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Sally Ride: Shooting for the Stars Great Lives Series - Couverture souple

 
9780449903940: Sally Ride: Shooting for the Stars Great Lives Series
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Book by Hurwitz Sue

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Lift-Off into Space
 
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER: June 18, 1983. The astronaut van stopped in front of the launchpad and Dr. Sally Ride, mission specialist, and the four other members of the crew peeked out the window. A gentle Atlantic breeze blew across her face, stirring her curly brown hair, but Sally didn’t notice. Spotlights bounced off the gleaming white exterior of the space shuttle, Challenger. Sally’s attention was riveted to the awesome sight of the magnificent flying machine shrouded in Florida’s predawn darkness. This was the greatest moment in her life!
 
The Challenger stood on its tail with its nose pointed toward the sky, the very same sky that Sally and the other four crew members would be thundering through in several hours. As Sally stepped down from the van and walked closer to the Challenger, the sputtering and gurgling of the shuttle’s engines echoed the bubbling of her own thoughts. She was finally getting her chance to fly in space!
 
As Sally contemplated her first spaceflight, she wondered how she would react. As part of her extensive training for the shuttle flight, she had already spent countless hours in a simulator of the shuttle cockpit where she had experienced small doses of weightlessness. Still, she wondered how weightlessness, experienced while actually traveling in space, would really feel. How would her body react to the force of gravity pulling against her during lift-off? How would she react to the confinement of the small shuttle quarters during six days in space?
 
As technicians hovered around the orbiter, carefully reexamining its many complicated components, Sally’s thoughts raced through the events in her life that led up to this moment. Long years studying math and science had trained her mind in problem solving. Intensive sports competition had trained her body. Now she had to prove she could put all that experience to good use.
 
The scary truth was that Sally was about to be strapped into a four-million-pound aluminum and ceramic tile flying machine that stood over thirty stories high and was powered by a dangerous propellant. Although many people believed that space shuttle flights were nearly as safe as flying in commercial jets, Sally knew otherwise.
 
In March 1981, when a test on the space shuttle Columbia was being conducted on one of the launchpads, an accident occurred. Unexpectedly, a compartment inside the rear of the shuttle was enveloped in gaseous nitrogen, depleting most of its oxygen. Even though the environment inside the chamber was clearly hazardous, an “all clear” signaled that it was safe for five waiting technicians to enter. When they did, disaster struck — the workers collapsed from the poisonous fumes. The five were rushed to the hospital, but two died from inhaling the noxious gas. Sally knew that there were risks to spaceflight, but she was also thrilled about being propelled two hundred miles above Earth. Like the other astronauts with her, Sally believed that the dangers were worth the reward of doing something new — breaking new ground, exploring the unknown. Sally would also be the first American woman to fly in space, though this was not her main focus.
 
The pungent smell of jet fuel mingled with the salty air of coastal Florida as Sally and her companions walked to the elevator and stepped inside for the ride up to the shuttle’s cabin. The slow, tension-filled ascent up the scaffold beside the 195-foot shuttle was shared by Commander Robert Crippen, Pilot Frederick Hauck, Medical Doctor Norman Thagard (the first medical doctor assigned to a shuttle mission), and the other mission specialist, John Fabian. Though this was the seventh shuttle mission, there would be many new experiments, procedures, and tasks to carry out once the crew was in space.
 
As they left the elevator the astronauts were greeted by several technicians, who scurried around checking and rechecking the astronauts’ flight suits — especially their air supply — and making sure they were staying on schedule. Sally’s anticipation mounted as the technicians helped her slip on her launch helmet, which would provide her with oxygen and radio communication with Mission Control during lift-off.
 
After Sally and the other crew members climbed through the small hatch of the Challenger’s nose cone into the flight cabin, technicians prepared to strap the astronauts into their reclining seats. Sally’s eyes scanned across the flight deck of the shuttle orbiter. It looked much like that of a large commercial airline, except that three video screens occupied the center of the instrument console. These screens displayed vital information about the shuttle’s vast and complicated flight and navigation systems. Sally had practiced using the shuttle’s instruments many times; her training was ready to be put to the test.
 
Once Sally was lying back in her seat facing the nose of the shuttle, the awkward perspective made it difficult to look out the windows. Still, the position would help her cope with the tremendous acceleration of lift-off and ascent into orbit that the shuttle would go through in order to blast its way out of Earth’s gravitational pull. While the actual launch was still some time away, Sally could feel her heart pounding and her blood rushing to her head.
 
Sally knew that her parents, sister, and husband were watching in a special room provided for the astronauts’ families and others with a personal interest in the launch. Even though she could not see her loved ones — including Steve Hawley, her husband and a fellow astronaut — Sally knew that their thoughts and prayers were focused on her and the historic flight. As dawn broke and rays of sunlight crept over the horizon, more than 250,000 spectators crowded the beaches and causeways around the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Some spectators wore T-shirts with the slogan, Ride, Sally Ride. Clenched fists, gritted teeth, and other signs of nervousness were visible along with joyous cheers as the onlookers waited impatiently for the moment of lift-off.
 
