Space Invaders: How Robotic Spacecraft Explore the Solar System
Manned space missions attract the most media attention, and it's not hard to understand why: A "crewed" space flight necessarily involves personal danger, daring, and courage. It is hard for us, as earthbound observers, not to become imaginatively and emotionally involved in the sheer adventure of human beings launched into the heavens.

However, in the roughly fifty years of the Space Age, unmanned missions, compared to manned missions, have flown much more often, much further, for much longer, and into regions of the Solar System from which no human could ever hope to return. In this book, Michel van Pelt offers a "behind the scenes" look at the development of unmanned missions, from their first conceptual design to the analysis of the scientific data returned by the spacecraft. In technically detailed but easy-to-understand prose he tells us: Why space probes are by definition lighter, cheaper, and much less complex than their manned counterparts. The compelling scientific rationale for investing in remote-controlled and robotic space flights to the furthest reaches of the Solar System and beyond. Why the widely discredited idea of "Faster, Better, Cheaper" space missions should be given another look, or at least two-thirds of another look. How advances in robotics and miniaturization, as well as propulsion, power, communications, and attitude and thermal systems, will continue to increase the range and versatility of unmanned spacecraft. In a blend of historical narrative and reader-friendly, informative analysis, Michel van Pelt describes not just the great unmanned spaceflights of our recent history, but the astonishing feats of exploration we can expect to witness in thedecades to come.

1101515691
Space Invaders: How Robotic Spacecraft Explore the Solar System
Manned space missions attract the most media attention, and it's not hard to understand why: A "crewed" space flight necessarily involves personal danger, daring, and courage. It is hard for us, as earthbound observers, not to become imaginatively and emotionally involved in the sheer adventure of human beings launched into the heavens.

However, in the roughly fifty years of the Space Age, unmanned missions, compared to manned missions, have flown much more often, much further, for much longer, and into regions of the Solar System from which no human could ever hope to return. In this book, Michel van Pelt offers a "behind the scenes" look at the development of unmanned missions, from their first conceptual design to the analysis of the scientific data returned by the spacecraft. In technically detailed but easy-to-understand prose he tells us: Why space probes are by definition lighter, cheaper, and much less complex than their manned counterparts. The compelling scientific rationale for investing in remote-controlled and robotic space flights to the furthest reaches of the Solar System and beyond. Why the widely discredited idea of "Faster, Better, Cheaper" space missions should be given another look, or at least two-thirds of another look. How advances in robotics and miniaturization, as well as propulsion, power, communications, and attitude and thermal systems, will continue to increase the range and versatility of unmanned spacecraft. In a blend of historical narrative and reader-friendly, informative analysis, Michel van Pelt describes not just the great unmanned spaceflights of our recent history, but the astonishing feats of exploration we can expect to witness in thedecades to come.

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Space Invaders: How Robotic Spacecraft Explore the Solar System

Space Invaders: How Robotic Spacecraft Explore the Solar System

by Michel van Pelt
Space Invaders: How Robotic Spacecraft Explore the Solar System

Space Invaders: How Robotic Spacecraft Explore the Solar System

by Michel van Pelt

Paperback(2007)

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Overview

Manned space missions attract the most media attention, and it's not hard to understand why: A "crewed" space flight necessarily involves personal danger, daring, and courage. It is hard for us, as earthbound observers, not to become imaginatively and emotionally involved in the sheer adventure of human beings launched into the heavens.

However, in the roughly fifty years of the Space Age, unmanned missions, compared to manned missions, have flown much more often, much further, for much longer, and into regions of the Solar System from which no human could ever hope to return. In this book, Michel van Pelt offers a "behind the scenes" look at the development of unmanned missions, from their first conceptual design to the analysis of the scientific data returned by the spacecraft. In technically detailed but easy-to-understand prose he tells us: Why space probes are by definition lighter, cheaper, and much less complex than their manned counterparts. The compelling scientific rationale for investing in remote-controlled and robotic space flights to the furthest reaches of the Solar System and beyond. Why the widely discredited idea of "Faster, Better, Cheaper" space missions should be given another look, or at least two-thirds of another look. How advances in robotics and miniaturization, as well as propulsion, power, communications, and attitude and thermal systems, will continue to increase the range and versatility of unmanned spacecraft. In a blend of historical narrative and reader-friendly, informative analysis, Michel van Pelt describes not just the great unmanned spaceflights of our recent history, but the astonishing feats of exploration we can expect to witness in thedecades to come.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781489990129
Publisher: Springer New York
Publication date: 11/16/2014
Edition description: 2007
Pages: 312
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

Table of Contents


Preface     xi
Introduction     1
From the Ground Up     3
Rockets and Satellites     4
To the Moon     15
Humans versus Robots     18
A Space Robot is Born     23
Scientific Conception     25
Proving Technology     33
The Political Push     36
Paper Spacecraft     38
It's Just a Phase I'm Going Through     48
Anatomy of a Space Probe     53
Bits and Pieces     55
Power     57
Communication     65
Structures     70
Thermal Control     73
Attitude Control     77
Propulsion     86
Data Handling     89
Mechanisms     93
The Kidnap of Luna 1     95
Building and Testing     97
The Spacecraft Garage     97
Keep it Clean     100
Planetary Protection     102
Shake, Rattle 'n' Roll     108
Shaken, not stirred     110
Canned space     112
Antenna testing     112
Special cases     113
Breaking the software     114
Instruments of Science     115
The More we Learn, the More we Don't Know     116
Let's get Physical     118
It's All in the Data     121
Many Eyes     122
Visible light instruments     123
There is more than meets the eye     126
Messenger's Instruments     129
Roving Around     132
Diving through an Atmosphere     140
Primeval soup     142
Going down     142
Launch     149
On the Road     149
Spaceports     150
Preparing for Launch     153
Up and Away     156
Rockets     159
Orbits     162
Distant Destinations     167
To the Moon     170
The first visits     170
Preparing for Apollo     172
Robot rovers     175
Modern missions     176
A new Moon     177
Unromantic Venus     179
Greenhouse nightmare     179
Into the unknown     180
Magellan     186
Venus Express     189
Mars     190
Stumbling toward Mars     192
Viking invasion     193
Disaster strikes     195
Return to the red planet     196
Mercury, a Scorched Planet     202
Giant Jupiter     204
Saturn     210
The Outer Giants: Uranus and Neptune     217
The Sun     218
Asteroids and Comets, the Building Blocks of the Solar System     223
Attack from outer space     223
Thawing ice balls     229
Never Finished     235
Death of a Spacecraft     237
Down to Earth     238
In a Blaze of Glory     240
Saving SOHO     243
Hope is Lost     245
Near Eros     246
A Bright Future     249
Faster, Better and Cheaper?     251
Going Commercial     252
Future Launchers     256
Solar Sailing     262
Nuclear Energy     265
Working Together     266
Going for a Walk     267
Flying     270
Microbots     272
Beyond the Solar System     276
Only Just Beginning     281
Glossary      285
Bibliography     297
Index     305
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