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  1. Dodge asteroids, practice typing, and learn about planets with ABCya’s exciting space games for kids ages 4-12. They’re out of this world! pre- k grade k grade 1 grade 2 grade 3 grade 4 grade 5 grade 6+

    • Who Was Laika The Space Dog?
    • Laika's Mission: Sputnik 2
    • Laika's Death
    • The Soviets and Americans in A Cold War Space Race
    • Additional Resources and Reading

    Laika was a black-and-white mutt originally named Kudrayavka, or Little Curly. Her later name, which means Barker, came about when she barked during a radio interview. (In the U.S. press, she was sometimes called Muttnik.) Laika weighed about 13 pounds (6 kilograms) at the time of her flight, according to NASA. Laika's launch pad to fame were the s...

    Sputnik 1, which launched on Oct. 4, 1957, was a 184-lb. (83 kilograms), beach-ball-size sphere that basically just emitted beeps as it circled Earth, although those beeps shocked the world. Sputnik 2 launched just a month later; according to one accountof an interview with cosmonaut Georgy Grechko, who flew in the 1970s, the project was rushed to ...

    Sputnik 2 was a suicide mission for the poor dog; the satellite was not designed to come safely back to Earth and the Soviet space program didn't want to delay the launch. Telemetry data showed that Laika survived the launch, according to Anatoly Zak of RussianSpaceWeb.com. Initially, Soviet publications claimed that the dog died, painlessly, after...

    Sputnik 2's launch was one of three spaceflight events that shook the United States in 1957, causing widespread concern among Americans about the nation's technological capabilities compared to those of its Cold War rival. "'When I saw the dog go up, I said, 'My God, we better get going because it's going to be a legitimate program to put man in sp...

    Historian Alice George explored Laika's story in detail for Smithsonian Magazine. A feature in The New Yorker explores the social and political aspects of Laika's flight. "Laika's Window: The Legacy of a Soviet Space Dog" (Trinity University Press, 2018) explains how Laika's flight paved the way for human spaceflight. Laika also features in a 2020 ...

  2. On November 3, 1957, Sputnik 2, with the dog Laika aboard, lifted off with g-forces reaching five times normal gravity levels. NASM. The Soviet canine recruiters began their quest with a herd of ...

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  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Space_DogsSpace Dogs - Wikipedia

    Space Dogs (a.k.a. Belka & Strelka — Star Dogs, original: Белка и Стрелка. Звёздные собаки, Belka i Strelka. Zvyozdnye sobaki) is a 2010 Russian animated Adventure comedy historical drama film. The film is based on the Soviet space dogs Belka and Strelka, and honors the first animals who survived an orbital space ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › LaikaLaika - Wikipedia

    Laika ( / ˈlaɪkə / LY-kə; Russian: Лайка, IPA: [ˈlajkə]; c. 1954 – 3 November 1957) was a Soviet space dog who was one of the first animals in space and the first to orbit the Earth. A stray mongrel from the streets of Moscow, she flew aboard the Sputnik 2 spacecraft, launched into low orbit on 3 November 1957.

  6. ABCya's games for students in grade 2 are designed to help second graders practice writing, reading, and problem-solving in a fun and interactive way. Our games for students in second grade help students practice mechanics, grammar, spelling, telling time, basic geometry, and much more. In our second-grade games, learners can practice the ...

  7. From 1957 to 1960, 11 flights with dogs were made on the R-2A series (developed from the R-1 missile, and once again, itself a copy of the German V-2) which flew to about 200 km (120 mi). Three flights were made to an altitude of about 450 km (280 mi) on R-5A rockets in 1958. In the R-2 and R-5 rockets, the dogs were contained in a pressured cabin.

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