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Space Intelligence Notes, December 1963.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, February 1, 1961.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, February 1962.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, February 1963.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, January 1, 1961.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, January 1962.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, January 1963.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, July 1961.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, July 1962.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, July 1963.
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.