Inside the shuttle, the voice of the ground controller from Mission Control played counterpoint to the various mechanical noises of the warming engines. As every valve and throttle was checked and rechecked by computers, the astronauts watched the many lights on the control panel blink on and off like elaborate Christmas decorations. For Sally, this ride into space was better than any Christmas present.
 
As a child Sally had always been fascinated by the planets, stars, and galaxies, but she had never dreamed of becoming an astronaut. Her interest in science had led instead to a degree in astrophysics, through which she had learned about the characteristics and properties of stars. Now, at the age of thirty-two, she was about to become the youngest American astronaut ever to go on a space mission.
 
At 7:33 A.M. the countdown to launch entered its last few critical seconds. Sally heard the Challenger’s mighty engines roar to life, as the tremendous rockets flanking the huge fuel tank of the shuttle ignited and the orbiter began to quiver. As a gigantic cloud of dark smoke spewed from Challenger’s solid rocket boosters, Sally breathed deeply — her six-day, two-hour voyage into the heavens had begun.
 
The crowd of spectators cheered the astronauts off on their voyage. Sally was busy monitoring the flight controls. The on-board computer lights were blinking madly and flight information was being processed at an incredible speed. Sally needed every ounce of concentration she had to keep track of the changes and call out data to the other astronauts.
 
The powerful rocket engines built up to the thrust of 450,000 pounds needed to lift the Challenger and its crew beyond the pull of the Earth’s gravity and into orbit. The pressure, or G-force, was so great it was as if the planet did not want the ship or astronauts to leave. Sally’s head vibrated from side to side inside her helmet and the noise from the rockets blotted out nearly all other sound. Indeed, she had to strain her neck to lift her head in order to read the data on her bank of instruments.
 
Two minutes later, after the booster rockets burned out, the ride became steady and calm, even though the spacecraft was now traveling at a speed of about 17,400 miles an hour — or nearly 5 miles per second! Two smaller engines ignited at the rear of the orbiter, thrusting the Challenger still higher and higher. Fourty-four minutes and 23.7 seconds after lift-off, the final orbiting position was reached — about 200 miles above the Earth, where the astronauts’ real job would begin. Over the next six days, Sally and the rest of the crew would collect vast amounts of scientific data, use a robot arm to deploy and retrieve satellites, and conduct a variety of experiments.
 
Dr. Sally Ride’s participation in the flight of the space shuttle Challenger was not only a personal achievement, but one which would help to open up new opportunities for other American women in a variety of professions. Her courage, determination, and commitment to teamwork earned her respect from her fellow astronauts as well as from millions of Americans — and a place in the history of space exploration.
Présentation de l'éditeur :
Sally Ride

Shooting for the Stars

Astronaut Dr. Sally Ride took a deep breath and nervously waited as the powerful engines of the Space Shuttle Challenger roared to life. This was the most frightening, yet exciting moment of Sally's life! She was determined to prove that an American woman could perform in space as well as a man.

Countdown to History!

Sally Ride: Shooting for the Stars profiles the life of America's first woman astronaut to fly in space. Jain Sally's astronaut training as she learns to fly jets, practices sea rescue missions, and floats weightlessly in a special "zero gravity" aircraft. Witness her breathtaking view of Earth from 184 miles out in space while traveling aver 17,400 miles per hour! Then dare to share her dream of joining NASA's astronaut program.

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  • ÉditeurBallantine Books
  • Date d'édition1989
  • ISBN 10 044990394X
  • ISBN 13 9780449903940
  • ReliureBroché
  • Nombre de pages128
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9780606023252: Sally Ride: Shooting for the Stars

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ISBN 10 :  0606023259 ISBN 13 :  9780606023252
Editeur : Demco Media Inc, 1989
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Description du livre Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Sally RideShooting for the StarsAstronaut Dr. Sally Ride took a deep breath and nervously waited as the powerful engines of the Space Shuttle Challenger roared to life. This was the most frightening, yet exciting moment of Sally's life! She was determined to prove that an American woman could perform in space as well as a man.Countdown to History!Sally Ride- Shooting for the Stars profiles the life of America's first woman astronaut to fly in space. Jain Sally's astronaut training as she learns to fly jets, practices sea rescue missions, and floats weightlessly in a special "zero gravity" aircraft. Witness her breathtaking view of Earth from 184 miles out in space while traveling aver 17,400 miles per hour! Then dare to share her dream of joining NASA's astronaut program. A biography of the California astrophysicist who became, with the second mission of the Challenger spacecraft in June 1983, the first American woman and the youngest American astronaut to orbit earth. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9780449903940

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