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|action1date=14:10, 2 Oct, 2004
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Russian language history (change years)
|action4date=22:09, 14 Feb 2005
http://www.pereplet.ru/space/chrono/1971.html
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Does anyone think this should be formatted as a table?
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[[User:Paranoid|Paranoid]] 18:51, 17 May 2004 (UTC)
|action5link=Wikipedia:Featured article review/Space Race/archive1
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==Just one part seems off...==
|action6date=26 July 2007
|action6link=Wikipedia:Peer review/Space Race/archive2
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|action7=PR
"...as the scientific community, the public, and even The New York Times scoffed at him"
|action7date=01:25, 20 October 2010
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Of course the New York Times would scoff at him. Have you ever read the New York Times? Or worse yet, the New York Times Magazine? They love scoffing at people...
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|maindate=March 1, 2005
==Reformatting==
|currentstatus=FFA
I reformatted the article, now can someone help me research and expand? [[User:Ilyanep| ]] &mdash; [[User:Ilyanep|<font color="grey">Il&gamma;&alpha;&eta;&epsilon;&rho;</font>]] [[User talk:Ilyanep|<font color="#333333">(T&alpha;l&kappa;)]] 17:33, 23 Aug 2004 (UTC)
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: You have my sword. (I already beefed up the moon race stuff before realising this was a candidate for <s>article</s> collaboration of the week.) I'm going to be away for another week, though, so while I'll be reading up on spacey topics, editing will alas have to wait. --[[User:AlexG|AlexG]] 15:30, 27 Aug 2004 (UTC)
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:Had a big play around - resectionised it all and added images already available. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 16:54, 14 Sep 2004 (UTC)
{{WikiProject Spaceflight|importance=Top|needs-image=yes}}
{{WikiProject Rocketry|importance=High |needs-image=yes}}
{{WikiProject History of Science|importance=High}}
{{WikiProject Cold War|importance=High}}
{{WikiProject United States|importance=High|UShistory=yes|UShistory-importance=high}}
{{WikiProject Soviet Union|importance=High|hist=yes}}
{{WikiProject Russia|importance=High|hist=yes|tech=yes|sci=yes}}
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== Not just US and USSR // The new space races ==
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==Encyclopedia Astronautica not reliable==
Though there is a small mention of China perhaps there is scope for other countries in the space race (past and present). The following articles mention the UK ventures:
*[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/831401.stm BBC]
*[http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Launchpad/6133/ "Britain in Space"]
The term "space race" may also now include:
*The first commercial flight(s)
*The first member of the public rocket to reach space (there's a large competition about that but I can't remember the details right now)
[[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 21:19, 14 Sep 2004 (UTC)


I noticed that there are quite a few references on this article to [http://www.astronautix.com Encyclopedia Astronautica] however the site is no longer being updated and I noted this comment from {{re|SpinningSpark}} on the site’s [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Encyclopedia_Astronautica wiki article talk page]:
I once found a children's book in English titled "Space Race" -- and guess what was inside? Pictures of the Ariane! Some Europeans (and Brits, maybe) think that the phrase can be used for ''Europe's'' project to equal the capacities of the US!
:"Mark Wade's online ''Encyclopedia Astronautica'' has become a popular Internet source for space history. Unfortunately, while it contains a great deal of information, not all of it is correct. Space historians have noticed a variety of factual problems, and unfortunately these problems have not been consistently repaired. Since this is not a peer-reviewed source and historical errors are not always fixed, this cannot be considered a reliable source, despite its impressive appearance." ''Critical Issues in the History of Spaceflight'', [https://books.google.co.uk/?id=bYEgAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA485 pp. 484–485].
But please, none of this other stuff. Put it in reference.
Would suggest that we should start replacing thse references with reliable souces and deleting any errors. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]])
--[[User:Sobolewski|Sobolewski]] 02:22, 1 Mar 2005 (UTC)
:Have today replaced the Encyclopedia Astronautica references [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 05:54, 24 July 2022 (UTC)


:This sounds like Encyclopedia Astronautica is unreliable at all - which it is not even if there may be minor flaws (as in many publications and encyclopedia in spite of peer reviews). Just take the quote literally: "not all of it is correct" might also be understood as "most of it is correct". Therefore I'm using it as a reference if the data is consistent with other sources. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 15:23, 2 December 2022 (UTC)
== Canadians and The [[Moon Shot]] ==
:The reference links to [[Encyclopedia Astronautica]] (deleted by @[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] in July 2022 as "unreliable", see [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Space_Race&diff=1100538648&oldid=1100087680 diff]) were restored because the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_419#RFC_on_Encyclopedia_Astronautica RfC for the reliability of Encyclopedia Astronautica] concluded that "there appears to be a consensus that this is a valuable resource". So far no specific errors were addressed for the items linked to this article. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 11:18, 10 November 2023 (UTC)
[[User:Quinobi]]
::@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] has misrepresented the rfc, which concluded “There appears to be a consensus that this is a valuable resource, <u>but which lacks editorial oversight, contains errors and is no longer updated…caution needs to taken in using the source</u>.” The rfc found that [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources#No consensus| no consensus, unclear, or additional considerations apply]] on the reliability of the site, which includes “It may be necessary to evaluate each use of the source on a case-by-case basis while accounting for specific factors unique to the source in question.” Given the issues with this source I am reverting SchmiAlf's change pending consensus for inclusion.[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 11:54, 20 November 2023 (UTC)


== German influence on Soviet space program ==
1960 the [[Avro team]]
After being laid off when the Canadian Government cancelled its [[fighter]] program (1959..1961), the entire team of Canadian aerospace scientists at [[Avro]] ( builders of the legendary [[Avro Arrow]] ) were hired by [[NASA]] just as it called for intellectual fuel to meet [[Kennedy]]'s challenge. It was lucky for the fledgling nasa to 'inherit' an intact [[team]] with so much coherent [[shared knowlege]].


The statement "However, after 1947 the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their influence on the future Soviet rocket program was marginal." in the [[Space Race#Soviet rocket development]] section is based on the lead section of [[German influence on the Soviet space program]]. A survey [[Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#Survey]] with options for changing the lead was opened by the moderator. Please participate in the survey and vote for your preferred option! [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 16:05, 2 October 2023 (UTC)
== Thoughts ==


