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The war for the conquest of space is still on

Rudyard Kipling by Rudyard Kipling
April 17, 2021
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https://mundo.sputniknews.com/20210416/la-guerra-por-la-conquista-del-espacio-sigue-en-pie-1111271432.html

The war for the conquest of space is still on

The war for the conquest of space is still on

On April 12, 1961, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin achieved the impossible: he circled the Earth aboard the Vostok-1 spacecraft.

2021-04-16T22: 05 + 0000

2021-04-16T22: 05 + 0000

2021-04-16T22: 05 + 0000

telescope

60 years since the first manned flight into space

Yuri gagarin

space

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https://cdnmundo1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/04/10/1111272326_14:0:626:344_1920x0_80_0_0_2c05558973e108bec3e619e20754387b.jpg

The war for the conquest of space is still on

60 years after the feat of the Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the world changed but the desire to expand remains intact.

On April 12, 1961, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin achieved the impossible: he circled the Earth aboard the Vostok-1 spacecraft in a trip that lasted just under two hours. That Soviet feat marked the beginning of a new era and it filled a surprised humanity with hope: space was no longer so mysterious. Previously, in the 1950s, the USSR had crossed the barriers known to man, by putting the first artificial satellite they called Sputnik into orbit. “For the first time, space became accessible to humans,” Diego told Sputnik Mardones, an astronomer at the University of Chile and a researcher at the Center for Astrophysics, with a doctorate in Astrophysics from Harvard, an expert in radio astronomy and star formation. The impact of that historical event transcends to the present day, with the technological and economic race that exists between countries focused on finding a habitable planet for the future of humanity. What will be the next frontier to tear down? Is it possible that the human beings live on Mars or on another planet far from Earth? These are some of the challenges facing science. “To advance in these issues, there must be a political and economic effort,” César Fuentes, an astronomer at the University of Chile and a researcher at the Center for Astrophysics, told Sputnik. in Astrophysics from Harvard and an expert on the Solar System and spacecraft. Fuentes also highlighted the Russian vision of creating a Space Station. We also spoke with the Colombian professor Marino Guarín, president of the Colombian Astronomy network, and with the astrophysicist Hector Vives, a Spanish researcher on black holes, gravitational lenses and dark matter. Uruguay, Telescopio is broadcast on Radio M24 (frequency 97.9 from Montevideo and 102.5 from Maldonado) on Mondays and Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m., and on Saturdays at 12:00 p.m. In Bolivia, on Radio Illimani – Patria Nueva (94.3 FM for the whole country and 93.7 FM in Cochabamba), from Monday to Friday from 4 to 5 hours. On Radio Kawsachun Coca (FM 99.1 from Cochabamba and FM 99.9 Trópico), from 10 pm to 11 pm.

See also  They discover a black hole that has a strange "dance" in space - Enséñame de Ciencia

Sputnik World

[email protected]

+74956456601

MIA “Rosiya Segodnya”

2021

Sputnik World

[email protected]

+74956456601

MIA “Rosiya Segodnya”

News

es_ES

Sputnik World

[email protected]

+74956456601

MIA “Rosiya Segodnya”

https://cdnmundo1.img.sputniknews.com/img/07e5/04/10/1111272326_90:0:549:344_1920x0_80_0_0_35ad9cbda89fa53fdd955dac9b455794.jpg

Sputnik World

[email protected]

+74956456601

MIA “Rosiya Segodnya”

Sputnik World

[email protected]

+74956456601

MIA “Rosiya Segodnya”

аудио, 60 years since the first manned flight into space, yuri gagarin, space

60 years after the feat of the Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, the world changed but the desire to expand remains intact.

On April 12, 1961 the Russian cosmonaut Yuri gagarin accomplished the impossible: he circled the Earth aboard the Vostok-1 ship on a journey that lasted just under two hours.
That Soviet feat marked the beginning of a new era and it filled a surprised humanity with hope: space was no longer so mysterious. Previously, in the 1950s the USSR had crossed the barriers known to man, by putting the first artificial satellite called Sputnik into orbit.

“For the first time, space was made accessible to humans,” he told Sputnik Diego Mardones, an astronomer at the University of Chile and a researcher at the Center for Astrophysics, with a doctorate in Astrophysics from Harvard, an expert in radio astronomy and star formation.

“The launch of Sputnik is the beginning of the space age, it defines the beginning and is a great milestone because it extends the reach of the human being through technology to space,” he added.

The impact of that historical fact transcends to the present, with the technological and economic race that exists between the countries focused in finding a habitable planet for the future of humanity.
What will be the next frontier to tear down? Is it possible that human beings live on Mars or on another planet far from Earth? These are some of the challenges science faces.

“To advance on these issues, there must be a political and economic effort,” he told Sputnik César Fuentes, an astronomer at the University of Chile and a researcher at the Center for Astrophysics, a doctorate in Astrophysics from Harvard and an expert on the Solar System and spacecraft. Fuentes also highlighted the Russian vision of creating a Space Station.

See also  Borrell condemns violation of Moldovan airspace by Russian missiles

We also spoke with the Colombian professor Marino Guarín, president of the Colombian Astronomy network, and with the astrophysicist Hector Vives, a Spanish researcher on black holes, gravitational lenses and dark matter.

In uruguay, Telescope It is broadcast on Radio M24 (frequency 97.9 from Montevideo and 102.5 from Maldonado) on Mondays and Wednesdays at 7:00 p.m., and on Saturdays at 12 noon. In Bolivia, on Radio Illimani – Patria Nueva (94.3 FM for the whole country and 93.7 FM in Cochabamba), from Monday to Friday from 4 to 5 hours. On Radio Kawsachun Coca (FM 99.1 from Cochabamba and FM 99.9 Trópico), from 10 pm to 11 pm.

Rudyard Kipling

Rudyard Kipling

"Reader. Evil problem solver. Typical analyst. Unapologetic internet ninja."

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