography by Guy Aceto

Fact Sheet: North Korea Missile Activity in 2017

Conflict and Change. Chapter 10

MOTORS CORPORATION MILWAUKEE. WISCONSIN Currently building the spacecraft guidance and navigation systems for

Exhibit R-2, RDT&E Budget Item Justification

m ss^s Missiles at the Cape: Missile Systems on Display at the Air Force Space and Missile Museum, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida o o

Lesson 1: Air Force Beginnings Through the Korean War

Indefensible Missile Defense

December 14, 1819 Alabama Becomes a State

D-Day invasion----june 6, Yalta Conference----Feb. 1945

The UAH Space Hardware Club Sounding Rocket Program

SSUSH19: The student will identify the origins, major developments, and the domestic impact of World War ll, especially the growth of the federal

During the Cold War, the USA & USSR were rival superpowers who competed to spread their ideology

Essential Question: What caused an Arms Race to develop between the US and USSR? How did space exploration factor into the Arms Race?

Review ROUND 1. 4th Nine Weeks Review

The U.S. Navy and Space

1945 onwards. A war with no fighting or direct conflict. USSR v USA Communism v Capitalism East v West

ARCHIVED REPORT. AGM-45 Shrike - Archived 10/2001

Banning Ballistic Missiles? Missile Control for a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World

AMRDEC. Core Technical Competencies (CTC)

Valuation Methodologies for Rocket Motors from Excess Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles

DBQ 13: Start of the Cold War

AU-18 Space Primer. Prepared by AIR COMMAND AND STAFF COLLEGE SPACE RESEARCH ELECTIVES SEMINARS. Air University Press Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama

Director, Intelligence and Security Research Center George Mason University

Civil Air Patrol. Volunteer Citizens Serving Communities Overview for Educators.

Defense Support Program Celebrating 40 Years of Service

The Cold War (ish)

Fallout Shelters and A Man on the Moon

Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Operations

Specifications for the procurement of a new combat aircraft (NKF) and of a new ground-based air defence system (Bodluv) [German version is authentic]

Artist Ted Wilbur for NASA

Boosting Access. to Government Rocket Science. John F. Rice. Defense AT&L: September October 2014 Defense AT&L: September October

CWA 2.5 The President s Daily Bulletin (Nuclear Arms Race) Timeline

New Artillery Sunday Punch

The Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962

Research and Development in the Physical, Engineering, and Life Sciences (Except Biotechnology)

Addendum 9 March 2017

NAVAHO SUPERSONIC "PILOTLESS BOMBER": U.S. SPACE TECHNOLOGY INCUBATOR

The Origins of, and Reasons for, Systems Engineering V. Arrichiello. Vincenzo Arrichiello

Postwar America ( ) Lesson 3 The Cold War Intensifies

DBQ 20: THE COLD WAR BEGINS

GROUP 1: The President s Daily Bulletin Nuclear Arms Race

NASA Marshall Faculty Fellowship Program

Axis and Allies Revised: Historical Edition (AARHE)

An Introduction to Orbital ATK, Inc.

Technical and institutional factors in the emergence of project management

The Sputnik Crisis And America's Response

The 6555th. Missile and Space Launches Through by Mark C. Cleary. 45th Space Wing History Office

The Allied Victory Chapter 32, Section 4

Ammunition and Explosives related Federal Supply Classes (FSC)

Name Class Date. Postwar America Section 1

WARFIGHTER TRAINING ON MRTFB RANGES A SUCCESS STORY

DOING BUSINESS WITH NASA

An Introduction to Orbital ATK, Inc. Company Overview Presentation

MEMORANDUM. BASE OPS/ International Spy Museum. Operation Minute by Minute. 01 October, 1962 (time travel skills required)

SOFIA - FlyYourThesis

Arms Control Today. U.S. Missile Defense Programs at a Glance

A New World. The Cold War - Part 2

I. The Pacific Front Introduction Read the following introductory passage and answer the questions that follow.

January 23, Dear Government and Industry Representatives:

Beyond Breaking 4 th August 1982

Test By Trial. The unique 46th Test Group tries out a wide range of weapons systems over the white sands of southern New Mexico.

