New paper says Canadian first to present scientific principles for rockets and space travel

Robert Godwin has been researching the life of Canadian William Leitch (1814-1864) and found that Leitch wrote a book published in 1862 that described many of the principles of rocketry and spaceflight decades before the space pioneers Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and Robert H. Goddard wrote about rockets and space travel:  Rocket Spaceflight Accurately Described by Scottish-Canadian Scientist in 1861 – the Commercial Space Blog.

Here is a press release from Godwin:

Rocket spaceflight was proposed over three decades earlier than
previously thought; in the time of Abraham Lincoln and Charles Dickens
 

Burlington, Canada – October 4, 2015 – In a paper published today entitled The First Scientific Concept of Rockets for Space Travel* author and space historian Robert Godwin has proven that a Scottish-Canadian teacher applied scientific principles to accurately describe the rocket as the best device for travelling in space in 1861. More than three decades earlier than previously believed.

Robert Godwin who is an author and editor of dozens of books on spaceflight released his findings about a Presbyterian minister named William Leitch, born in Scotland in 1814. Godwin asserts that Leitch was the first trained scientist to have correctly applied modern scientific principles to space flight in an essay which he wrote in the summer of 1861 called A Journey Through Space. It was published in a journal in Edinburgh that year before being included in Leitch’s 1862 book God’s Glory in the Heavens.

William+Leitch+ca+1861[1]William Leitch (ca. 1861). (Credit: The Space Library)

Previous histories of spaceflight have maintained that the first scientific concept for rocket-powered space travel was envisioned at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century by such men as the Russian, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky, and the American, Robert Goddard. Both men claimed Jules Verne as their inspiration. But Godwin says William Leitch made his suggestion to use rockets four years before even Jules Verne’s famous “space gun”.

“There is no doubt in my mind that Leitch deserves a place of honour in the history of spaceflight,” said Godwin. “The fact that he was a scientist is the key to this story. He wasn’t just making a wild guess. Not only did he understand Newton’s law of action and reaction, he almost dismissively understood that a rocket would work more efficiently in the vacuum of space; a fact that still caused Goddard and others to be subjected to ridicule almost six decades later.

“Whereas Goddard and Tsiolkovsky got their first inspiration from the science fiction of Wells and Verne, Leitch seems to have been inspired by the advances in powerful telescopes, the newly spin-stabilised military projectiles being manufactured in London, and Isaac Newton,” Godwin claimed.

Leitch’s proposals seem to have fallen through the cracks of history because he died at a young age and the copyright to his writings would fall victim to the bankruptcy of his publisher in 1878.

“His suggestion to use rockets in space remained in print for over forty years, but his name had been stripped away from the work. The problem was compounded by the title of his book being changed at the last minute to remove all references to astronomy, which led to it languishing for 150 years in the theology section of libraries,”Godwin said. “But it was still in print when Goddard and Tsiolkovsky made their mark on the field.”

“Leitch comprehended everything from the catastrophic implications of cometary impacts to the special relationship between light and time. He was a genius. Long since forgotten,” Godwin said.

In Godwin’s paper he reveals that Leitch studied at the University of Glasgow in the same classroom as William Thomson, the legendary Lord Kelvin, and even assisted Kelvin in an experiment on electricity. In 1859 Leitch was appointed to the post of Principal of Queen’s University in Kingston Ontario. He died in Canada in 1864 and is buried near to Canada’s first Prime Minister, who he evidently knew.

“He was buried on October 4th of that year: a date which has a certain resonance for space historians,” Godwin said, in a reference to the launching of Sputnik in 1957, 93 years after Leitch’s death.

“I also wonder what he would have thought of Elon Musk being a graduate of Queens,” Godwin continued, referring to the CEO of SpaceX, the United States’ leading space company.

Having preached in a parish near St Andrews in Scotland, Leitch’s children became early golf enthusiasts. Leitch’s granddaughter was the legendary golfing champion Cecilia Leitch.

“William Leitch was an expert on ballistics and the effect of gravity on trajectories. It must have been in the DNA,” Godwin joked.

