
Soviet stamp about the sputnik
The 'Sputnik crisis' was a turning point of the
Cold War that began on
October 4,
1957 when the
Soviet Union launched the
Sputnik 1 satellite. The
USA had believed itself to be the leader in
missile development and thus the leader in space technology. The surprise Sputnik launch and the failure of the first two
U.S. launch attempts proved this was not so. The shock of the Sputnik launch was so great throughout America that even congresswoman
Clare Boothe Luce commented on the launch, referring to Sputnik's beeps as "an intercontinental outer-space raspberry to a decade of American pretensions that the American way of life was a gilt-edged guarantee of our national superiority." After this initial shock, the
Space Race began, leading up to
Project Apollo and the
moon landings in
1969.
The Sputnik crisis spurred a whole chain of U.S. initiatives, from large to small, many of them initiated by the
Department of Defense.
★ Within 2 days, calculation of the Sputnik Orbit (joint work by
UIUC Astronomy Dept. and
Digital Computer Lab.)
★ By February 1958, the political and defense communities had recognized the need for a high-level Department of Defense organization to execute R&D projects and created the Advanced Research Projects Agency, which later became the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency or 'DARPA'.
★ On
July 29,
1958, President Eisenhower formally brought the U.S. into the
Space Race by signing the National Aeronautics and Space Act, creating
NASA and later
Project Mercury.
★ Education programs initiated to foster a new generation of
engineers. One of the more remarkable and remembered things that came out of this was the concept of "
New Math".
★ Dramatically increased support for scientific research. For
1959, Congress increased the
National Science Foundation appropriation to $134 million, almost $100 million higher than the year before. By 1968, the NSF budget would stand at nearly $500 million.
★ The
Polaris missile program.
★
Project management as an area of inquiry and an object of much scrutiny, leading up to the modern concept of
project management and standardized project models such as the DoD ''
Program Evaluation and Review Technique'', PERT, invented for Polaris.
★ The decision by
President Kennedy, who campaigned in
1960 on closing the "
missile gap", to deploy 1000
Minuteman missiles, far more
ICBMs than the Soviets had at the time.
See also
★
Space Race
★
Sputnik program
External links
★ Roger D. Launius:
Sputnik and the Origins of the Space Age, nasa.gov