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Space Intelligence Notes, October 1961.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, November 1961.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, December 1961.
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. -
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, 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, March 1962.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, April 1962.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, May 1962.
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. -
Space Intelligence Notes, June 1962.
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. -
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.