:I revised the rating of German influence based on Anatoly Zak and Ordway/Sharpe which have a more detailed view than Siddiqi (2000) and Neufeld (2012). Further details can be found in [[Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#Survey]] which is still open for participation in the survey. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 18:25, 16 November 2023 (UTC)
::SchmiAlf, as detailed on [[Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program]], you have pushing a [[Wikipedia:Fringe theories|fringe theory]] which overstates the German influence on the Soviet space. Their is no concensus for your changes and the rfc has not been finalised. Therefore I am reverting your controversial edits. Would suggest you stop trying to expand your fringe theory to other wiki articles until the rfc is complete [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 23:29, 16 November 2023 (UTC)
:::@[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]], you are blaming me "fringe". Since January 2022 (see [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Space_Race&oldid=1066265217 old version]) ''you'' have removed a lot of (previously undisputed) contributions related to German influence from this article. I have restored references to G-2 and G-4 because they are essential for this topic. I have added statements of several space historian to outline the on-going dispute. I kept the Siddiqi (2000) "after 1947 ... marginal" statement (you are clinging to), but it sounds rather strange here as compared to Neufeld (now with his original quote) and Zak. I'm convinced that this version is closer to Wikipedia's [[WP:NPOV|neutral point of view]] than it was before. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 09:06, 17 November 2023 (UTC)
::::SchmiAlf, for the last 12 months you have pushed a [[Wikipedia:Fringe theories|fringe theory]] which overstates the German influence on the Soviet space. I note that I am not the only wiki editor with these views, in this discussion [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AValentin_Glushko&type=revision&diff=330519271&oldid=323480953 DonPMitchell] called it a [[Conspiracy Theory |conspiracy theory]] and this discussion on [[Talk:R-7 Semyorka#Censored article: great shame.]] @[[User:DonPMitchell|DonPMitchell]] and @[[User:Mark Lincoln|Mark Lincoln]] discuss the “myth” of German involvement.
::::{{tq|Anatoly Zak concluded that the "German ideas and concepts developed by Gröttrup's team on Gorodomlya did influence Soviet designers and accelerate their efforts"}} This is a classic example of [[WP:SYNTH]]. Zak’s website in the [http://www.russianspaceweb.com/gorodomlya.html#contribution German contribution in the Soviet rocketry: Myth and Reality] section summarises both arguments for and against German contribution, which he concluded with “As it often happens in history, the truth might lie in between: Germans did not designed Sputnik or its rocket, however the ideas and concepts developed by Gröttrup’s team on Gorodomlya did influence Soviet designers and thus accelerated their efforts.” In other words, Zak’s website supports the original wording in this article, as supported by Siddiqi (2000).
::::As you now appear to be supporting Neufeld, I have replaced the conclusion with option C of the rfc, which incorporates both Neufield and Siddiqi, including the suggestions from @[[User:Caeciliusinhorto|Caeciliusinhorto]]. You have also included way to much information about German details, this article is about the Space race and this information should be left in supporting articles, hence the link to [[German influence on the Soviet space program]] embedded in this section. Again, I suggest you stop trying to expand your fringe theory to other wiki articles until the [[Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#RFC on Last Sentence of Lede| rfc on the talk page of German influence on the Soviet space program]] is complete.[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 11:04, 20 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::I strictly reject your allegation that I'm propagating a fringe theory. It has been ''your'' objective, since 18 months, to downgrade the contributions of captured German scientists to Soviet rocketry by synthesizing Siddiqi (2000) with differing statements of Neufeld (2012) and Zak (2003/2012) as if they said the same. Arbitrarily you delete essential German design studies and reference to Ordway/Sharpe (1979) which obviously do not fit your limited view and/or your strange mission. As argument you bring up an outdated talk from 2009 which has nothing to do with my edits (i.e., no word that the Germans designed the R-7).
:::::A week ago I restored valuable references to Mark Wade's [[Encyclopedia Astronautica]] here and in several other articles ([[Soviet rocketry]], [[Intercontinental ballistic missile]], [[Vostok 1]], [[R-7 Semyorka]]). Contrary to the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_419#RFC_on_Encyclopedia_Astronautica result of the RFC] you have deleted them a second time without giving a proper argument on a case-by-case basis as suggested. Therefore I'm inviting @[[User:ActivelyDisinterested|ActivelyDisinterested]], @[[User:Daranios|Daranios]], @[[User:PM3|PM3]], @[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]], @[[User:Wehwalt|Wehwalt]], @[[User:InvadingInvader|InvadingInvader]] to comment on this dispute and potential fringe theories. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 12:09, 21 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::Can you find a better source than Encyclopedia Astronautica to reference the desired information? Remember that [[WP:OSE]], though targeted towards deletion discussions, is best used in any discussion when only comparing to featured articles and good articles. <b><span style="color:#0080FB">Invading</span><span style="color:#0668E1">Invader</span></b> ([[User:InvadingInvader|userpage]], [[User talk:InvadingInvader|talk]]) 12:12, 21 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::I am not entirely clear what we are discussing. The survey appears to be dormant, but had I chimed in, I would have been for Option C based on the only sources I have on hand (Chertok and Siddiqi). However, since the sentence was not proper English ("However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, after 1947-48 they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used, the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal."), I'd instead say, "However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, after 1947-48 they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used; the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal." If we need further sources, I can ask Asif (we are both members of the AAS History Committee) if he can recommend other published sources on the issue. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 22:26, 21 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::Thanks @[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]], if you could ask Asif for additional sources, including his thoughts or sources that also deal with [https://www.scientistsandfriends.com/files/JBIS.pdf Olaf Przybilski’s claims], that would be appreciated. Note that as you are obviously discussing the [[Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#RFC on Last Sentence of Lede|survey on the talk page of German influence on the Soviet space program]], I will copy your response to that page. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 00:47, 22 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::@[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] Which claims specifically are in question? --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 14:47, 22 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::@[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] Claims that after 1947 German specialists had an extensive influence on Soviet rocketry. In particular Dr. Olaf Przybilski pointed out similarities between later Soviet rockets and the studies carried out by German specialists, for example, resemblance between a cone-like aerodynamic shape the Gröttrup team had proposed for several rockets and the conical shape of Korolev’s largest designs—the R-7 and the N1 moon rocket. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 15:04, 22 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::@[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]], I have posed the question to the committee as a whole. We shall see what they turn up. :) --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 18:58, 22 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::@[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]], in the following I'm summarizing arguments which I brought up in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Dispute_resolution_noticeboard/Archive_237#German_influence_on_the_Soviet_space_program early moderated dispute]. Many of these details were already mentioned by Ordway/Sharpe's ''The Rocket Team'' (1979), pp. 329-344. Surprisingly they had access to the [https://archive.org/details/CIA-RDP80-00810A001800090003-0 1953 CIA interrogation] of German returnees (see reference on p. 442) which describes the full details of G-4/R-14, although this secret CIA document was not released until 2010. Based on this insight knowledge they concluded: "The R-14 finally proposed by the Germans [in October 1949] was certainly no 'uprated' V-2. It was a new departure in rocket design. Indeed, at the time, it was considerably in advance of anything proposed or thought of by von Braun and his team in the United States."
::::::::The most important details are as follows (referring to the item numbers in the ''1953 CIA interrogation''):
::::::::* Item 50: Conical shape of G-4 (with its astounding similarity to the R-7 boosters as documented by [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Comparison_G-4.R-14_with_R-7_booster.png comparative drawing]). This essential design approach is also described by Helmut Gröttup's [https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP80-00810A003300530005-2.pdf 1954 CIA interrogation], his comprehensive book [https://owncloud.birkenwald.de/owncloud/index.php/s/BHp4MDDZZTcGnpG Über Raketen] (1959) and Werner Albring's Gorodomlia (1991) (available as [https://buchshop.bod.de/gorodomlya-island-werner-albring-9783741218231 Gorodomlya Island] in English since 2016 with additional material from Soviet archives).
::::::::* Items 26-33: The use of pressure-stabilized [[balloon tank]]s based on thin-walled self-supporting (monocoque) structures (1 mm) to reduce weight (documented by Uhl (p.177-178) and applied for R-7);
::::::::* Items 8d, 8g: Low initial acceleration by thrust/weight ratio of 1.44 (instead of typically 2.0) (R-7's Sputnik shot had a value of 1.4);
::::::::* Items 36, 72: Gimbal arrangement of the motor instead of rudders (first used by Soviet design of [https://web.archive.org/web/20211024160135/https://www.energia.ru/english/energia/launchers/rocket-r9.html R-9 (Russian source)];
::::::::* Item 50: Exhaust nozzles adjustable in direction ([[vernier thruster]]s) for roll control (used by RD-107/108 for R-7 and R-9, see above);
::::::::* Item 42: System for simultaneous emptying of both tanks as described by Ustinov's 1948 task "fuel level sensor in the rocket’s tanks" (also documented by Russian [https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A1%D0%B8%D1%81%D1%82%D0%B5%D0%BC%D0%B0_%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%BE%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B6%D0%BD%D0%B5%D0%BD%D0%B8%D1%8F_%D0%B1%D0%B0%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%B2 Tank emptying system] and Chertok (p. 292, Vol 2);
::::::::* Items 28, 29: Arrangement of the oxygen tank ahead of the fuel tank to solve structural issues during fueling and to improve the center of gravity position (applied for R-5 and R-7).
