This is Vol. 4, No. 12 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as planned atomic research in Israel, the flight of Cosmos-21 and Cosmos-22, and the launch of Japan's first missile ship; from the semitechnical literature such as new constributions to space flight; from the technical literature includng biological sciences, chemistry, space flight, and units and measurements; science and technology section translations; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 11 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as rocket firing progress in India, the election of a new president, and the exchange of measurement experts between the US and USSR; from the semitechnical literature such as Soviet aims in astronomy and space research; from the technical literature including communication, materials engineering, space flight, tracking, and vehicle engineering; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 10 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as ice from space, US tracking station plans, the presence of intelligent beings on Mars, and sun eruptions possibly causing atomic geysers on the Moon; from the semitechnical literature such as sun power; from the technical literature including astrogeology, life support, materials engineering, physics, theoretical physics, and nuclear physics; and bibliography.
This is Vol. 4, No. 9 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as re-useable research rocket, high speed cameras, Soviet plans, and space pursuits; from the semitechnical literature such as the effects of noise and vibration on man; from the technical literature including astrophysics, atmospheric physics, chemistry, instrumentation, life support, orbital mechanics, organic chemistry, space flight, and vehicle engineering; space and technology section translations; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 8 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as Soviets search for international cooperation for Moon trip and the completion of Soviet Pacific Ocean shots; from the semitechnical literature; from the technical literature including communications, lasers, photography, and space flight; science and technology section translations; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 7 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the Soviets putting the first woman in space, the launch of Soviet Cosmos -18, and West Germany's entrance into the space age; from the semitechnical literature such as new isotopes; from the technical literature including chemistry, electronics, lasers, materials engineering, physics, propulsion, and reliability; science and technology section translations; and a report on COSPAR.
This is Vol. 4, No. 6 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the failure of Mars I, Soviet claims that Earth as a "Saturn" ring, and the confirmation of a new atom part; from the semitechnical literature such as the Canadian satellite Alouette; from the technical literature including astronomy, biosciences, communications, geosciences, lasers, life sciences, materials engineering, theoretical physics, tracking, and vehicle engineerings; science and technology section translations; on books; and technical articles in the journal literature.
This is Vol. 4, No. 5 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the new French tracking radar, Soviet generators' use of wind power, and the reality of the US-Soviet joint space effort; from the semitechnical literature such as experiences from the US and Soviet of manned space flights, physical conditioning during space flight, and the possibility of "Moon glow" and "Moon shine"; from the technical literature including astrogeology, lasers, materials engineering, physics, space flight, and science and technology section translations; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 4 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the booster size of the Soviet manned flight, the course correction of Soviet spacecraft Mars I, the announcement of U.S.-France space program, and Russian estimates of water on Mars; from the semitechnical literature such as Earth from orbit and the Moon as a power source; from the technical literature including astronomy, astrophysics, geophysics, life support, materials engineering, physics, and space flight; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 3 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the Soviet Mars 1 spacecraft, the announcement of a new French satellite tracking radar, and the details of space cooperation between Americans and Russians; from the semitechnical literature such as the "correction" of Newton by Soviet scientist, and Soviet preparations for a manned orbit flight; from the technical literature including astrionics, astronomy, astrophysics, geology, instrumentation, life support, materials fabrication, physics, space medicine, and theoretical physics; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 2 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as Soviet lunar plans, the determining of the temperature of Venus, and Russian use of Swedish space flight simulators; from the semitechnical literature such as potential USSR Mars probe communication troubles, and the search for life in space; from the technical literature including astrobiology, astrophysics, communications, geology, life support, meteorology, photography, physics, production engineering, space flight, and telemetry; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 4, No. 1 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the reason for sunspots and the cooperation of the U.S. and Soviet Union on three space projects; from the semitechnical literature such as the biggest telescope in Germany and the discovery of a "living fossil" in algae; from the technical literature including astronomy, astrophysics, biophysics, life support, physics, radio communication, space flight, space medicine, and support systems; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 12 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as a Soviet communications satellite to be orbited, predictions that U.S. will be first to the Moon, critics of the Civilian Space Program, Soviet space failures, and the use of rockets to install cables; from the semitechnical literature such as Russian analysis of problems of space-weaponry defense and commentary on a Soviet paper; from the technical literature including astrionics, astrobiology, astrogeology, astronomy, astrophysics, metallurgy, optics, physics, production engineering, propulsion, radio communication, space flight, and theoretical physics; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 11 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents pages, topics include various articles from the world press such as Russian claims of astronauts orbiting four miles apart, Soviet photos of thermal radiation, and the Soviet