Noah’s Ark in space Paris
RUSSIAN MONGREL LAIKA ORBITED THE EARTH 60 YEARS AGO
First space trip by a human, Russia’s Yuri Gagarin, followed four years later.
Three-and-a-half years before Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man in space, a dog called Laika was, in 1957, the first living creature to orbit the Earth.
The stray from Moscow is one of many animals who preceded humans in the conquest of space. Like most of the others, she did not survive.
“These animals performed a service to their respective countries that no human could or would have performed,” the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) says on its website.
“They gave their lives and/or their service in the name of technological advancement, paving the way for humanity’s many forays into space.”
In June 1948, rhesus monkey Albert I was the first mammal to be sent up to space in a rocket on a Nasa mission to test its reaction to weightlessness. He reached 63km in altitude, just below the start of outer space at 100km. A year before, the US had sent fruit flies to an altitude of 100km in a V-2 rocket.
Tsygan and Dezik in August 1951 were the first dogs to be sent into space on a sub-orbital flight for the Soviets, returning alive.
But the first full orbit of Earth by a living being was accomplished by Laika, a small mongrel picked up from the street and sent up in the Soviet Sputnik 2 on November 3, 1957, enclosed in a metal container. She died after a few hours due to a malfunction in the rocket’s equipment.
In August 1960, the Soviet Union sent something of a Noah’s Ark into space, including dogs Belka and Strelka, a rabbit, 40 mice, two rats and 15 flasks of fruit flies and plants. It was the first orbital flight from which animal passengers returned alive.
Strelka later gave birth to a litter of six puppies, one of which was given to US president John F Kennedy as a gift for his children.
Research with Ham, the first chimpanzee in space, in January 1961 paved the way for the first space flight by an American, Alan Shepard, one month after Gagarin’s historic mission in April 1961.
Another chimp, Enos, became the only animal from the US to be sent into orbit in late 1961, just before John Glenn circled the Earth.
In October 1963, France became the first country to send a cat into space, named Felicette. She replaced Felix, who ran away on the eve of departure. The French also sent up the first rat, Hector, who reached a height of about 150km in 1961.
In 2001, China, seeking to become part of the small club of space powers, sent a spacecraft into orbit with rats aboard. In 2003 it sent its own astronauts into space.
In 2010, Iran, which wants to send a man into space, announced it had successfully tested a locally manufactured rocket containing several animals, including a rat, tortoises and worms.
As global space agencies work towards propelling people to Mars by the 2030s, questions of survival in deep space are also being explored with the help of animals.
In September 2007, researchers said minuscule eight-legged invertebrate creatures known as “water bears”, or tardigrades, can survive the vacuum, extreme temperatures and ultraviolet radiation of open space.
And in 2014, Japanese scientists announced the survival of mouse sperm which had been freeze-dried and sent for nine months to the International Space Station, which orbits about 400km above the planet. Back on Earth, the sperm was used to fertilise embryos in vitro to produce offspring that grew into normal adult mice. –