satellites, Sputniks 1, 2, and 3, and Luna 1. Sputnik 1 practically unhinged the American social order when it became the first artificial satellite on October 4, 1957. For three weeks it emitted regular beeps at standard shortwave frequencies as it circled the globe. Not only had America been beaten into space, Sputnik weighed six times more than the first American satellite, launched four months later.
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Where space exploration was concerned, Nikita Khrushchev did more than just make fiery speeches. Khrushchev aggressively pushed Soviet engineers to design larger rockets, not just to build nuclear intercontinental missiles, but to embark on an ambitious space program that would bring communism to the stars. "People of the whole world are pointing to this satellite," Khrushchev said of that first Sputnik launch. "They are saying the United States has been beaten." 35
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Less than a month after Sputnik 1, the Soviets triumphed again with Sputnik 2, now five times heavier. More stunning to the American public, however, was that the capsule contained a dog named Laika, the first living creature to enter outer space. For about a week the world could hear Laika's heartbeat as she ate and slept. Then her oxygen ran out and she quietly died.
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In May 1958 the Soviets launched Sputnik 3, a repeat of the first Sputnik mission, and then topped that feat by sending Luna 1 into solar orbit on January 2, 1959. This probe had been intended to hit the moon, and though the Soviet engineers missed their target by about 3,700 miles, their spacecraft became the first human object to escape the carters gravity.
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Meanwhile, the United States was having trouble getting its rockets off the ground. Just two months after Sputnik, with an entire world watching, the first American attempt to orbit a satellite exploded at launch. "Oh What a Flopnik!" was how one newspaper headline described the debacle. 36
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Though the U.S. was finally able to orbit six satellites in the next two years, fifteen other rockets were failures. Some exploded on the launch pad. Others broke apart in flight. Many simply fizzled, crashing back to earth.
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Not surprisingly, the Soviets were proud of their lead in space. As Frol Kozlov, the First Deputy Premier of the Soviet Union, said at the opening ceremonies of the Soviet cultural exhibit, "We do not conceal that [these launches] required us to tax our strength considerably, but neither do we conceal our pride in the results of our toil." 37
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