Title
Minimum Propulsion for Soft Moon Landing of Instruments
Reference
YA2007.25/2/1/11
Production date
-07-1959 - -07-1959
Creator
- Cranfield Institute of TechnologyBiographyBiography
The College of Aeronautics was founded in 1946 at RAF Cranfield, with the aim to provide specialist postgraduate aeronautical education in Britain.
Initially the College had four departments covering the main aspects of aeronautics; Aerodynamics headed by Prof W J Duncan, Aircraft Design headed by Prof R L Lickley, Aircraft Propulsion headed by N S Muir and Flight headed by Group Captain R C Hockey.
Between 1955 and 1969, the programme of education diversified to include the creation of new Departments of
Aircraft Electrical Engineering and of Mathematics in 1955 and in October 1958 the creation of a
Department of Aircraft Materials. New courses were planned and introduced covering subjects such as fluid
mechanics, control engineering, and automotive engineering.
In July 1967 the College presented the Privy Council with a Petition for the grant of a Royal Charter along with a draft charter for a new institution to be called Cranfield Institute of Technology.
The Insititute has since expanded, most notably in 1975 when the National College of Agricultural Engineering at Silsoe
became part of Cranfield Institute of Technology, and in 1984 where a third campus was founded at the Royal Military College of Science at Shrivenham.
- Carton, D.SBiographyBiography
Worked at the College of Aeronautics, Cranford.
Scope and Content
A paper examining the problems associated with the soft landing of instrument packages on the moon including general specifications, trajectories, and the selection and use of liquid or solid propellants. Includes illustrative graphs and tables.
Language
English
Level of description
ITEM
Repository name
Science and Industry Museum
Associated people and organisations
- Carton, D.SBiographyBiography
Worked at the College of Aeronautics, Cranford.
- Cranfield Institute of TechnologyBiographyBiography
The College of Aeronautics was founded in 1946 at RAF Cranfield, with the aim to provide specialist postgraduate aeronautical education in Britain.
Initially the College had four departments covering the main aspects of aeronautics; Aerodynamics headed by Prof W J Duncan, Aircraft Design headed by Prof R L Lickley, Aircraft Propulsion headed by N S Muir and Flight headed by Group Captain R C Hockey.
Between 1955 and 1969, the programme of education diversified to include the creation of new Departments of
Aircraft Electrical Engineering and of Mathematics in 1955 and in October 1958 the creation of a
Department of Aircraft Materials. New courses were planned and introduced covering subjects such as fluid
mechanics, control engineering, and automotive engineering.
In July 1967 the College presented the Privy Council with a Petition for the grant of a Royal Charter along with a draft charter for a new institution to be called Cranfield Institute of Technology.
The Insititute has since expanded, most notably in 1975 when the National College of Agricultural Engineering at Silsoe
became part of Cranfield Institute of Technology, and in 1984 where a third campus was founded at the Royal Military College of Science at Shrivenham.
- British Interplanetary SocietyBiographyBiography
The British Interplanetary Society (BIS) was founded in 1933 by a group of space flight enthuasiasts to promote and educate on the exploration and use of space for the benefit of humanity.
In the years before World War II a technical core of BIS members made the first plans for a rocket capable of landing three men on the Moon and returning them to Earth. After World War II members of the Society developed ideas for the exploration of outer space including developing liquid rockets for launch into space, the construction of Space Stations, the human exploration of the Moon, the development of probes to investigate other planets in our Solar System and the use of space telescopes to observe distant stars and galaxies.
In 1951 the BIS organized the world’s first International Congress on “The Artificial Satellite”, and became one of the founder members of the International Astronautical Federation (IAF). Earth Remote Sensing was initially advocated and studied at an international level at its NATO Conference in the 1950s, with space biology following soon afterwards.
Planetary studies began with papers examining the propulsion requirements to reach Mars and Venus, as well as projected instruments for scientific probes. Advocacy of studies on comets and meteors helped further the Giotto mission to Halley’s Comet and later the ESA Rosetta mission.
Studies and long term thinking on human spaceflight and launch vehicle development have always been a core area of activity amongst Society members, with the visionary early work on the BIS Lunar Lander, the Orbital Launcher and various other space launchers and space stations.
With the demise of the Apollo Program in 1972, the British Interplanetary Society continued to encourage exploration of ideas on the possibilities of a return to the Moon and its eventual colonization.
More recently a group within the Society has initiated a series of studies on the scientific and technical objectives of conducting a human exploration of the Martian North Polar Cap (Project Boreas), and another group within the Society has initiated a follow on study to the Daedalus Interstellar Starprobe, called Project Icarus.
Subject
Conditions governing access
Open access.
Conditions governing Reproduction
Copies may be supplied in accordance with current copyright legislation and Science Museum Group terms and conditions.