Title
Observation results sent to DSIR and related correspondence for the years 1965-1967
Reference
KET/A/2/2
Production date
1965 - 1967
Creator
- Perry, Geoffrey EBiographyBiography
(1927-2000), Teacher and satellite signals interpreter
Geoffrey E. Perry was born on August 4, 1927, in Braintree, Essex, and received a bachelor's degree from Reading University, where he studied physics. His interest in space was first stirred by a German V-2 rocket that landed near his home in Braintree during World War II. His interest was further piqued by a multinational scientific program called the International Geophysical Year in 1957, which involved much discussion of conditions in space. By the early 60's, he was monitoring the radio transmissions of telemetry data from Soviet satellites with amateur radio equipment.
Perry began teaching at Kettering Grammar School in the early 50's. Here, Perry and boys he had trained to interpret satellite signals from a simple radio receiver caused an international stir in 1966, when Perry noticed that Soviet satellites were in a different orbit than usual and were communicating to a new location on the ground. He concluded that the Soviet Union had begun using a third launching site, at Plesetsk in northwest Russia, whose existence was then secret.
The amateur monitoring program, which eventually outgrew the school and is now an international collaboration called the Kettering Group, went on to become one of the best sources of public information on Soviet satellites as they malfunctioned, fell out of the sky or simply went about their routine business.
In 1978, after a student pointed out irregularities in the motions of a satellite he had been assigned, Perry predicted the crash of a Soviet nuclear-powered satellite. It plummeted to the ground in Canada. Perry's retired from Kettering in 1984. He died on the 18th January 2000, near his home in Bude, Cornwall from a sudden heart attack, he was 72. He is survived by his wife, Jean; and by his daughter, Isabel Carmichael.
Extent
1 folder
Language
English
Level of description
FILE
Repository name
Science Museum, London
Associated people and organisations
- Department of Scientific and Industrial ResearchBiographyBiography
The Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR) was established in 1916 and were responsible for the organisation, development and encouragement of scientific and industrial research and the dissemination of its results. It worked by encouraging and supporting scientific research in universities, technical colleges and other institutions, establishing and developing its own research organisations for investigation and research relative to the advancement of trade and industry, and taking steps to further the practical application of the results of research. It could make grants for the purposes of any of these functions.
The department encouraged and supported scientific research in universities and other institutions by means of grants for special research projects, research fellowships, studentships, grants to research associations and research contracts. From 1941 to 1945 the department was responsible for atomic energy research, in an organisation known as the Directorate of Tube Alloys. In the 1950s the department embarked on research in the human sciences in relation to the needs of industry, undertaken from 1953 to 1957 in collaboration with the Medical Research Council; in 1958 the department's research programme was transferred from its Headquarters Office to the new Warren Spring Laboratory.
The department was abolished by the Science and Technology Act 1965, which dispersed its functions over a number of government departments and other bodies.
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
Finding aids
Box 6