::::::::All German ideas were limited to theoretical design sketches, accompanied by some experiments for areodynamics and engine trials. In parallel, the Soviet teams under Korolev in NII-88 and Glushko in OKB-456 successfully solved the challenges of the technical implementation, based on adopted approaches (until 1952 continuing to ask advice from the 100+ German scientists isolated on Gorodomlya) and own ideas.
::::::::Due to strict consealment during Stalin's era it is hard to find Soviet documents which explicitly prove the level of German contributions to the early Soviet rocketry (Uhl's, Zak's and other historians' dilemma). Nevertheless, the Russian [https://owncloud.birkenwald.de/owncloud/index.php/s/XTAeeiz4wfbS3X7 ''70 Years of Zwezda 1946-2016''] document (2016) acknowledged them as follows: ''"The German experience in terms of basic research and practical engineering application became a good school for the Soviet scientists. Many valuable ideas were adopted from the German collective, which saved the Soviet rocket industry many years of development and mistakes. [...] In the technically simplified design of a single-stage rocket with a conical shape, many innovations were again implemented: For the first time there were no gas thrusters, the rocket was equipped with stages in longitudinal and transverse pitch, with a bundle of three engines as a propulsion block and engine control during acceleration."''
::::::::As ever in technology, the success was based on 10% inspiration and 90% perspiration - but with more than marginal contributions by the German team in 1948-49. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 11:28, 23 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] It sounds as though the Soviets had a quantum leap from the R-1/R-2 (German copies) era and the R-5/R-7 (German ideas/home-grown) era. If ''Zwezda'' be a reliable source, it certainly seems that insight (which you quoted in italics) should be reflected in an article that incorporates the German impact on the Soviet program. Otherwise, you make a compelling argument, but it would be OR-ish without dispositive external sources. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 15:35, 23 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] 70 Years of Zwezda 1946-2016 is sourced from https://owncloud.birkenwald.de/owncloud/index.php/s/XTAeeiz4wfbS3X7 and I have noticed that a number of your sources are linked to “owncloud.birkenwald.de. Can you clarify how you found this source? In particular, is this your own website? [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 16:20, 23 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::True, this is "my" cloud for providing documents which cannot be found otherwise in the web. The Zvezda document was handed over as a printed copy to Ursula Gröttrup, Helmut Gröttrup's daugther who grew up on Gorodomlya.
::::::::::More information can be found for [http://www.zavod-zvezda.ru/istoriya.html Zvezda history]. Zvezda has its origins as Branch No. 1 of NII-88 in 1946 to 1950 and has been continued as a plant for Soviet and Russian space technology in [https://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%A1%D0%BE%D0%BB%D0%BD%D0%B5%D1%87%D0%BD%D1%8B%D0%B9_(%D0%97%D0%90%D0%A2%D0%9E,_%D0%A2%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%80%D1%81%D0%BA%D0%B0%D1%8F_%D0%BE%D0%B1%D0%BB%D0%B0%D1%81%D1%82%D1%8C) Solnetschny (Twer)] on Gorodomlya island. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 16:46, 23 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] I suspect using your own cloud website to provide documents would not be a reliable sources, as per [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:RS&redirect=no WP:RS] particularly [[WP:USG]]. I believe the quickest way to resolve will be to raise the issue on the [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard|reliable sources notice board]], will do so and you can respond with your explanation. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 11:35, 24 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::refer [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#using your own cloud for providing documents which cannot be found otherwise in the web.]] [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 14:36, 24 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::::As some have noted in that discussion, hosting a document does not make it unreliable. It just makes it publicly accessible, which is desirable. For instance, I got a list of R-5 launches from Asif Siddiqi (no one is going to challenge that he's a reliable source given how many articles use his published works), but because I have my own hosting, I wanted to make the list accessible to everyone. It can be found [http://sdfo.org/stl/R-5%20Launches%201953-1959.docx here]. That doesn't necessarily make @[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]]'s documents reliable, but his hosting them does not ''prima facie'' make them unreliable. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 19:56, 24 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::::As already stated in the RSN, the Zvezda document was published in 2016 with an edition of 2000 pieces. This can be evaluated from the bottom of page 9 of the document (including the reference of the printing works). [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 17:32, 25 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::::@[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]], obviously the current discussion on "reliability of source" and "copyright" noticeboards is trying to discredit the sources mentioned above. If needed, an original print of the Zvezda document can be added to the public library of the Deutsches Museum as part of Helmut Gröttrup's inheritance (NL 281). I provided this and other documents under the conditions of fair use as common ground for our dispute.
::::::::::::::For further discussion of the <u>content</u> I'm asking how I can support you to reconsider your initial preference for Option C (as you stated on 22:26, 21 November 2023 (UTC)) which was copied by @[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] to the survey of the RFC. Any proposal to get out of the deadlock is welcome. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 17:34, 28 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::{{tq|obviously the current discussion on "reliability of source" and "copyright" noticeboards is trying to discredit the sources mentioned above.}} @[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] I raised the issue on the reliability board as I have never heard of an Editor using their own website to provide links to articles. Sharing documents for the benefit of other editors on talk pages may be acceptable, but you currently have your own website linking your sources to the [[Helmut Gröttrup]] and [[German influence on the Soviet space program]] articles to support your claims, a practice the majority of Editors on the reliability board find unacceptable. It has also highlighted the issue of [[wp:PUBLISHED]] to ensure that your sources were not “found in my grandmother’s attic”, as one of the Editors has elegantly stated. Many of these Editors also raised serious concerns over the copyright issue, including not complying with [[wp:COPYLINK]], [[WP:ELNEVER]] and [[WP:LINKVIO]]. Hence it has nothing to do with “discrediting” your sources, but all about ensuring you are complying with Wikipedia policies.[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 10:21, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::My support of Option C was solely based on my materials at hand. As I said before, Zvezda seems to support your amendment, and so long as it's a reliable source, I'm fine with it. I just don't know how to assess Zvezda's reliability (the primary documents are less useful since interpreting and synthesizing them becomes OR). So tell me what Zvezda is and why it's reliable. Everything else, including the specious "it's invalid because it's hosted on a personal website", is immaterial. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 19:51, 28 November 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::Zvezda (see [http://www.zavod-zvezda.ru/ homepage]) is a Russian company (full name: Филиал АО «НПЦАП им. академика Н.А. Пилюгина» «Завод «Звезда») which goes back to August 1946 prior to the [[Operation Osoaviakhim]] to host the 170+ German rocketry specialists on [[Gorodomlya Island]]. As "Branch No. 1 of NII-88" it was under supervision of the Soviet minister of armaments [[Dmitry Ustinov]] and headed by [[Sergei Korolev]] as chief desginer. From December 1946 to October 1953 it was base for
::::::::::::::::* Design studies (e.g., G-1, G-2, G-4) and labs for radio-control systems, simulation of rocket trajectory, shallow water channel, supersonic wind tunnel, test stand for engines) (more information and pictures can be found in [https://buchshop.bod.de/gorodomlya-island-werner-albring-9783741218231 Werner Albring's Gorodomlya Island] (English edition of 2016 includes research by Irina Suslina, pp. 1-34 of attachment);
::::::::::::::::* Transfer of German knowledge to the Soviet rocketry team under Korolev who visited the branch (at least) in 1948 and 1949 for technical discussions;
::::::::::::::::* In autumn 1950 several German experts for the trajectory simulation ("Bahnmodell", called "MU simulator" by Ustinov) were transferred to Moscow (among them Johannes Hoch) to work on the control of anti-aircraft missiles further developed from [[Wasserfall]] surface-to-air missile. (But this is another story.)
::::::::::::::::After the last Germans had been returned from Gorodomlya by October 1953, the site was continued as a Soviet only branch and, based on [http://www.zavod-zvezda.ru/o_predpriyatii/istoriya.html Zvezda's history], "switched to the production of high-precision float gyroscopic devices for their installation on rocket and space technology" in 1958. Under the Russian era it was reorganized as "Research and Production Center for Automation and Instrumentation named after Academician N.A. Pilyugin" known as Federal State Unitary Enterprise "Zvezda" (FSUE) "Star") enterprise, part of [https://www.npcap.ru/nashe-predpriyatie/struktura/ Roskosmos].
::::::::::::::::Since 2013, the Zvezda homepage is tracked by the WaybackMachine, with an example [https://web.archive.org/web/20161030040454/http://www.zavod-zvezda.ru/press_centr/novosti.html 70 years anniversary in August 2016].
::::::::::::::::The 1946-2016 brochure was compiled by Елена Бориса (Elena Borisova) who was employee of Zvezda (and organizer of the Zwezda museum). The enterprise is the main employer on the island with its "closed administrative-territorial entity (ZATO)" [[Solnechny, Tver Oblast]] with 2,200 inhabitants (in 1948 they were about 500). Even nowadays, this area is not accessible for the public.
::::::::::::::::Since February 2022, the beginning of the Russion war on Ukraine, contact is difficult and the scope of the Zvezda homepage has been reduced (especially on the news and product page (see [https://web.archive.org/web/20161102044038/http://zavod-zvezda.ru/produkciya.html archived version] for comparison). [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 16:15, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::So how about truth in advertising: "Historians have generally discounted the contribution of German scientists to the Soviet missile program; however, per the company history of Zvezda (the successor organization to Branch No.1 of NII-88 to which the Germans had been assigned)..." and then summarize Zvezda's view.
:::::::::::::::::Perhaps you can phrase it more elegantly/accurately than I have, but this would seem to address any issues. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 16:24, 29 November 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::(you might also inquire with Zvezda about permission to host and reproduce their document. That would take care of potential copyright issues.) --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 17:41, 29 November 2023 (UTC)