launch of Cosmos 10; from the semitechnical literature such as the description of the Vostok spaceship; from the technical literature including astrionics, astronomy, astrophysics, atmospherics, chemistry, flight mechanics, instrumentation, life sciences, physics, power, production engineering, and propulsion; on books; and selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 10 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as space-war preparations within Soviet military, the disclosure of six Soviet space failures, U.S. and Italy's new joint space program, and USSR to attempt sun data shots; from the semitechnical literature such as the Moon as a power source, the launching of Cosmos 8, lunar atmosphere creation, and the charting of space threats; from the technical literature including astronomy, astrophysics, biosciences, chemistry, communciations, geoscience, instruments, materials, metallurgy, oceanography, photography, physics, production engineering, propulsion, radio astronomy, spacecraft, and telemetry; on books, and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 9 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the possibly launch of a Soviet space laboratory station in 1963 and the report of the existance of water on the Moon; from the semitechnical literature such as Russian studies of ways to send a man to the moon and the intensification of Soviet radiation studies; from the technical literature including aerodynamics, astronomy, astrophysics, chemistry, geophysics, mechanics, metallurgy, microscopy, nuclear physics, physics, production engineering, and spacecraft; on books; and bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 8 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as Soviet predictions of fatal solar flares, the discovery of traces of life in meteorite, infrared photos of the Moon, and space food for cosmonauts; from the semitechnical literature such as Soviet plans to drill earth with underground rocket, Luniks II and III, and research on temperature of lightning; from the technical literature including aerodynamics, astronomy and astrophysics, atomspheric physics, cryogenics, electronics, electrical engineering, guidance, interplanetary flight, instrumentation, materials, mechanics, metallurgy, meteorology, nuclear physics, oceanography, physics, process engineering, propoulsion, space medicine, and thermodynamics; on books; and selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 7 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as Soviets asking permission to build Austrialian tracking stations and the discovery of rare type of nuclear decay; from the semitechnical literature such as Soviet investigation of galaxies and anti-matter; from the technical literature including astronomy and astrophysics, biosciences, chemistry, cryogenics, geophysics, hydraulics, materials metallugy, meteorology, nuclear power, photography, physics, and production engineering; on books; and selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 6 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the successful first international space launchings and the release of some details from the flight of Soviet Gagarin; from the semitechnical literature such as the discovery of oxygen in the atmosphere of Venus and Russian plans for the world's largest telescope; from the technical literature including astrionics, astronomy, astrophysics, celestrial mechanics, climatology, earth sciences, ionospheric physics, instrumentation, materials, metallurgy, production engineering, and spacecraft; on books; and selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 5 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the Russian proposal of a joint moon flight and artificial gravity to aid future cosmonauts; from the semitechnical literature such as the possibility of Russian development of thermonuclear weapons in space; from the technical literature including aerodynamics, astrophysics, geophysics, materials, metallugy, meteorology, nuclear physics, physics, process engingeering, propellants, and spacecraft; on books; and selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 4 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the text of the U.S. President's letter on U.S.-Soviet space work and reports on biological aspects of space flight; from semi-technical literature such as Soviet missiles and the effect of space weightlessness; from technical literature including astronomy, astrophysics, geophysics, materials, physics, production engineering, spacecraft, and thermodynamics; on books; and selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 3 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as Soviet plans for an industrial complex on the Moon and Japan's increasing rocketry efforts; on popular literature such as proposals for a "stationary" satellite; from technical literature such as astronomy, atmospheric physics, bioastronautics, geophysics, mechanics, materials engineering, nuclear physics, optics, and physics; on books; and on selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 2 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as the possibility of a Russian 'asteroid bomb' threat by 1970; on popular literature such as Soviet plans to land on the Moon in 1967; from technical literature such as astronomy and astrophysics, chemistry, communications, electronis, fluid mechanics, instruments, materials engineering, meteorology, physics, and production engineering; on books; and on selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 3, No. 1 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press such as Soviet Moon plans for 1962, on popular literature such as the Russian belief that there are people on Mars, from technical literature such as aerodynamics, celestial mechanics, cosmology, data processing, optical instruments, materials engineering, production engineering, radio astronomy, and telemetry, on books, and on selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 2, No. 12, of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. According to the table of contents page, topics include various articles from the world press, on popular literature, from technical literature such as biochemistr, celestrial mechanics, chemistry, physics, and more, on books, and on selected bibliographies.
This is Vol. 2, No. 11 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include the third list of NASA translations of Soviet publications, Soviet nuclear tests, the primary education of Soviet youth compared to American education, U.S. and Russian measurements of Venus, corrosion behavior of titanium alloys, Polish study of nonlinear pressure oscillations during combustion, the development of a transistorized device for registering cosmic rays by the Soviet Union, speculations on future space achievements, the Soviet Lunik II carrier vehicle and payload, and a review of Soviet literature.
