Project Space Station

Project Space Station by Brian O’Leary, published by Stackpole Books on September 15, 2017, is a reprint edition comprising 176 pages in English. This book explores NASA’s ambitious plans to establish a permanent, manned space station by the year 1990, detailing the studies and considerations surrounding user requirements, system attributes, and architectural options. O’Leary, an astrophysicist and former astronaut, provides insights into the evolution of space stations, referencing historical precedents like Skylab and the Soviet Salyut, while discussing the implications of continuous human presence in space.
Readers will find a comprehensive examination of the future of space exploration, including the concept of “tinkermodules” that will be assembled in orbit, and the potential for space careers, commerce, and even the prospect of conflicts in space. The book delves into various topics such as space station architecture, the history of space endeavors, and the possibilities of living and working in space. Project Space Station presents a unique perspective on the developments that could shape humanity’s future in the cosmos, making it a timely resource for those interested in science, physics, and space science.
Official synopsis Publisher
It’s happening now—plans are being formulated under the coordination of NASA to launch a permanent, manned space station by the year 1990. Studies surveying user requirements, system attributes, and architectural options have been conducted, and you’re on the top of these far-reaching considerations on the next big step taken within space!
Now that the Shuttle and Spacelab are realities, NASA has set sights on a new horizon—a permanent, manned space station in the high frontier. The precedents have been set—Skylab hosted human visits for up to 84 days, and the Soviet’s Salyut was and is a temporary base for cosmonaut crew. The differences are the term and scope of space station living and the accomplishments that can be realized with a permanent site and continuous experimentation within its facilities.
Brian O’Leary, writer, astrophysicist, and former astronaut, describes the “tinkermodules” that will be carried to the earth’s orbit to be assembled as a space station. His inside track information also lays the groundwork for fascinating disclosures on: Space station history, NASA’s studies and plans, space careers and human potential, commerce and homesteading in space, odds of a space war, spacelab, space station architecture, space factories and hotels, soviet space station programs, colonies and exploration.
Here are issues that will likely bear directly on the space station of the not-so-distant future and an expert’s interpretation of what that future holds. Unique and timely, Project Space Station gives you a distinctive foretaste of a new era in which homesteading asteroids, growing huge silicon crystals in weightless factories—and the possibility of real star wars—will be a way of life.
In 1982, NASA undertook the planning of the United States’ next major initiative in space: a manned space station program to be presented for consideration to the Administration and Congress. This painting depicts one possible space station concept based on the earlier Space Platform studiesby TRW Space & Technology Group (Redondo Beach, California) as commissioned by NASA’s Marshall’s Space Fligth Center. The rectangular panels extending to the right and elft of the main spacecraft would provide solar energy. The upward extension is a single radiator. Of the three modules on the main space station, two are manned for habitation and experimentation and the third, unmanned, provides logistics support. A communications antenna extends forward and downward from the spacecraft. (NASA-photo)
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