preview

The Pros And Cons Of NASA During The Cold War

Decent Essays

While public opinion during a national crisis often oversimplifies threats, NASA found that this oversimplification worked in its favor during the Cold War. Some viewed the launching of the Soviet Union’s rocket Sputnik as a declaration of power in space, even though the rocket orbited Earth for only two months. Additionally, many people believed that the launching of the satellite meant that the Soviet Union could “just as easily send a barrage of atomic weapons toward the United States” (“Creation of NASA” 259). A headline from the October 5, 1957 edition of the newspaper Cleveland Plain Dealer read “Satellite Fired by Russia; Circling Us 15 Times a Day,” underlining the fear that many Americans shared about the capabilities of a nuclear bomb attack by satellite (Pettinato). In addition to having this fear, the public also supported the space program because of the sense of …show more content…

The Hubble Space Telescope, launched in 1990 by NASA space shuttle Discovery, is one of the most powerful telescopes ever created, and it has the ability to observe celestial objects and events billions of miles away (“National Debate Topic…”). This telescope has photographed many important phenomena, including the scope of galaxies, the creation of planets, and the births and deaths of stars. According to journalist William Harwood of the CBS News website, the Hubble Space Telescope has “‘helped astronomers confirm the existence of super massive black holes, pin down the true age of the universe and spot the faint building blocks of the first galaxies as they collided, merged, and grew just a billion years or so after the birth of the cosmos’” (“National Debate Topic…”). Additionally, the Hubble Space Telescope has played a key role in discovering and characterizing dark energy, a concept that has “changed our fundamental understanding of the cosmos”

Get Access