This is Vol. 2, No. 10 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include the second list of NASA translations of Soviet publications, a detailed account and analysis of the flight of the Soviet satellite Vostok II, the revealing of the international satellite communications system SPACEWARN, Russian study of anabiosis for possible use in space flight, the retardation of Earth's rotation, the development of an experimental model of an electromagnetic flowmeter by the Russians and their success in converting glass into microcrystalline materials, and various other studies conducted by the Soviets.
This is Vol. 2, No. 9 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include NASA translations of Soviet publications, the satellite orbit of Vostok 2, the space launching of Soviet spacecraft, a reported luminescent ionosphere around Venus, Russian plans for a manned space station, possible Russian concentration on rocket shots at the Moon, new volumes available of a Soviet space publication on artificial Earth satellites, transmission into space with AM short-wave telegraph-telephone transmitters, Soviet high-speed photoelectric spectrophotometer, future Soviet space communication techniques, and various Soviet experiments, research, and discoveries.
This is Vol. 2, No. 8 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include problems in the Soviet scientific community due to the shift of power and other changes, espionage and outer space, Soviet fishermen observe the return of two American astronauts from space, plenary session of the Commission of Radioastronomy, Soviet discussion of the Venus shot, and radar observations of Venus.
This is Vol. 2, No. 7 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include a comparison of Soviet and American satellites, the thermal history of the moon, the Earth's third radiation belt, observations of Venus and the view that Venus does not rotate, natural Earth satellites, signal from space unidentifiable, Soviet proposal of new lunar TV satellite, and the possibility of Soviet women in space.
This is Vol. 2, No. 6 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include various featured articles about Soviet meteorological satellites, rocket planes and cosmoplanes, Youri Gagarin on the manned Soviet space flight, various planets, telescopes and instruments, lunar catalog, human colonization of planets, space physics and geophysics, animal experiments during space flights, space stations, Soviet space carrier vehiclce launching technique, literature on devices used in USSR satellites, women and laboratories in space, Soviet literature, and available technician information.
This is Vol. 2, No. 5 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include featured articles of "Soviet Security" and "Soviet Space Feat Confirmed," Soviet testing of glass fiber nuclear fuel, Soviet space medicine, flying saucers in Russia, the failure to re-establish radio contact with the Venus probe, data on the Tungusska meteorite, and details of the first Soviet manned satellite orbit.
This is Vol. 2, No. 4 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include featured articles of "The Hidden Side of the Moon" and "The Soviet Venus Probe," Soviet rockets study the eclipse, and Intelligence Briefs.
This is Vol. 2, No. 3 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include the "rise of the Soviet intelligentsia", Soviet publications regarding future developments in astronautics, a contract signed between the Soviets and a New York publisher for exclusive English language rights to Soviet scientific books, the development of cosmic microbiology, a review of the danger of radiation sickness, and Intelligence Briefs.
This is Vol. 2, No. 2 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include the Soviet's goal of converting its industrial production to automation, the next Russian space "spectacular", Hungarian space goals, problems of interplanetary travel, the significance of spaceships in the study of the atmosphere, and Intelligence Briefs.
This is Vol. 2, No. 1 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include available Soviet scientific literature including scientific journals available in English, part two of an in-depth look at Russian literature and technology in the field of astronautics and various topics of Soviet space-related activities.
This is Vol. 1, No. 2 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include part one of an in-depth look at Russian literature and technology in the field of astronautics, various topics of Soviet space-related activities, and articles pertaining to the future of the industry.
This is Vol. 1, No. 1 of Space Intelligence Notes, a publication of the Space Systems Information Branch at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Topics include the use of television in Soviet space research to transmit pictures of the reverse side of the Moon to Earth, a proposed plan to use a ring of small particles around the Earth to create heat and light, an experimental Soviet space ship in orbit with two dogs onboard and other essentials for future manned flights, a Soviet published book on problems associated with flights to the Moon, discoveries and theories of the composition of the surface of the Moon, and international reactions to U-2 flights over Russia.
This is the Space Log, a monthly publication for the Space Business Daily newsletter. The Space Log includes a detailed timeline of space activity and research over the course of the month of February.
This is Vol. 24, No. 39 of Space Business Daily, a Space Publications newsletter. Topics include the ordering of seven-segment solid motors by the Air Force Space Systems Division for the MOL program, concern over the presented Apollo Applications plans for a manned space flight, the potential operational communications satellite system for tactile messages between warring units, another postponement of the Saturn IB launch, budget requirements in 1968 for the SNAP 8 program to continue, part twoi of the detailed breakdown of the Defense Secretary's funding position for space and missile projects for 1967, various business acquisitions and changes in earnings, the plans for a new facility to be built to house ramjet experimentation, topics on Future Space Business, and NASA contracts and negotiations.