@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] and @[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] there are still issues with the reliability of the [https://owncloud.birkenwald.de/owncloud/index.php/s/o8TDDTKN3NH3PFr Zvezda document]. And let’s be clear, we are talking about a publicity brochure promoting a Russian Company celebrating their 70th anniversary, which SchmiAlf is suggesting should overide a number of reliable sources. I note on the [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#using your own cloud for providing documents which cannot be found otherwise in the web.|Reliability notice board]] that @[[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]], @[[User:Slatersteven|Slatersteven]], @[[User:Selfstudier|Selfstudier]] and @[[User:ActivelyDisinterested|ActivelyDisinterested]] have all questioned the reliability of this source; including fails "reliable, independent, published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy", fails “been recorded then broadcast, distributed, or archived by a reputable party” and all the issues with [[WP:PRIMARY]]. I also have concerns with SchmiAlf’s suggestion that the {{tq|Zvezda document can be added to the public library of the Deutsches Museum as part of Helmut Gröttrup's inheritance}}. What is SchmiAlf’s connection with the museum? Will the museum verify the authenticity? What fact checking will they carry out? Or will it just be filed? Given the above, I do not believe this document helps in resolving the current discussion on this Talk page, or on [[Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#Survey]]. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 11:06, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
[[international cooperation]] or [[dumb luck]]?
::Yeah… Until this document is turned over to the Deutsches Museum (or similar) authenticated and catalogued by that institution, and made accessible to the general public, I don’t think we can call it reliably ''verifiable'' as a primary source.
::I also have concerns relating to [[WP:No original research]]. It sounds like a Wikipedian is the first person to review this document, and is using WP to inform the world on what it says … that is a classic NOR violation. [[User:Blueboar|Blueboar]] ([[User talk:Blueboar|talk]]) 12:40, 30 November 2023 (UTC)
:You are missing the seven (7) facts (or call them presumptive evidence) which I outlined above on 11:28, 23 November 2023 (UTC) of this talk. ''Each'' of them is contradicting the notorious claim that the "German contributions to the Soviet rocketry were marginal after 1947" (solely based on Siddiqi (2000), p. 84). The Zvezda brochure is additional evidence for the value of the German contributions and is the closest source we can expect from Russia for describing what happened on Gorodomlya Island. It was <u>not</u> a {{tq|publicity brochure promoting a Russian Company}} but summarized the enterprise's history for their employees as clearly stated on its second page with its headline "Dear colleagues, employees of the company and valued veterans!" For Russian circumstances it required quite some courage to publish (!) this (overdue) admission to the factual German achievements in 1946 to 1949. Therefore @[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]]'s last argument/question above may be perceived as the next step for discrediting the Russian brochure, trying to annihilate it by formal arguments and ignoring the testimony of contemporary witnesses and insiders.
:As an example, the conical shape depicted in [https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Comparison_G-4.R-14_with_R-7_booster.png this sketch] compares two sources (CIA 1953, R-7 design). Some Wikipedians may argue here that this visualization is "OR-ish". But this astounding similarity was already brought up by Ordway/Sharpe (p. 337), Przybilski and Zak, all of them well-known scholars and space historians. Every open mind can figure out this level of German involvement with little engineering background. Therefore the Russian brochure does not {{tq|override a number of reliable sources}}, but confirms them as another jigsaw piece of Soviet rocketry history. Calling the Russian brochure unreliable means propagating the (incorrect) view that the German influence was finished after they had supported the design of the R-1, the Russian copy of the V-2. Under regular circumstances, the later use of these German ideas (detailed in the [https://archive.org/details/CIA-RDP80-00810A001800090003-0 1953 CIA interrogation] and [https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP80-00810A003300530005-2.pdf 1954 CIA interrogation]) would be considered [[patent infringement]] because there was little information flow from the Soviet to the German team.
:Basically, our dispute is mainly driven by the current wording in the section [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Race#Soviet_rocket_development Soviet rocket development] of this article:
::"However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, from the late 1940s they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used, the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal."
:which is not supported by Zak (2012) and Mick (2000), other than pretended by the used references. Instead, the German contributions in 1948-49 should be acknowledged as follows:
::"However, due to a combination of secrecy and political requirements, the Soviets froze out the German specialists after 1949 and thereafter made little use of their expertise for the Soviet space program."
:in this article as proposed per '''Option B''' in this [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:German_influence_on_the_Soviet_space_program#RFC_on_Last_Sentence_of_Lede survey]. In addition, the "after 1947 ... German influence was marginal" (or similar) statement should also be revised accordingly in the following articles: [[German influence on the Soviet space program]], [[Soviet rocketry]], and [[Soviet space program]]. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 17:33, 1 December 2023 (UTC)
::Since Zak is accepted as RS, I don't know why we're arguing given this (from the Zak reference):
::"As it often happens in history, the truth might lie in between: Germans did not designed [sic] Sputnik or its rocket, however the ideas and concepts developed by Gröttrup’s team on Gorodomlya did influence Soviet designers and thus accelerated their efforts. "The work of the captive German scientists and technicians served as a yardstick against which Soviet accomplishments could be measured, and the Soviets were capable of extracting those developments useful to their program and of discarding others which they had already surpassed," concluded a US historian."
::So change this line in the article:
::"However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, from the late 1940s they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used, the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal."
::to
::"However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, from the late 1940s they were excluded from Soviet rocket design, while they continued developing plans for the G-2 and G-4, they were never produced. Nevertheless, the Soviets used the work of Gröttrup’s team to verify their own efforts and incorporated useful innovations by the Germans into their own designs."
::(as it stands, the original sentence is clumsy and also doesn't quite follow—it suggests that there were rockets beyond the G-2 and G-4 that they were working on, which wasn't the case.)
::Beyond that, {{ping|SchmiAlf}}, you need to write an article and submit it to Quest Space Quarterly, and then you can cite it. :) This talk page is not really the forum for your erudite arguments (though I have enjoyed them). --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 14:34, 3 December 2023 (UTC)
:::Your proposal sounds much better than any option before. And I like your idea to submit an article to Quest Space Quarterly (although this will take several weeks). It is true that neither the talk page nor the article are a forum for these distinctive arguments. [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 17:55, 4 December 2023 (UTC)
::::If there are no objections, I'll be happy to make that change. What say you, @[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]]?
::::(Quest is a great mag. It may yet be the only peer-reviewed space history journal out there. I've been published there four times.) --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]])
:::::Neopeius, I do not support your suggestion. Also note that @[[User:Caeciliusinhorto-public|Caeciliusinhorto-public]] has previously supported a modified option C, which I also support, where you appear to be suggesting a modified B, which SchmiAlf supports. So unfortunately their is no concensus. However considering the [[User talk:SchmiAlf#Conflict of interest|conflict of interest]] that has arisen with SchmiAlf, would suggest this discussion be suspended until that issue is resolved. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 12:32, 5 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] is not the issue (he has already conceded that WP is not the place to advance his arguments)—my suggested revision is based solely on the Anatoly Zak, which is already cited in the article. What is wrong with my proposed language? Mostly, I dislike the current sentence's awkward and misleading phrasing.--[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 14:42, 5 December 2023 (UTC) @[[User:Balon Greyjoy|Balon Greyjoy]] @[[User:Gog the Mild|Gog the Mild]]
:::::::@[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] I have been busy recently so have not had the chance to respond to your message, plan to do so when I have time. In the meantime suggest you review [[German influence on the Soviet space program#Historical analysis]] which highlights other sources that argue there was minimal to no German influence, including [https://www.nasa.gov/history/history-publications-and-resources/nasa-history-series/rockets-and-people/ Chertok] p73 vol 2 (Germans had little influence and the R-7 rocket that propelled the Sputnik 1 to orbit was "free of the "birthmarks" of German rocket technology”) and [https://search.worldcat.org/title/1007784889 Willey] (“In reality, the Germans did not build anything for the Russians, did not “supervise" the firings, and did not "introduce innovations”). How would you include their views in your proposed wording? [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 22:49, 7 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::Hello, @[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]]. Those rather off-hand comments don't really contradict the Zak. It's true the Germans had little influence on the R-7. The German program would have been useful only at the time it was operating, which was at the early stages of R-5 development. As Zak said, and as I hope my language suggests, the Russians used the German designs as a yardstick against which they compared their own designs. Also, while I like Ley and cite him for some of my early articles, his scholarship is ancient. He had no idea what was going on behind the Iron Curtain...and how could he? Citing him is like citing Oberg's "Red Star in Orbit"—hopelessly outdated. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 14:37, 8 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::Hi @[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]], the same “ancient” comment equally appliies to Zak. His comment "The work of the captive German scientists and technicians served as a yardstick against which Soviet accomplishments could be measured, and the Soviets were capable of extracting those developments useful to their program and of discarding others which they had already surpassed," is a direct quote from Schwiebert, Ernest G., USAF's Ballistic Missiles - 1954-1964; A Concise History. Air Force & Space Digest, May 1964, p. 54. So your suggestion of “Nevertheless, the Soviets used the work of Gröttrup’s team to verify their own efforts and incorporated useful innovations by the Germans into their own designs." is also based on “ancient” information.
:::::::::I believe the various opinions over this issue is best summarised by Siddiqi. He takes a middle ground by acknowledging Nazi Germany rocket technology and involvement of German scientists and engineers was an essential catalyst to early Soviet efforts. However his analysis of German influence after 1947-48 was “minimal” and his [https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/605972 2009 article] provides further evidence and reasons why their influence was marginal. Siddiqi’s opinion is also supported by [https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/29799/Neufeld%20Nazi%20Aerospace%20Exodus.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y%7C Nuefeld] and [https://www.jstor.org/stable/25148197 Mick].
:::::::::In addition, a major problem with SchmiAlf’s argument is the lack of evidence of German influence in Soviet records and archives, which is an issue which both Zak and Siddiqi highlight and SchmiAlf acknowlege above. I have read comments along the lines that somewhere is the missing evidence in Soviet archives. I believe there is a simpler answer; these records cannot be found because they never existed as the Soviets ignored their work after 1947-48. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 22:36, 8 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::That's fair. I'm in contact with Asif, so I will get his take on the situation and get back to you. But if the Zak is NOT a reliable source, it shouldn't be cited, or at least, it should be clear what specific ideas it is supporting. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 01:41, 9 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::With regard to Mick (2003), there is misconception. In the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Soviet_rocketry#German_influence talk] on [[Soviet rocketry]] (09:47, 27 November 2023) I have laid out that the referenced abstract is not correct as compared to his original German statement (in 2000) and therefore does not support Siddqi's (2000) statement (p. 84) "after 1947 ... German influence was marginal" as ilenart626 is claiming for his preferred option A in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AGerman_influence_on_the_Soviet_space_program&diff=1188861525&oldid=1188455429#RFC_on_Last_Sentence_of_Lede current RfC]).
::::::::::For Neufeld I have pointed to his statement that ''the Germans were <u>increasingly</u> frozen out <u>after 1948</u>''. This is rather in line with Siddiqi's [https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/605972 Germans in Russia: Cold War, Technology Transfer, and National Identity] (2009) which provides a comprehensive update in stating (pp. 122-123):
:::::::::::''From these sources, it seemed likely that the Germans had made significant contributions at the birth of the Soviet ballistic missile program but that their contributions (and utility) diminished in the late Stalin years. When Soviet bureaucrats no longer perceived an urgent need for their presence, the Germans were sent home.''
::::::::::Siddiqi (2009) did not repeat his "after 1947 ... marginal" statement and reported on the G-1 project presented in December 1948 (pp. 139-140). Sketches of the G-1 (Soviet R-10) with Russianized labels were found in the Gorodomlya archives (see [https://owncloud.birkenwald.de/owncloud/index.php/s/QD7rdfAXcMrfWps here] (p.9) and [https://buchshop.bod.de/gorodomlya-island-werner-albring-9783743132252 Albring (2016)] pp. 14-15 of the appendix, also compare with [https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP80-00810A001400010001-4.pdf CIA information report June 1953] pp. 31&42, also stateing that development continued until spring of 1950 (p. 26) and inquiries were answered until the beginning of 1951 (p. 29)). During 1949, the Germans worked on concepts of G-2 and G-4 which have been described by Orway/Sharpe (1979) (based on [https://archive.org/details/CIA-RDP80-00810A001800090003-0 1953 CIA interrogation R-14]), Zak (2012) and Mark Wade's [[Encyclopedia Astronautica]] in more detail. Korolev visited Gorodomlya for this reason in October 1949. But we are disputing back and forth whether and how these concepts may have influenced later Soviet missile technology. Most probably, we will not find a commonly agreed answer in current space history nor the "smoking gun" in Russian archives.
::::::::::@[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]], there is enough evidence that the Soviets refused to officially acknowledge the German contributions after 1947 due to political reasons ([[Zhdanov Doctrine|Zhdanovshchina]]) but kept them isolated on Gorodomlya Island for another four to six years to prevent them reporting on Soviet progress of rocketry to the West. During the Cold War, all technical documents were classified top secret. So far, no original German document from 1945 to 1953 was retrieved from a Russian archive. Does this mean, by your terms, that there were no Germans in Podlipki (NII-88) and its branch on Gorodomlya Island at all and Zvezda is a fake? [[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] ([[User talk:SchmiAlf|talk]]) 16:37, 9 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::@[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] I have had a lengthy discussion with Asif, and he has also provided me full copies of articles we have been using for citations. Based on these, I plan on proposing new language that will probably please @[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] and may well satisfy you, as well. With Asif's permission, I will also relay what he said to me verbatim (this is obviously not citable scholarship, but he has as much right to be heard as we do.) :) --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 17:42, 9 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::Strike that last. I find I am out of time for the weekend. I'll just tell you my thoughts:
::::::::::::1) The current language under Soviet rocket development is thoroughly inappropriate (and I'm sorry for not catching this before). Nearly half the verbiage is dedicated to the Germans, which makes it look like the Soviets hardly had their own program. It needs a complete rewrite. You can reference my [[R-1 (missile)]], [[R-2 (missile)]], and [[R-5 Pobeda]] articles for what I think are pretty good summaries of the early history of Soviet work. Mentioning the German involvement in Germany from 1945-1947, and the marginal work done in the USSR till 1953 is fine, but it honestly should not be more than two sentences, and more work done on the Soviet side.
::::::::::::2) I have a copies of Siddiqi's 2001 "Rocket engineers from the Glushko Design Bureau" and his 2009 article "Germans in Russia: Cold War, Technology Transfer, and National Identity"—if you need them, email me at gideon@galacticjourney.org. The former details the contributions of Baum (the second highest paid employee in Glushko's OKB for a time). He concludes: "In sum, there is evidence to suggest that the Soviets benefited from the German contribution [to rocket engine design] much more than they have admitted so far, but much less than some recent German accounts [such as from Przybilski] have claimed."
::::::::::::3) At the end of the email to me, Asif concluded:
:::::::::::: "1. German technology (V2, rocket engines, test stands, guidance systems) were absolutely crucial to the foundation of the postwar Soviet missile program. There's no way that the Soviets do anything without that.
:::::::::::: 2. I know I differ from Przybilski on the interpretation of the contribution of German expertise in the 1946-51 period. Besides a few significant things, I don't think it was that important. I will say that while I don't agree with Przybilski (he depends almost entirely on post-facto German memoir material), I am glad that it's out there for people to decide."
::::::::::::In the body of his email, he says that, while German innovations were incorporated into the R-2, the R-3/R-5/R-7 were wildly different designs, starting with their change in propellants.
::::::::::::Long story short: German influence on initial program, profound. On rocket engines, not inconsiderable, but probably not profound. On post-R-2 designs, negligible.
::::::::::::So a rewrite of that whole section would:
::::::::::::A) Reduce the German content while expanding the Soviet content
::::::::::::B) Reflect Asif's scholarship, which I think is solid, though a side note to Przybilski, if there be any space, might be okay. I doubt this article is the place to go in depth into this discussion, however. There just isn't room, and it takes emphasis away from the main point—the Soviet ICBM is a Soviet invention "free of the fingerprints of German designers".
::::::::::::Thanks for bringing me in to offer my opinion. I'm sorry I don't have the energy to do the rewrite myself. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 19:14, 9 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Thankyou @[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] your input and Asif’s comments are highly valued. Would suggest that your above comments be copied to [[Soviet rocketry]] and [[German influence on the Soviet space program]] talk pages, with the Soviet rocketry being the article that goes indepth into this discussion. I should have some time available over the Xmas break to work on an update referencing the articles you mentioned. Then summaries can be included in this article, [[Soviet space program ]] and similar articles, that point back to Soviet rocketry. The German influence of the Soviet space program can then be the main article to include Przybilski’s view. What do you think? [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 23:39, 9 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::::If you're not opposed, I'd be obliged and grateful if you copied them there. You have my license to do so. And I agree. Even Asif says it's good to represent that view, even if it is a minority. And who knows? Maybe when @[[User:SchmiAlf|SchmiAlf]] publishes his article, it'll be convincing. :) --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 06:11, 10 December 2023 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::Hi @[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]], as discussed above, I have updated the “Soviet rocket development” of this article, mainly from the [[Soviet rocketry]] article. Let me know if you have any comments. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 23:53, 30 December 2023 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::I like it! Good job. :) [[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 06:00, 31 December 2023 (UTC)


