Tests pilots in the dawn of the space age envisioned spaceflight as an extension of atmospheric flight. They assumed that experimental aircraft would fly progressively faster and higher until one would go into orbit and return to Earth in a conventional runway touchdown. By the late 1950s a small group of NASA engineers and pilots were designing oddly shaped, wingless aircraft known as lifting bodies. Thir goal was to develop a vehicle that could survive the heat of reentry into the atmosphere, fly at subsonic speeds, and make controlled, horizontal landings, much like an airplane. But NASA, determined to beat the Soviets to the moon, adopted the more easily implemented Mercury capsules, which were controlled largely by booster technology and required risky, expensive ocean splashdowns and recoveries. The proponents of lifting bodies continued during the 1960s and 1970s to refine and test the concept. Their research eventually became central to the design of the space shuttle, which first flew in 1981. Written by a pilot-engineer who participated in every phase of NASA's lifting body program, "Flying without wings" documents the adventure, triumphs, setbacks, and fun of pioneering a technology that allowed astronauts to accomplish lifting reentries and precise runway landings. He tells how, after the cancellation of the Air Force's Dyna-Soar program, the first lifting body projects such as the Paresev paraglider and the M2-F1 wer built on shoestring budgets at Edwards Air Force Base, California, often without the knowledge of official at the NASA headquarters. He descibes hair-raising test flights, including his near-crash in the M2-F2 in 1966, and he details his successful efforts to eliminate landing engines from early space shuttle designs. Because of the shuttle's success, the wingless lifting-body concept has enjoyed a resurgence of interest since the late 1980s, and two new lifting body programs, the X-33 and the X-38, are currently underway. Charting the transformation of aircraft into spacecraft, this vivid memoir describes the efforts of a small group of pilots and researchers to prove a seemingly impossible aerodynamic concept that would profoundly influence the history of spaceflight.
The author describes how polio changed his life, explains how he developed a positive outlook, and discusses the nature of disability
This is the extraordinary story of a poor Tennessee farm boy growing up during the depression of the 1930's who longed to be a pilot.
Written by a a pilot/engineer participant of NASA's lifting body program, this book documents the adventures, triumphs, setbacks, and fun of pioneering a technology that allowed astronauts to accomplish lifting reentries and precise runway ...
Loveless and luckless, she would rather bury her nose in a book than face her grim reality.And then, on a whim, she swipes right on a new dating app, and finds the man of her dreams - someone who can sweep her off her feet and teach her how ...
'Diseases that are entirely preventable with decent sanitation.' Camelia nodded as she picked up her glass. 'Yes, all part of the reforms the King has been promising and not delivering.' Kamel lit a cigar.
This book is a compilation of the life experiences of people from all walks of life.
A Flying Without Wings
Always asking and reaching for it in your physical presence. Kellie recounts her journey and experience of growing up with this unique love. Her knowing she is an old/advanced soul and her struggle to fit into this world and all around her.
The aviation historian and author of Memphis Belle presents an authoritative analysis of the groundbreaking, post-WWI series of military aircraft.
I m born from Dinka tribes where Polygamy is predominantly pride of cultural values in Southern Sudan, Eastern Africa.