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In a four page review of Godwin’s paper Mr. Frank H. Winter, former Curator of Rocketry of the National Air and Space Museum, Smithsonian Institution, in Washington, D.C., stated:

“We can no longer take it for granted that the consistently cited trio of founders of space flight theory—Tsiolkovsky, Goddard, and Oberth—were the only individuals who seriously thought and wrote about the rocket as the most viable means of achieving space flight… William Leitch is less well known than the first three, but he should now be included in the overall picture, especially since he pre-dated them.”

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On studying Godwin’s findings David Baker, editor of the British Interplanetary Society’s Spaceflight Magazine in London England stated:

“Rob Godwin has conducted a valuable piece of outstanding research, revealing for the first time how an intellectual mind from the 19th century anticipated the Space Age and explained how rockets could lift mankind to the stars, long before anyone else had defined it, in simple, lucid and scientifically accurate terms. This work is a landmark addition to the history of rocketry and Godwin is to be complimented for having himself made another important contribution to the genre.”

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In Houston Texas, Mr. Michael L. Ciancone, Chair of the American Astronautical Society History Committee, commented:

“This paper by Robert Godwin puts flesh to the bone of William Leitch, a 19th century scientist and theologian who published some thoughts on rocketry that represent one of the earliest known references to the use of rockets for spaceflight. These perspectives are valuable because the history of spaceflight is a tapestry of experiences that contains more than the threads representing the big names in rocketry.”

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And in Toronto, Canada, Dr. Dafydd “Dave” Williams, retired Canadian astronaut (STS-90 and STS-118) and Former Director of the Space and Life Sciences Directorate, Johnson Space Centre commented:

“A very impressive piece of research…& very exciting to learn that these principles of spaceflight were postulated & articulated so far before aerodynamic flight, let alone spaceflight.”

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* Godwin’s paper is to be published this week as part of the Space Week celebrations. It will be available on TheSpaceLibrary.com.

Moonspike crowd-funding a mission to put a tiny payload into the Moon

The Moonspike project made its debut last week. The project aims to build a low cost two-stage rocket and a spacecraft to send a “tiny” payload to the Moon. The group is led by Chris Larmour, who has run several technology companies, and Kristian von Bengtson, who is well-known as a co-founder of Copenhagen Suborbitals, an organization developing a rocket for carrying a single person on a suborbital space trip. While Copenhagen Suborbitals is a volunteer, non-profit, the Moonspike project is organized as the private company Moonspike, Ltd.

The goal is to impact this 1 gram “Lunar Penetrator” into the Moon’s surface:

LunarPenetrator The spike is titanium and the disk will hold a flash memory chip with digital photos and messages from backers of the project.

Moonspike has opened a crowd-funding campaign to raise over $909k and as of today has gotten nearly $80k pledged with 26 days left: Moonspike: the World’s First Crowdfunded Moon Rocket by Moonspike Limited — Kickstarter.

You can download their feasibility report (pdf).

Here is a video laying out their plan:

The Space Show is off the air this week – Oct.5.15

There will be no shows this week on The Space Show while host David Livingston recovers from spinal surgery.

Find links to summaries and audio files for recent shows here and here.

See also:
/– The Space Show on Vimeo – webinar videos
/– The Space Show’s Blog – summaries of interviews.
/– The Space Show Classroom Blog – tutorial programs

The Space Show is a project of the One Giant Leap Foundation.

New book on using the Mini-Cube for STEM now in paperback

I’ve posted here many times about JP Aerospace, which has been flying high altitude balloons and airships for over 30 years. Founded and led by John Powell, the part professional, part volunteer organization has won USAF contracts, carried out multiple promotional flights for companies from around the world, and developed a number of innovations in the technology of Near Space.

Furthermore, JPA has a very active education program. Over 50,000 students have had their PongSats taken to the edge of space for free by JPA.

FourPongSatsOn2014FlightFour PongSats mounted on a JPA balloon structure
during a high-altitude flight in October 2014.

A PongSat is a ping-pong ball with a tiny experiment inside of it. A few years ago, JPA introduced the Mini-Cube, which provides a standardize plastic box structure, 5 cm to a side, in which more sophisticated and elaborate experiments can be enclosed and flown for a fee to Near Space.

minicubebanner[1]

Back in May I posted about an ebook written by Gregory N. Cecil that provides a step-by-step tutorials for teachers, students, and anyone else on how use a Mini-Cube for low-cost educational Near Space experiments and demonstrations. The book is now available in paperback: Classroom Laboratory at the Edge of Space: Introducing the Mini-Cube Program.