== Did the Soviet win the Space Race ==
Should 'Americans' take [[national pride]] in putting a Man on the Moon?
Space Race discussion and research topics:


Professor Jennifer Frost opine that they did but I think the argument they made is hugely flawed and should be removed. [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 10:17, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
Compare and Contrast


:Professor Frost is providing balance to the opinion from American political scientist Richard Samuels that the space race was a "decisive American victory". I believe the two comments read together provide a reasonable NPOV. Also note the comments in the FAQ section above “Shouldn't this article say that the Soviet Union or the United States won the space race?” which concludes with “In essence, the space "race" concluded with a "tie," as both nations achieved feats of technological mastery and exploration that significantly improved humanity's understanding of the cosmos.”. I would be ok to add this, or similar wording to the article.[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 11:43, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
* good luck, serendipity, success, design, ...
::https://youtube.com/watch?si=qWG8z7WmeZqkfmIY&v=rSK7rUSnFK4
* bad luck, accident, disaster, sabotage, ...
::If this does not convince you that I am right, I have nothing else. [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 12:46, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::So you are saying that a utube video by “DeadKennedyInSpace” is a reliable source? What about his other videos, ie “How Flat Earth Uses deception”? “The Day the Internet Failed the Sarcasm Test”? What about “The next level of (stupid) parts 1 to 5”[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 13:14, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::No, I am showing you why I think the source is flawed.Besides, those videos, though they can't be considered "reliable", are still insightful [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 13:33, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::If you enter [[Timeline of the Space Race]], you can see that the achievements of the US are more meaningful than the Soviet's [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 13:42, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::and why do you talk like those videos are nonsense? They are actually pretty in-depth. [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 14:19, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::Her argument is not factual, so how can that be counterbalance [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 14:37, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:Frost is, according to [https://profiles.auckland.ac.nz/j-frost her page], "a United States women's historian, focused on social, cultural, and political developments in the twentieth-century United States". She's not a space historian, nor a specialist in USSR space program or even USSR in general. I don't think that it's a 'balanced view' of a specialist. [[User:Artem.G|Artem.G]] ([[User talk:Artem.G|talk]]) 11:59, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::This arguement equally applies to Richard Samuels as his [https://polisci.mit.edu/people/richard-samuels website] states that he is a “Professor of Political Science” and is not a space historian, nor a specialist in the USSR space program or even the USSR in general. So should we remove his statement that the space race was a "decisive American victory"? [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 13:31, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::If you think my edit is correct, just do what you think is right to do [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 12:30, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::You do realise this subject has been extensively discussed in the past. Suggest you search the archives to understand the history behind the FAQ above. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 13:43, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::the Faq is about german influence, why do you tell me to read that [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 13:47, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::my mistake, let me say again.Like I said, American achievements are overall more meaningful than the Soviet's, as you can see in the timeline;therefore, theUS overall had an edge overthe Soviet Union in the "race". [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 14:02, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::So that we are clear on “meaningful” the [https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/meaningful Cambridge dictionary] defines it a “useful, serious, valuable or inportant”. Looking at the [[Timeline of the Space Race]], for the Soviets, a sample of 10 include:
:::::*Sputnik - 1st satelite
:::::*Luna 2 - 1st spacecraft moon landing
:::::*Luna 3 - 1st photos of far side of the Moon
:::::*Yuri Gagarin - 1st man in space
:::::*Valentina Tereshkova - first woman in space
:::::*Mars 1 - 1st Mars flyby
:::::*Venera 3 - First hard landing on another planet (Venus)
:::::*Soyuz 4/5 - First docking of two manned spacecraft
:::::*Venera 7 - First soft landing on another planet (Venus)
:::::*MIR - First consistently inhabited long-term research space station.
:::::Looking at the US list a sample of 10 include:
:::::*Vanguard 1 - First solar-powered satellie
:::::*Mariner 2 - First successful planetary flyby mission (Venus)
:::::*Syncom 2 - First geosynchronous satellite
:::::*Apollo 8 - First return to Earth after orbiting the Moon
:::::*Gemini 8/aTV - First spacecraft docking
:::::*Apollo 11 - First humans on the Moon
:::::*Mariner 9 - First spacecraft to orbit another planet (Mars)
:::::*STS1 - First spaceplane in orbit, the Space Shuttle (test flight)
:::::*Pioneer 11 - First Saturn flyby
:::::*Voyager 2 - First Uranus flyby.
:::::Nguyen280405, can you please explain to me how the above US list is more “meaningful” (ie useful, serious, valuable or inportant) than the Soviet list? For example:
:::::# How is “First humans on the Moon” more meaningful than “first man in space”?
:::::# How is “First spaceplane in orbit” more meaningful than “ First consistently inhabited long-term research space station”?
:::::# How is the “First Saturn flyby” more meaningful than the “first Mars flyby”
:::::# How is the “First geosynchronous satellite” more meaningful than the “first satelite”?
:::::[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 15:16, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::::1.The US only need a few month to catch up.
::::::3.The US conducted first successful Mars flyby.
::::::4.The US lauched the first truly useful satelite. [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 16:15, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::::1I am sorry, a few week. [[User:Nguyen280405|Nguyen280405]] ([[User talk:Nguyen280405|talk]]) 16:18, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::::::sorry but you a comparing a sub-orbital ballistic flight to an orbital flight, which was also <u>second</u> and therefore not relevant / not on the timeline. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 16:42, 25 January 2024 (UTC)


I trimmed it without completely removing the source. But it's an undue weight given to a single opinion of non-specialist, so I would agree with its removal for a better source. [[User:Artem.G|Artem.G]] ([[User talk:Artem.G|talk]]) 15:59, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
== Heading change ==


:@[[User:Artem.G|Artem.G]] the "decisive American victory" is also only supported by a single opinion of a non-specialist, so is’nt this also been given undue weight and should be trimmed / removed for a better source? [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 16:12, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
I changed many of the headings to allow a better flow for the reader. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 03:55, Sep 21, 2004 (UTC)
::If you want a reference from a space historian, how about [[Asif A. Siddiqi]], this is from a [https://spaceanddefense.io/calls-for-a-new-way-of-thinking-about-the-global-space-race/ statement he made in 2023]
:::”Because the United States first made it to the Moon, they are widely assumed to have won that space race, but Siddiqi suggests otherwise. “Before that landing, there was an enormous amount of investment in the robotic exploration of the Moon, both by the Soviets and the US, in terms of all sorts of smaller benchmarks like the first lunar impact, the first pictures of the far side of the Moon, the first soft lunar landing, and the first lunar orbit. We forget, but in those little races, the Soviet Union dominated almost every benchmark, but it is forgotten as the United States won the big one.”
::[[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 16:34, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::Added! [[User:Artem.G|Artem.G]] ([[User talk:Artem.G|talk]]) 20:23, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::then let's remove this as well! These quotes oversimplify the history. Siddiqi is a much better source that should be used instead. [[User:Artem.G|Artem.G]] ([[User talk:Artem.G|talk]]) 17:20, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
:::Ok, have trimmed the lead, fixed a broken link and added Siddiqi to the Lead. Perhaps we could summarise the Lead even more, say who won is contested by historian’s and include a summary of what Siddiqi said? [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 23:53, 25 January 2024 (UTC)
::::I think it might be useful to actually define dates for the Space Race in the lead. Also, I appreciate Asif's quote:


