. The L5 Development Group is a privately funded, for profit, commercial space exploration and development program. The L5 Development Group is a privately funded, for profit, commercial space exploration and development program. space history, history of space flight and related technologies  

Space History for September 4


If you are not already a subscriber, you are welcome to enter your email address here to sign up to receive the Space History newsletter on a daily basis. Under no circumstances will we release your legitimate email address entered here to outside persons or organizations, and it will only be used for mailing the specific information you have requested.

Enter your email address here:
 

Unsubscribe instructions are included in every newsletter issue in case you decide you no longer wish to receive it.

Note: We record the IP address from which subscriptions are entered to help prevent SPAM abuses.


Race To Space
Someone will win the prize...
               ... but at what cost?
Visit RaceToSpaceProject.com to find out more!


1784
Died, Cesar F. Cassini de Thury, French astronomer, cartographer (Earth radius greater at the equator than the poles)
ref: mathshistory.st-andrews.ac.uk

1880
Johann Palisa discovered asteroid #218 Bianca.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1882
The first municipal electric power station, Pearl Street Station in New York City, built by Thomas Edison, supplied electricity to its first 85 customers.
ref: ethw.org

1891
Johann Palisa discovered asteroid #315 Constantia.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1905
Paul Gotz discovered asteroid #571 Dulcinea.
ref: translate.google.com

1919
Karl Wilhelm Reinmuth discovered asteroid #921 Jovita.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1924
George Van Biesbroeck discovered asteroid #1033 Simona.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1951
Karl Wilhelm Reinmuth discovered asteroids #1642 Hill, #1643 Brown, #1823 Gliese, #2537 Gilmore and #2615 Saito.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1951
President Harry Truman opened the Japanese Peace Treaty Conference in San Francisco with the first coast-to-coast television broadcast in the US.

AT&T's "microwave radio-relay skyway" system was designed to carry television signals as well as telephone messages, and less than three weeks after the first phone call, it did just that. On 4 September 1951, the largest single television audience to date - estimated at more than 30 million people - saw and heard President Harry Truman open the Japanese Peace Treaty Conference in San Francisco via the nation's first coast-to-coast telecast. The broadcast was made possible when AT&T met a U.S. State Department request to advance the TV opening of the new system by a month from what the telephone company had been planning.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1967
Tamara Smirnova discovered asteroid #1791 Patsayev.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1968
MSFC Director Wernher von Braun performed a pressure suit test in the Saturn I Workshop immersed in the Neutral Buoyancy Tank, verifying upgraded seals used in the aft dome penetration sealing study, and recommended additional handholds and tether points.
ref: history.nasa.gov

1972
Lyudmila Zhuravleva discovered asteroids #1859 Kovalevskaya, #1909 Alekhin, #2015 Kachuevskaya and #3231.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1975
Claes-Ingvar Lagerkvist discovered asteroid #2744 Birgitta.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1977
Paul Wild discovered asteroid #2368 Beltrovata.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1980
Edward L. G. Bowell discovered asteroid #3216 Harrington.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1983
Edward L. G. Bowell discovered asteroids #2959 Scholl and #3439 Lebofsky.
ref: en.wikipedia.org

1984 15:49:53 GMT
USSR launched a Proton-K/DM-2 from Baikonor carrying Cosmos 1593, 1594 and 1595 to orbit, three dummy Glonass satellites, testing components and apparatus of the space-based navigation system being set up by the Soviets.
ref: nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov

1987 19:26:00 GMT
USSR launched Ekran 16 from Baikonur to transmit Central Television programs to a network of receivers for collective use, which was positioned in geosynchronous orbit at 99 deg E 1987-1989.
ref: nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov

1997 12:03:00 GMT
GE Americom's GE 3 communications satellite was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida, and positioned in geosynchronous orbit at 87 deg W.
ref: nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov

1999 10:34:00 GMT
South Korea's Mugungwa 3 (a.k.a. Koreasat 3) communications satellite was launched from Kourou on an Ariane 42P and positioned in geosynchronous orbit at 112 deg E.
ref: nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov


We are going to run out of oil!
Visit SpacePowerNow.org to help fix the problem.
SpacePowerNow.org - For Human Survival


Please help support our efforts by shopping from our sponsors.


This newsletter and its contents are
Copyright © 2006-2024 by The L5 Development Group.  All rights reserved.
 - Publication, in part or in whole, requires previous written permission.
 - Academic or personal-use citations must refer to http://L5DGbeta.com as their source.
Thank you for your cooperation.
Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict
Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict

Site Features