A book written for secondary public and private school STEM instructors, home schooling, and undergraduate STEM courses of study explaining how to set up their own student focused “space program” utilizing the Mini-Cube Program. With this Informal STEM Project Based Learning Activity, students can have the unique, affordable, and challenging opportunity to send experiments via high altitude balloon to an altitude of 100,000 feet (20 miles or 32 km), commonly known as the “edge of space.” Utilizing the scientific method, team work, research, and communicating in writing the results and applications for peer review, students will participate in the full cycle of an actual experiment from the original question to the published results and conduct true science at the edge of space.

Utilizing the scientific method, team work, research, and communicating in writing the results and applications for peer review, students will participate in the full cycle of an actual experiment from the original question to the published results and conduct true science at the edge of space.

Here is the table of contents for the book:

BookTOC

 

New Horizons: Images & fly-over video of Pluto’s moon Charon show a dramatic landscape

The New Horizons missions releases great imagery of Pluto’s moon Charon:

Pluto’s Big Moon Charon Reveals a Colorful and Violent History

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft has returned the best color and the highest resolution images yet of Pluto’s largest moon, Charon – and these pictures show a surprisingly complex and violent history.

Charon-Neutral-Bright-Release[1]
Charon in Enhanced Color: NASA’s New Horizons captured this high-resolution enhanced color view of Charon just before closest approach on July 14, 2015. The colors are processed to best highlight the variation of Charon’s surface properties. (Larger image)
At half the diameter of Pluto, Charon is the largest satellite relative to its planet in the solar system. Many New Horizons scientists expected Charon to be a monotonous, crater-battered world; instead, they’re finding a landscape covered with mountains, canyons, landslides, surface-color variations and more.

“We thought the probability of seeing such interesting features on this satellite of a world at the far edge of our solar system was low,” said Ross Beyer, an affiliate of the New Horizons Geology, Geophysics and Imaging (GGI) team from the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View, California, “but I couldn’t be more delighted with what we see!”

Charon-Detail-(with-connecting-lines)-9-29-15[1]
Charon in Detail: Charon’s cratered uplands at the top are broken by series of canyons, and replaced on the bottom by the rolling plains of the informally named Vulcan Planum. (Larger image.)
High-resolution images of the Pluto-facing hemisphere of Charon, taken by New Horizons as the spacecraft sped through the Pluto system on July 14, and transmitted to Earth on Sept. 21, reveal details of a belt of fractures and canyons just north of the moon’s equator. This great canyon system stretches across the entire face of Charon, more than a thousand miles, and probably around onto Charon’s far side. Four times as long as the Grand Canyon, and twice as deep in places, these faults and canyons indicate a titanic geological upheaval in Charon’s past.

Pluto-Charon-v2-10-1-15[1]
Strikingly Different Worlds: A composite of enhanced color images highlights the striking differences between Pluto and Charon. (Larger image)
“It looks like the entire crust of Charon has been split open,” said John Spencer, deputy lead for GGI at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. “In respect to its size relative to Charon, this feature is much like the vast Valles Marineris canyon system on Mars.”

The team has also discovered that the plains south of the canyon, informally referred to as Vulcan Planum, have fewer large craters than the regions to the north, indicating that they are noticeably younger. The smoothness of the plains, as well as their grooves and faint ridges, are clear signs of wide-scale resurfacing.

One possibility for the smooth surface is a kind of cold volcanic activity, called cryovolcanism. “The team is discussing the possibility that an internal water ocean could have frozen long ago, and the resulting volume change could have led to Charon cracking open, allowing water-based lavas to reach the surface at that time,” said Paul Schenk, a New Horizons team member from the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston.

Even higher-resolution Charon images and composition data are still to come as New Horizons transmits data, stored on its digital recorders, over the next year – and as that happens, “I predict Charon’s story will become even more amazing!” said mission Project Scientist Hal Weaver, of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland.

The New Horizons spacecraft is currently 3.1 billion miles (5 billion kilometers) from Earth, with all systems healthy and operating normally.

New Horizons is part of NASA’s New Frontiers Program, managed by the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. APL designed, built, and operates the New Horizons spacecraft and manages the mission for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. SwRI leads the science mission, payload operations, and encounter science planning.