American Military Aviation: The Indispensable Arm By Charles J. Gross

Kill Vehicle Work Breakdown Structure

UNCLASSIFIED FY 2016 OCO. FY 2016 Base

Eisenhower, McCarthyism, and the Cold War

Flight PatternQ&A with the first military test pilot to fly the X-35 and F-35

Naval Support Facility. Indian Head. Supporting Our Military and Our Nation INSTALLATION OVERVIEW JULY 2010 APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE

CRS Report for Congress

Final Marine Corps Cessna Citation Encore Delivered

George C. Marshall 1953

System Engineering. Missile Design and. Eugene L Fleeman. Lilburn, Georgia AIM EDUCATION SERIES. Joseph A. Schetz, Editor-in-Chief

Keywords. Guided missiles, Classification of guided missiles, Subsystems of guided missiles

Last spring, the world eagerly followed reports of a dead satellite containing harmful materials on a crash course with the earth.

H. R. ll [Report No. 115 ll]

Introduction to missiles

Entering the New Frontier

Guided Notes. Chapter 21; the Cold War Begins. Section 1:

The Cold War Begins. Chapter 16 &18 (old) Focus Question: How did U.S. leaders respond to the threat of Soviet expansion in Europe?

The Patriot Missile Failure

Global Missile Launch Surveillance for Increasing Nuclear Stability*

HOW HIGH IS IT WEB SITES RESEARCH AIRCRAFT/ROCKETS/SPACECRAFT

The U.S. military, especially the Army, was in poor shape after Vietnam:

When/why was the word teenager invented? a) Have teenagers changed all that much since the word was made? Why or why not?

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences (USUHS) APA-Accredited Ph.D. Program in CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY

In your spiral create 8 graphic organizers over the material provided. The graphic organizers may only have 3 spokes; therefore you will need to

MATCHING: Match the term with its description.

Cuban Missile Crisis 13 Days that Changed the almost changed World

The British Nuclear Program and the United States: Dependency and Interdependency in the 1950s and early 1960s

How did the way Truman handled the Korean War affect the powers of the presidency? What were some of the long-term effects of the Korean war?

SSUSH20A & B Cold War America

16 Department of the Air Force Department of Veterans Affairs Department of Homeland Security

Access to Space: The Future of U.S. Space Transportation Systems. April OTA-ISC-415 NTIS order #PB

Transcription:

Name: Quiz name: Chapter 12 Classwork Assignment Famous Scientist Biography Wernher von Braun Date: 1. German engineer who played a prominent role in all aspects of rocketry and space exploration, first in Germany and after World War II in the United States. 1 @ 1 2. Braun was born into a prosperous aristocratic family. His mother encouraged young Wernher s curiosity by giving him a upon his confirmation in the Lutheran church. 1 @ 2 3. Braun s early interest in and the realm of space never left him thereafter. In 1920 his family moved to the seat of government, Berlin. 1 @ 2 4. He did not do well in school, particularly in. A turning point in his life occurred in 1925 when he acquired a copy of Die Rakete zu den Planetenräumen ( The Rocket into Interplanetary Space ) by a rocket pioneer, Hermann Oberth 1 @ 2 5. In the spring of 1930, while enrolled in the Berlin Institute of Technology, Braun joined the. In his spare time he assisted Oberth in liquid-fueled rocket motor tests. 1 @ 3 Page 1 of 6