"Because the United States first made it to the Moon, they are widely assumed to have won that space race, but Siddiqi suggests otherwise. “Before that landing, there was an enormous amount of investment in the robotic exploration of the Moon, both by the Soviets and the US, in terms of all sorts of smaller benchmarks like the first lunar impact, the first pictures of the far side of the Moon, the first soft lunar landing, and the first lunar orbit. We forget, but in those little races, the Soviet Union dominated almost every benchmark, but it is forgotten as the United States won the big one.”
== Arrows to the Moon ==


::::That said, by any measure, the United States took the lead in any Space Race you want to mention by 1965, and it never really ceded it. Source: me, a space historian. :) Anyway, I know this isn't an internet forum, and again, I think the lead is fine (though dates would be a good addition), but don't kid yourself. It was a clear American victory in accomplishments, which was inevitable—we had far more money to spend. --[[User:Neopeius|Neopeius]] ([[User talk:Neopeius|talk]]) 01:15, 26 January 2024 (UTC)
I added a reference to ''Arrows to the Moon'' Chris Gainor(2001) ISBN 1-896522-83-1 to the reference section and an External link to the CORE/NSF synopsis of the book. This book tells how the [[Avro team]] of British and Canadian scientists found jobs at NASA and a lot of Space Technology Contractors. There were 32 of these guys emplayed directly by NASA and many more who found work for contractors. I don't have a copy of this book and I can't find it online. If someone knows this material and puts it into the '''Scientists''' Section, it would render quite a bit of [[context]]ual [[justice]] to the Subject Matter.
:::::The Space Race was predominantly a ''propaganda'' victory. No one disputes that the Soviets also made significant advances in space exploration.
:::::Minority views should be it in the article. But saying that the Soviets "tied" or "beat" the United States in the Space Race (in popular consciousness) is not one of those. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:52, 9 February 2024 (UTC)
::::::The consensus for current Lead was reached after considerable discussion, as detailed above. If you want to propose changes please do so on the Talk page and follow [[WP:MOSLEAD]], in other words, the Lead needs to summarise the conclusion in the Legacy section. [[User:Ilenart626|Ilenart626]] ([[User talk:Ilenart626|talk]]) 00:13, 10 February 2024 (UTC)


== Name, table ==
== Page titles ==
As it is now, this article would be better named "space exploration" than "space race." The race itself was just between the U.S. and USSR.


Right now, the article is structured chronologically, with titles such as "Disaster strikes both sides" and "Both programs recover". Is this proper formatting? This seems more like a story than separate sections about a topic. Maybe this should be a series? [[User:WikiFloath|WikiFloath]] ([[User talk:WikiFloath|talk]]) 15:36, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
Also, maybe all the "firsts" should be put into a table.
[[User:Maurreen|Maurreen]] 05:56, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)

==Timeline==
In the achievements table, we should remove the entry from 2001; the space race was certainly not ongoing in 2001. If this small fact about achievement is related to something in the text, we could have it there but not in the timeline. Also, the article states that "it was a competition from 61 to 69"; perhaps we should remove even the achievements in the 80s. [[User:Sverdrup|&#9999; Sverdrup]] 14:10, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:I believe the intro paragraph is too limited in its timeframe. All evidence points to what became known by the media as the "space race" started shortly after WWII and "ended" with the U.S.-USSR spacedock and handhsake in the early 1970s. Maybe instead of removing the 80s and 90s information completely, they could be moved to a second table under Recent Developments. I'll do just that. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 02:30, Sep 22, 2004 (UTC)
::Agreed. I wrote a couple of short paragraphs near the beginning to mention WWII->1961, hope it's ok or an ok start.--[[User:Chairboy|Chairboy]] 03:06, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

==the term "space race"==
Is the scope of the term used here too limited? Although technically stated as ending in 1975, nations have continued to try to improve their space development programs in recent history. The space race is clearly still ongoing in at least two aspects: 1. being the 1st to do something, i.e. getting someone to Mars (which is already mentioned in the article) and 2. reducing the cost of launching payload into space, or a commercial space race. The commercial aspect is currently highly competitive, and a lot can probably be written about it as well, but I don't know where/if it fits into the current article--[[User:Confuzion|Confuzion]] 11:28, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)
: Agree. That info was originally in the article was was removed for some reason as shown here: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Space_Race&diff=6065742&oldid=6065725 -- I have replaced it. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 20:07, Sep 22, 2004 (UTC)
::I feel like the current article is too broad and wanders off-topic. We need to decide if the article is about The Space Race (i.e. the race between Russia and the U.S. during the Cold War) or about the general idea of racing to reach certain space milestones, including on-going competition. Really though I can't see how anything today deserves a comparison; the Space Race was a Big Deal when it was happening, and nothing today comes close. At least in the U.S., NASA isn't in the news unless something's exploding.
::Also, the information on individual space agencies seemed like a total non sequitur. I was especially surprised when I saw a section on the Brazilian Space Agency. I mean, what do they have to do with a space race if they haven't even launched a rocket successfully? Who are they racing ''against?'' [[User:Isomorphic|Isomorphic]] 00:01, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:::Brazil is trying to be the leading space program in South America and the 1st into space from South America (excluding French Guiana)--[[User:Confuzion|Confuzion]] 06:43, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::Just to clarify: I think everything in the article is good material, I just don't know what some of it is doing under this article title. We don't seem to have an article on the [[history of space flight]]. Perhaps we should be putting some of what's here into that? [[User:Isomorphic|Isomorphic]] 00:10, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)

:::I agree with [[User:Isomorphic|Isomorphic]]. THE space race was between the U.S. and USSR, during a limited period of time. If a broader article is desired, maybe this one should just be renamed.
:::[[User:Maurreen|Maurreen]] 05:20, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::::Maybe all that was needed was some shuffling of paragraphs. I moved all space angencies formed after 1975 to the Recent Developments section. I also added a clarification in the ESA section that it was greatly overshadowed by the US-USSR rivalry. Seems more focused now. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 05:40, Sep 23, 2004 (UTC)
:::Though ''the'' space race is the US/USSR getting to the moon race there are many others that are very important, if only, perhaps, to people outside of those countries. China see their space race as very important, no doubt, and commercial flights could have a huge impact. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 07:04, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::::Much improved, but I still think that material on more recent developments, along with the material on individual space agencies, would be better off in a new article on the history of space flight. [[User:Isomorphic|Isomorphic]] 20:44, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)

I think this article is just a part of the [[history of space exploration]] (or [[history of space travel]]). The section "Recent Developments" belongs in a such broader article. [[User:Sverdrup|&#9999; Sverdrup]] 22:21, 23 Sep 2004 (UTC)

I agree with those who have argued that 'the space race' was, essentially, the race between the USA and the USSR which started with Sputnik and effectively ended with Apollo 11. Space exploration is a much broader subject and certainly deserves an article in its own right. The current commercial/privately funded activity may be 'a' space race, but - in historical terms at least -It's not 'the' space race. [[User:Jerry cornelius|Jerry cornelius]] 22:09, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)

==Article breadth and title==

It seems like we agree on the value of all the info here, but we disagree on how well it matches the title.

Maybe it would be best to just either change the title ([[Sverdrup]] suggested putting the information in a history article) or move the project to a current broad article, such as [[space exploration]] or [[human spaceflight]].
[[User:Maurreen|Maurreen]] 06:51, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:After poking around a bit, it appears that the entire section on space flight and space travel could probably use some reorganizing and gap-filling. Is there an associated Wikiproject? Maybe there should be. [[User:Isomorphic|Isomorphic]] 15:32, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::The http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Space_Race&diff=0&oldid=6123864 edit adds a section on the Indian space program that doesn't seem related to the subject of the Space Race, should probably be moved. Second? --[[User:Chairboy|Chairboy]] 17:17, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:::I agree that the Space Race article is getting disjointed. It looks to me like some of the material belongs in an article with a broader scope like [[Space exploration]]. Perhaps the Space Race should be limited to US/Russian efforts culminating with the manned moon landings. [[User:Quinobi|Quinobi]] 01:01, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::::The best time to do this would be after it is no longer the COTW, so the moved info does not inadvertantly get re-added. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 10:33, Sep 25, 2004 (UTC)
:::::Good plan - lets see how it all progresses and then chop and change it around (if necessary) after the cotw period. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 11:17, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC)

==External link==

I've just added an external link to a .PDF document containing a scan of a letter from Von Braun to VP Johnson. As a newbie I'm sure someone will correct me (and/or it) if it isn't appropriate or should be handled differently, but the letter is a seminal primary source so far as the space race is concerned and Von Braun is spot on - apart from being just a year out - in his conclusions. Note that he doesn't say anything about the 'returning safely to earth' part! [[User:Jerry cornelius|Jerry cornelius]] 18:31, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)

==Images==
We should have an image of a Soviet rocket launch too. [[User:Sverdrup|&#9999; Sverdrup]] 11:15, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:I too noticed the US-centricity of the images used. Sure you got to the moon first - but the Russians had many firsts too, and all the soviet images are PD . [[User:Ed g2s|<font face="verdana">ed g2s</font>]] &bull; [[User talk:ed_g2s|<font face="verdana">talk</font>]] 15:30, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::Changed the main photo to represent both countries & added animals in space USSR photo. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 09:17, Sep 26, 2004 (UTC)

