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SPACE SCIENCE TERMS

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Artificial Satellites:

A man-made object placed in the orbit about a planet.

Astrionics:

Electronics applied especially to astronautics.

Astronaut:

The person who actually flies through space and also those concerned with flying through space.
Read Also: Neil Armstrong

Booster:

A propulsion unit used in the initial stage of rocket flight.

Boost-Glide Vehicle:

A rocket- boosted winged-vehicle under aerodynamic control capable of leaving the atmosphere, entering space and re-entering the atmosphere by gliding.

Cislunar:

Space between the Earth and the Moon.

Cosmonaut:

The Russian name of the person who actually flies through space and also those concerned with such flying.

Early-warning satellite:

A reconnaissance satellite for detecting the enemy ballistic missile firing well in advance ti give warning.

Environment space chamber:

A chamber used for training the specimen.
Don’t Miss: Yuri Gagarin – The First Man in Space

Hard Landing:

The destructive impact of a space vehicle on a predetermined celestial target, the vehicle being destroyed upon impact.

Orbit:

Path of a body relative to its primary.

Payload:

Useful cargo.

Propellent:

A liquid or solid substance burned in a rocket to develop thrust.

Retro-rocket:

A rocket fitted on or in a vehicle used to retard forward motion.

Satellite:

A body moving around a celestial body.

Soft landing:

The presence of smooth landing of a space vehicle on a planet or satellite without any damage.

Space-platform:

A large orbiting satellite serving as a base in space well-equipped for the purpose.
Read Also: The European Space Agency (ESA)

Stationary orbit:

A circular orbit in which the satellite moves from west to east at such a speed as to remain fixed above a particular point on the

Telemetering:

A process of taking the measurement of speed, temperature, pressure and radiation within a spacecraft during flight and conveying them by radio to a ground station.

Tracking-station:

A station equipped with radio and radar etc. to track a body moving through space.

Trajectory:

The path described by a space vehicle.

Weightlessness:

The absence of any apparent gravitational pull on an object. Absolute weightlessness is obtained only by an object falling freely in the vacuum.
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