6. In 1932 he graduated from the Technical Institute with a B.S. degree in and entered the University of Berlin. 1 @ 3 7. By the fall of 1932 the rocket society was experiencing grave financial difficulties. At that time Capt. Walter R. Dornberger (later major general) was in charge of and development in the Ordnance Department of Germany s 100,000- man armed forces, the Reichswehr. 1 @ 4 8. He recognized the military potential of and the ability of Braun. Dornberger arranged a research grant from the Ordnance Department for Braun, who then did research at a small development station that was set up adjacent to Dornberger s existing solid-fuel rocket test facility at the Kummersdorf Army Proving Grounds near Berlin. 1 @ 4 9. Two years later Braun received a from the University of Berlin. His thesis, which, for reasons of military security, bore the nondescript title About Combustion Tests, contained theoretical investigation and developmental experiments on 300- and 660-pound-thrust rocket engines. 1 @ 4 10. By December 1934 Braun s group, which then included one additional engineer and three mechanics, had successfully launched that rose vertically to more than 1.5 miles (2.4 km). 1 @ 5 Page 2 of 6

11. Since the test grounds near Berlin had become too small, a large military development facility was erected at the village of in northeastern Germany on the Baltic Sea, with Dornberger as the military commander and Braun as the technical director. 1 @ 6 12. Liquid-fueled rocket aircraft and jet-assisted takeoffs were successfully demonstrated, and the and the supersonic antiaircraft missile Wasserfall were developed. 1 @ 6 13. The A-4 was designated by the Propaganda Ministry as V-2, meaning. By 1944 the level of technology of the rockets and missiles being tested at Peenemünde was many years ahead of that available in any other country. 1 @ 6 14. Braun always recognized the value of the work of American rocket pioneer Robert H. Goddard. Until 1936, said Braun, Goddard was ahead of us all. At the end of World War II, Braun, his younger brother Magnus, Dornberger, and the entire German rocket-development. 15. Within a few months Braun and about 100 members of his group were at the U.S. Army Ordnance Corps test site at White Sands, N.M., where they tested, assembled, and supervised the launching of captured V-2s for purposes. 16. Developmental studies were made of advanced ramjet and rocket missiles. At the end of the war, the United States had entered the with practically no previous experience. Page 3 of 6

17. The of Braun s group was outstanding. After all, he said, if we are good, it s because we ve had 15 more years of experience in making mistakes and learning from them! 18. After moving to Huntsville, Ala., in 1952, Braun became technical director (later chief) of the U.S. Army ballistic-weapon program. Under his leadership, the were developed. In 1955 he became a U.S. citizen and, characteristically, accepted citizenship wholeheartedly. 2 @ 2 19. During the 1950s Braun became a national and international focal point for the. He was the author or coauthor of popular articles and books and made addresses on the subject. 2 @ 2 20. In 1954 a secret army navy project to launch an Earth satellite, Project Orbiter, was thwarted. The situation was changed by the launching of by the Soviet Union on Oct. 4, 1957, followed by Sputnik 2 on November 3. 2 @ 3 21. Given leave to proceed on November 8, Braun and his army group launched the first U.S. satellite,, on Jan. 31, 1958. 2 @ 3 Page 4 of 6

22. After the (NASA) was formed to carry out the U.S. space program, Braun and his organization were transferred from the army to that agency. 2 @ 4 23. As director of NASA s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Braun led the development of the large space launch vehicles,. 2 @ 4 24. The engineering success of each rocket in the of space boosters, which contained millions of individual parts, remains unparalleled in rocket history. Each was launched successfully and on time and met safe-performance requirements. 2 @ 4 25. In March 1970 Braun was transferred to NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C., as for planning. 2 @ 5 26. He resigned from the agency in 1972 to become vice president at Fairchild Industries, Inc., an. 2 @ 5 27. In 1975 he founded the, a private organization whose objective was to gain public support and understanding of space activities. 2 @ 5 Page 5 of 6

28. In attempting to justify his involvement in the development of the, Braun stated that patriotic motives had outweighed whatever qualms he had had about the moral implications of his nation s policies under Hitler. 3 @ 1 29. He also emphasized the innate impartiality of, which in itself, he said, has no moral dimensions until its products are put to use by the larger society. 3 @ 1 30. During his later career Braun received from U.S. government agencies and from professional societies in the United States and other countries. 3 @ 1 Page 6 of 6