==Satellite acronyms==

Does anyone know what these stand for?
*ANIK - not acronym. Canadian communications satellite - Inuit for little brother
*WESTAR - not acronym. Probably AT&T related, such as Western Electric, Telstar (early satellite).
*MARISAT - not acronym. Maritime satellite.
:[[User:Maurreen|Maurreen]] 16:10, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC)
::[[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 20:28, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC) I interpolated the responses into the question above. See [[Communications satellite ]]

== The V-2 was the first ballistic missile. ==

"These scientists formed the core of the U.S. team, led by [[Wernher von Braun]], which began the development of [[ballistic missiles]] during the V-2 program decades earlier."
:I re-phrased the sentence as it implied the US began the development of the ballistic missile, which is historically untrue. The V-2 was first. [[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 21:13, 25 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== Timeline ==

Shouldn't the timeline also list they firsts for each nation, such as the first time the US put a man in orbit.
* Not really. The article already has too much stuff that is off topic -- This article is about the US-USSR competition -- the other info belongs in [[space exploration]], not here. You are welcome to join in and help us move the good-but-doesn't-belong-here mterial to [[space exploration]] once the COTW spotlight shifts to another article. [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 09:16, Sep 26, 2004 (UTC)

Also, did the soviet space agency not have a name? The article only mentions the RKA, but that was formed after the soviet union broke up.--[[User:Aqua008|Aqua]] 02:50, Sep 26, 2004 (UTC)

== Apollo 13 had no deaths. Heading is misnamed in that case ==

I renamed the Deaths section to Mishaps. Apollo 13 had no deaths. [[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 13:27, 26 Sep 2004 (UTC)

:I took out Apollo 13 and changed it back to deahts. [[User:Maurreen|Maurreen]] 14:15, 26 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== ''That's one small step for [a] man, one giant leap for mankind.''==
When Neil Armstrong was quizzed on his quote, he said it was a mistransmission, and [a] was left out. [[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 14:26, 26 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:http://www.snopes.com/quotes/onesmall.asp is an interesting read about this - perhaps that information should be added in. As it is the quote is out of place anyway. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 14:36, 26 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== Spaceflight is not flight ==

It is common to misapply the word ''fly'' to spacecraft, but we do not have a good English verb for the motion of an object along its trajectory between celestial objects like Venus and Earth. Has anyone found a precise word, even in some other language, for the verb of spaceflight? The connotation of a mass moving along its geodesic in spacetime would be even better, if someone in Wikipedia knows. [[User:Ancheta Wis|Ancheta Wis]] 01:37, 27 Sep 2004 (UTC)
: I think "fly" and "flight" do apply here, especially using the [http://roland.lerc.nasa.gov/~dglover/dictionary/f.html NASA definition of flight] as shown below:
::'''''flight '''''
:::''1. The movement of an object through the atmosphere or through space, sustained by aerodynamic, aerostatic, or reaction forces, or by orbital speed; especially, the movement of a man-operated or man-controlled device, such as a rocket, a space probe, a space vehicle, or aircraft.
:::''2. An instance of such a movement.
:Hope that helps. - [[User:Davodd|Davodd]] 07:08, Sep 27, 2004 (UTC)

== Moon rock ==
I'm sorry but I don't see how "you can touch moon rock is ''this'' museum" is at all relevant in this particular article. Please reply and explain why before reverting it's removal again and perhaps this can be resolved. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 18:06, 27 Sep 2004 (UTC)

==Why I deleted the sentence following "hoax allegations" at end of moon landing section==
I recently added the following line:

"Some are of the belief that the moon landing was faked by NASA. The evidence to support this belief and the counterarguments are presented in the article ''[[Apollo moon landing hoax accusations]]''.

Someone later appended this sentence:

"Others can visit and touch a moon rock sample at the [[National Air and Space Museum]] on the [[National Mall]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]."

Now, the problem I have with that is:

#It is not for an article writer to smugly attempt to invalidate a conspiracy theory with a terse sentence.
#The sentence linking to the conspiracy theory makes no attempt to push itself as valid. i don't see why a sentence should be added to give the impression that it is foolish... our article on the theory should do that.
#For someone inclined to believe the conspiracy theory, saying you "can touch a rock" will not be sufficient counter-evidence to convince them, we shouldn't imply that it is.
#Saying "others can..." suggests, in a factually erroneous manner, that someone who believes the conspiracy theory cannot touch the rock. They can, of course... they simply won't believe it is from the moon.

However, I admit I had difficulty knowing where to place reference to the conspiracy theory. I felt placing it at the end made it a bit too portentous. So, I'm happy for the significance of the conspiracy theory to be played down. However, I think it is well worth including in the moon landing section.

I also state that I am not a particular supporter of the conspiracy theory, though having seen a recent programme about it I was struck by how weak NASA's responses to the allegations were. However, I think this was probably due to biased programme editing rather than NASA not having a response.

I'd also appreciate it if you would view my contributions before writing me off as a conspiracy nut. As far as I can recall I haven't made any edits relating to a conspiracy theory before. --[[User:Bodnotbod|[[User:Bodnotbod|<font face="arial">bodnotbod</font>]] » [[User talk:Bodnotbod|<font size=0>.....TALK</font><font size=3>Q</font><font size=0>uietly</font><font size=3><font color=black>)</font>]]]]</font> 18:13, Sep 27, 2004 (UTC)
:Actually, my second edit was an accident. I hit "Back" on my browser without thinking about it. -[[User:N328KF|Joseph]] [[User talk:N328KF|(Talk)]] 18:24, 2004 Sep 27 (UTC)

==Oops==

I've just made a series of changes to the talk page, the last of which, I hope, reinstated the version before I made my changes. I added a long comment to the 'hoax' discussion and then thought better of it after re-reading the article and the links to other wiki pages. I've also added a link to the article on conspiracy theories. Apologies for mucking around with this so much and I hope that I haven't erased anything in the process. [[User:Jerry cornelius|Jerry cornelius]] 21:48, 27 Sep 2004 (UTC)
:Don't worry about it - the history and comparison tool is very good - nothing has been lost. [[User:Violetriga|violet/riga]] [[User_talk:violetriga|(t)]] 21:51, 27 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== Categories in "See also" section ==

:''22:57, 8 Feb 2005 Sfahey (same)''

Umm,

:''22:00, 8 Feb 2005 Fredrik (remove "see also" section. '''1) categories should not be mixed with the article namespace 2) these topics are already covered in the text''')''

- [[User:Fredrik|Fredrik]] | [[User talk:Fredrik|talk]] 22:08, 8 Feb 2005 (UTC)

:Hi there. I was responding to an "objection" on the FAC nomination which insisted that such a "see also" list should not be within a section of the article. I merged the two lists of "see also"s into one list at the end, after trying to weed out the listings which were linked elsewhere in the text and even moving some of them INTO the text. One difficulty is that the "Categories" links (which someone else had put in) take the reader elsewhere than the same-named other links, so I couldn't justify simply deleting them. [[User:Sfahey|Sfahey]] 23:48, 8 Feb 2005 (UTC)

::Part of the use of the category system is that it provides an automatic "see also" mechanism. The category listings provide a way for the reader to find related articles, so there is no need for this duplication. Note that this article is already in Category:Space exploration, and that Category:Spacecraft, Category:Spacecraft propulsion and Category:Lunar spacecraft are subcategories of this one. Also, the fact that the categories are not the same as the same-named links is not really a good argument. Then we'd have to provide one category link for each regular link. Regular links should always be used. If someone wants to know more about, say, [[celestial mechanics]], it is better to send them to the overview article as they can easily get to Category:Celestial mechanics from there. [[User:Fredrik|Fredrik]] | [[User talk:Fredrik|talk]] 00:00, 9 Feb 2005 (UTC)

==Removed paragraph==
[[user:David.Monniaux|David.Monniaux]] recently added this paragraph:

:''Meanwhile, [[Europe]] has established itself as the leader of commercial launches with its [[Ariane]] program. Contrary to the space shuttle program, which was heavily promoted in the same interval by the [[United States]], Ariane is a fully automatic vehicle. Manned vehicles require heavy and expensive life-support and security systems and thus the automatic solution is probably more suitable to launch operations without in-space repair or other delicate interventions needing direct human action. Still, the field of commercial space launching is concurrential and Ariane's position will have to be defended.''

I removed it because it's pure fantasy. If you look at Nasa's list of worldwide space launches in 2004 -
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/osf/2004/launch04.html - the US and Russia both had roughly 3x as many commerical space launches as Europe; China had more too. [[User:Raul654|&rarr;Raul654]] 16:35, Mar 1, 2005 (UTC)

== Vandalism ==

Whoever changed the history section to say "Jim's Rockets have interested scients and engineers..." you're not funny. Don't vandalize Wikipedia.

==Length of article==
The article is 40 kilobytes as of this moment. In order to reduce the size, I've created a separate article temporarily eititled "[[Wikipedia: Moon landing]]" and copied the relevant sections over to that article. Unfortunately I didn't realize that there was already a redirect for "[[Moon Landing]]" to Project Apollo. I now have to get the redirect deleted so the latter article can be established.

