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Encyclopedia > Konstantin Eduardovitch Tsiolkovsky
Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky
Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky

Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky (Konstanty Ciołkowski), (Константин Эдуардович Циолковский; September 5, 1857 new styleSeptember 19, 1935) was a Russian of Polish ancestry, rocket scientist and pioneer of cosmonautics.


He was born in Izhevskoye (now in Spassky District, Ryazan Oblast), Russia in a middle-class family (son of a Pole deported to Eastern Russia). As a child he was sickly and hard of hearing, and was not accepted at elementary schools, so was home schooled until 16.


Nearly deaf, he worked as a high school mathematics teacher until retiring in 1920. Tsiolkovsky theorized many aspects of space travel and rocket propulsion. He is considered the father of human space flight and the first man to conceive the space elevator. His most famous work was Исследование мировых пространств реактивными приборами (The Exploration of Cosmic Space by Means of Reaction Motors), which published in 1903 was arguably the first academic treatise on rocketry. Unfortunately his ideas never made it out of Russia, and the field lagged until German and other scientists independently made the same calculations decades later.


His work influenced later rocketeers throughout Europe, and was also studied by the Americans in the 1950s and 1960s as they sought to understand the Soviet Union's early successes in space flight.

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Tsiolkovsky also delved into theories of heavier-than-air flying machines, independently working through many of the same calculations that the Wright brothers were doing at the same time. However, he never built any practical models, and his interest shifted to more ambitious topics.


Friedrich Zander became enthusiastic about Tsiolkovsky's work and active in promoting and developing it. In 1924 he established the first Cosmonautics Society in the Soviet Union, and later researched and built liquid-fuelled rockets named OR-1 (1930) and OR-2 (1933). On August 23, 1924 Tsiolkovsky was elected as a first professor of the Military-Air Academy N. E. Zhukovsky.


In 1929 Tsiolkovsky proposed the construction of staged rockets in his book Космические поезда (Cosmic Trains).


The basic equation for rocket propulsion, the Tsiolkovsky rocket equation, is named after him.


He was also an adherent of philosopher Nikolai Fyodorov, and believed that colonizing space would lead to the perfection of the human race, with immortality and a carefree existence.


Tsiolkovsky died on September 19, 1935 in Kaluga, Russia, where there is a museum of astronautics named after him.


Quote

"The Earth is the cradle of humanity, but one can not live in a cradle forever!"


External links

  • Virtual Matchbox Labels Museum - Russian labels - Space - Page 2 - Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (http://phillumeny.onego.ru/labels/russian/space/page2/page2.html) Historic images
  • Tsiolkovsky (http://www.russianspaceweb.com/tsiolkovsky.html) from Russianspaceweb.com
  • Spaceflight or Extinction: Konstantin Tsiolkovsky (http://www.spaext.com/info/tsiolkovsky/index.html) Excerpts from "The Aims of Astronautics", The Call of the Cosmos

  Results from FactBites:
 
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (682 words)
Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky (Konstanty Ciołkowski), (Константин Эдуардович Циолковский; September 5, 1857 new style September 19, 1935) was a Russian and Soviet rocket scientist and pioneer of cosmonautics who spent most of his life in a log-house at the outskirts of the Russian town of Kaluga.
Tsiolkovsky first calculated that the escape velocity from the Earth into orbit was 8 km/second and that to achieve this, a multi-stage rocket fueled by liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen was required.
Tsiolkovsky died on September 19, 1935 in Kaluga, Russia and was buried in state.
Tsiolkovsky (2013 words)
Konstantin Tsiolkovsky was a true visionary and pioneer of astronautics.
Konstantin E. Tsiolkovsky, the father of cosmonautics, died in Kaluga at the age of 78 on September 19,1935.
Tsiolkovsky was certain that the future of human life will be in outer space, so he deceded that we must study the cosmos to pave the way for future generations.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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