50 Years of Human Space Flight

Celebrating April 12, 1961: Happy Yuri’s Night and 30 Years of Shuttle Flights

Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin on his way to the launch of Vostok 1. Courtesy NASA Great Images Project.

Today is the 50th anniversary of the flight into space of Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin. In the annals of the big space race between the United States and the Former Soviet Union, Gagarin carried the Soviet hopes aloft, beating the United States’s own effort to put a person into orbit. He climbed into his Vostok spacecraft, was launched into a single orbit of our home planet and returned safely to the planet — all on the same day in 1961.

Of course, this feat was a smack in the face of the U.S. space effort, which wasn’t doing well at the time. But, in time, I think we’ve all come to see what a great first step it was — and the effect it had on NASA’s own plans for space dominance. We may have had a space race for a decade, but since those days, the domain of space exploration has become — as it should always have been — a multi-national effort. And for that, we have this man to thank.

The launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis. Courtesy NASA.

Cosmonaut Gagarin never flew into space again, but his achievement marks an important step for humans in space. Following in his trail have been a solid line of astronauts and cosmonauts who claimed space (and, for the U.S. the Moon) as the place to explore.

In the 50 years since Cosmonaut Gagarin’s trip to space, hundreds of people have gone into space. They’ve lived in and explored the near-Earth environment. A few went to the Moon. And many more of us have watched as they did so.  Some of us even dreamed of doing it ourselves. And, in a most fitting coincidence, we’re also celebrating 30 years of NASA’s shuttle program — the fleet of vehicles that made so many discoveries possible.

On this special anniversary — and to celebrate Yuri’s Night and the commemoration of the shuttle program  — here’s a toast to the man who did it first and the folks who built, maintained and flew the space shuttles:

Nas Drovya!

Cat in Space

In Memory of Larry

Larry Cat in Space

More than 20 years ago, I wrote a planetarium show about a cat who went to the Moon. His name was Larry — so-called after our own Lawrence E. Katt, who lived with us for 18 years. He was born just as the space shuttle touched down at White Sands in New Mexico, and he was a faithful part of our lives all that time.  The show, Larry Cat in Space, is still shown around the world, and we’re starting to run into planetarium directors who grew up watching Larry when they were kids. The idea was to use a cat to teach younger children about observations, the phases of the Moon, and what it’s like in space.  By all accounts, it’s been successful in meeting those goals — and entertaining generations of kids.

Given that history with a “cat in space”, I was amused to see this ad (produced in Russia), showing a cat whose dream was to go to space. Reminds me of Larry — who’s out there somewhere, exploring the Cat’s-Eye Nebula (I’d like to think).  I love the thought of cats in space, and hope that they’ll find a way out there, too.  Until then… enjoy!