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Space Activity in Latin America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Arnold W. Frutkin
Affiliation:
International Affairs, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, D.C.
Richard B. Griffin Jr.
Affiliation:
Cooperative Projects Division, NASA

Extract

Space research and exploration are commonly considered the special province of the superpowers. The considerable financial resources and still greater technological capabilities required for programs of manned space flight and planetary investigation are widely assumed to be prerequisites for space research activity of any character. In fact, however, space research is richly varied, in objective and method as well as in material and financial requirements. Thus, it is possible for lesser powers and certain of the developing countries to participate in this newest area of human activity. The values to be achieved are not only scientific and technical but also political and economic. Tangible contributions can be made both to the domestic interests of such countries find to the space programs of major powers. The opportunities implicit in these facts were early recognized by the Latin American countries, particularly Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico, and all are engaged in interesting, stimulating, and productive space activities.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Miami 1968

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References

Note

* Sounding rockets are generally much smaller than the large boosters that place artificial satellites in orbit. They are used for vertical ascent into the high atmosphere or lower space, often carrying instrumentation comparable to that in satellites, for the purpose of gathering a wide variety of information of atmospheric conditions, ionospheric phenomena, solar or stellar processes, and so forth. The data are recorded in the nose cone of the rocket over a period of ten minutes or so before the rocket falls back to earth. In such experiments, the data obtained in the rocket are telemetered back to earth. In other experiments, optical or acoustical techniques are used to obtain data made possible by the high altitude sounding rocket. This work is a necessary adjunct to satellite research in that it can obtain certain information far more economically than can satellites and, in addition, provide information for regions in which satellites do not operate.