Once that's done, if no one objects (with a decisive concern), I will drastically edit the sections of "Space Race" dealing with Apollo 11 landing on the moon, and refer readers to the "Moon landing" article. This should bring the article to within the maximum suggested size. [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 19:40, 2005 Mar 1 (UTC)

:Well, the new article, "Moon Landing" has been created, but it isn't as easy to separate the two as I had first thought. Any thoughts or help would be appreciated. [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 06:13, 2005 Mar 2 (UTC)

::Yes, here's a thought: At roughly its current length, this article was voted a "featured article" just last month by a quite stringent jury. It is not appropriate for someone to come along and make this kind of radical change. FWIW, I plan to go over the myriad of recent edits this week, and see how many of them, like the one Raul (see above) deleted, take away from rather than add to this good article. [[User:Sfahey|Sfahey]] 02:11, 3 Mar 2005 (UTC)[[User:Sfahey|Sfahey]] 02:08, 3 Mar 2005 (UTC)

:::Here's another thought, from [[Wikipedia:Featured articles]]: "While these are some of our best articles, we are always working to improve them, so [[wikipedia:be bold in updating pages|be bold in updating articles]]." The article recently weighed in at 40 kilobytes. When articles go over 32 K, the following message appears: This page is X kilobytes long. Please see [[Wikipedia: Article size|article size]] for why this could be too long, and how to fix it." I brought it down to 37K, but there is a long way still to go. Perhaps you would agree to help out? [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 03:09, 2005 Mar 3 (UTC)

::::[[The Cantos]] is about 70KB and about to become featured. Don't get het up about a few extra KB if they are needed. The "note" about 32KB used to be important, due to technical limitations of some old web browsers, but is now just a rule of thumb to prevent article bloating and to encourage summary style. FWIW, I don't think "moon landing" need to be floated out. -- [[User:ALoan|ALoan]] [[User_talk:ALoan|(Talk)]] 10:53, 3 Mar 2005 (UTC)
:::There have been a lot of discussions on the Wikipedia mailing list lately about whether the 32K message should be softened down, because the use of sections makes it so that even those people still trying to edit Wikipedia on neaderthal browsers can edit everything except the first section of it. The 32K rule is not written in stone, nor is it a necessity, it is just a recommendation. But for some articles, especially ones which are already pretty much in [[Wikipedia:Summary style]] (like this one), I don't think it needs to be worried about too much, as long as the article is coherent. --[[User:Fastfission|Fastfission]] 14:14, 3 Mar 2005 (UTC)

::::No one is getting "het up" as far as I can tell&mdash;just trying to discuss the size and structure of the article. I need to make it clear that I think that this is a very well written article. That doesn't preclude further editing, though and I have edited or copyedited several Featured articles. I agree that the 32K rule is not written in stone. However, the article on ''Summary style'' that Fastfission refers us to has some interesting things to say about [[Wikipedia:Summary style#Size|size]]. I think that following the ''Summary style'' approach makes sense here (particularly with respect to the section on [[Space race#Lunar missions|Lunar missions]]), which is now also a separate article. [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 08:48, 2005 Mar 4 (UTC)

==First probe to another planet==
It says here that the first probe to another planet was by the USSR to Venus with Venera 3. But what about Mariner 2 in 1962? Doesn't that count? It reached Venus, returned information, and succeeded in its mission. [[User:Bob rulz|bob rulz]] 21:34, Mar 1, 2005 (UTC)

==Black Chinese Soldiers==
There is a link in the article for [[Military history of China|Black Chinese soldiers]], which links to the article on "Military history of China." However, there is no explanation of what a "black Chinese soldier" is. The term doesn't show up on Google either. Can anyone enlighten me on this? [[User:Sunray|Sunray]] 03:38, 2005 Mar 3 (UTC)
:What it is ... is 1)bogus, and 2)no longer in the article.[[User:Sfahey|Sfahey]] 22:29, 4 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 06:03, 30 April 2024

Former featured articleSpace Race is a former featured article. Please see the links under Article milestones below for its original nomination page (for older articles, check the nomination archive) and why it was removed.
Main Page trophyThis article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page as Today's featured article on March 1, 2005.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
October 2, 2004Peer reviewReviewed
January 14, 2005Featured article candidateNot promoted
January 29, 2005Featured article candidateNot promoted
February 14, 2005Featured article candidatePromoted
June 30, 2006Featured article reviewDemoted
July 26, 2007Peer reviewReviewed
October 20, 2010Peer reviewReviewed
June 7, 2021Good article nomineeNot listed
Current status: Former featured article


Encyclopedia Astronautica not reliable[edit]

I noticed that there are quite a few references on this article to Encyclopedia Astronautica however the site is no longer being updated and I noted this comment from @SpinningSpark: on the site’s wiki article talk page:

"Mark Wade's online Encyclopedia Astronautica has become a popular Internet source for space history. Unfortunately, while it contains a great deal of information, not all of it is correct. Space historians have noticed a variety of factual problems, and unfortunately these problems have not been consistently repaired. Since this is not a peer-reviewed source and historical errors are not always fixed, this cannot be considered a reliable source, despite its impressive appearance." Critical Issues in the History of Spaceflight, pp. 484–485.

Would suggest that we should start replacing thse references with reliable souces and deleting any errors. Ilenart626 (talk)

Have today replaced the Encyclopedia Astronautica references Ilenart626 (talk) 05:54, 24 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]
This sounds like Encyclopedia Astronautica is unreliable at all - which it is not even if there may be minor flaws (as in many publications and encyclopedia in spite of peer reviews). Just take the quote literally: "not all of it is correct" might also be understood as "most of it is correct". Therefore I'm using it as a reference if the data is consistent with other sources. SchmiAlf (talk) 15:23, 2 December 2022 (UTC)[reply]
The reference links to Encyclopedia Astronautica (deleted by @Ilenart626 in July 2022 as "unreliable", see diff) were restored because the RfC for the reliability of Encyclopedia Astronautica concluded that "there appears to be a consensus that this is a valuable resource". So far no specific errors were addressed for the items linked to this article. SchmiAlf (talk) 11:18, 10 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SchmiAlf has misrepresented the rfc, which concluded “There appears to be a consensus that this is a valuable resource, but which lacks editorial oversight, contains errors and is no longer updated…caution needs to taken in using the source.” The rfc found that no consensus, unclear, or additional considerations apply on the reliability of the site, which includes “It may be necessary to evaluate each use of the source on a case-by-case basis while accounting for specific factors unique to the source in question.” Given the issues with this source I am reverting SchmiAlf's change pending consensus for inclusion.Ilenart626 (talk) 11:54, 20 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

German influence on Soviet space program[edit]

The statement "However, after 1947 the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their influence on the future Soviet rocket program was marginal." in the Space Race#Soviet rocket development section is based on the lead section of German influence on the Soviet space program. A survey Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#Survey with options for changing the lead was opened by the moderator. Please participate in the survey and vote for your preferred option! SchmiAlf (talk) 16:05, 2 October 2023 (UTC)[reply]

I revised the rating of German influence based on Anatoly Zak and Ordway/Sharpe which have a more detailed view than Siddiqi (2000) and Neufeld (2012). Further details can be found in Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#Survey which is still open for participation in the survey. SchmiAlf (talk) 18:25, 16 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
SchmiAlf, as detailed on Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program, you have pushing a fringe theory which overstates the German influence on the Soviet space. Their is no concensus for your changes and the rfc has not been finalised. Therefore I am reverting your controversial edits. Would suggest you stop trying to expand your fringe theory to other wiki articles until the rfc is complete Ilenart626 (talk) 23:29, 16 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Ilenart626, you are blaming me "fringe". Since January 2022 (see old version) you have removed a lot of (previously undisputed) contributions related to German influence from this article. I have restored references to G-2 and G-4 because they are essential for this topic. I have added statements of several space historian to outline the on-going dispute. I kept the Siddiqi (2000) "after 1947 ... marginal" statement (you are clinging to), but it sounds rather strange here as compared to Neufeld (now with his original quote) and Zak. I'm convinced that this version is closer to Wikipedia's neutral point of view than it was before. SchmiAlf (talk) 09:06, 17 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
SchmiAlf, for the last 12 months you have pushed a fringe theory which overstates the German influence on the Soviet space. I note that I am not the only wiki editor with these views, in this discussion DonPMitchell called it a conspiracy theory and this discussion on Talk:R-7 Semyorka#Censored article: great shame. @DonPMitchell and @Mark Lincoln discuss the “myth” of German involvement.
Anatoly Zak concluded that the "German ideas and concepts developed by Gröttrup's team on Gorodomlya did influence Soviet designers and accelerate their efforts" This is a classic example of WP:SYNTH. Zak’s website in the German contribution in the Soviet rocketry: Myth and Reality section summarises both arguments for and against German contribution, which he concluded with “As it often happens in history, the truth might lie in between: Germans did not designed Sputnik or its rocket, however the ideas and concepts developed by Gröttrup’s team on Gorodomlya did influence Soviet designers and thus accelerated their efforts.” In other words, Zak’s website supports the original wording in this article, as supported by Siddiqi (2000).
As you now appear to be supporting Neufeld, I have replaced the conclusion with option C of the rfc, which incorporates both Neufield and Siddiqi, including the suggestions from @Caeciliusinhorto. You have also included way to much information about German details, this article is about the Space race and this information should be left in supporting articles, hence the link to German influence on the Soviet space program embedded in this section. Again, I suggest you stop trying to expand your fringe theory to other wiki articles until the rfc on the talk page of German influence on the Soviet space program is complete.Ilenart626 (talk) 11:04, 20 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I strictly reject your allegation that I'm propagating a fringe theory. It has been your objective, since 18 months, to downgrade the contributions of captured German scientists to Soviet rocketry by synthesizing Siddiqi (2000) with differing statements of Neufeld (2012) and Zak (2003/2012) as if they said the same. Arbitrarily you delete essential German design studies and reference to Ordway/Sharpe (1979) which obviously do not fit your limited view and/or your strange mission. As argument you bring up an outdated talk from 2009 which has nothing to do with my edits (i.e., no word that the Germans designed the R-7).
A week ago I restored valuable references to Mark Wade's Encyclopedia Astronautica here and in several other articles (Soviet rocketry, Intercontinental ballistic missile, Vostok 1, R-7 Semyorka). Contrary to the result of the RFC you have deleted them a second time without giving a proper argument on a case-by-case basis as suggested. Therefore I'm inviting @ActivelyDisinterested, @Daranios, @PM3, @Neopeius, @Wehwalt, @InvadingInvader to comment on this dispute and potential fringe theories. SchmiAlf (talk) 12:09, 21 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Can you find a better source than Encyclopedia Astronautica to reference the desired information? Remember that WP:OSE, though targeted towards deletion discussions, is best used in any discussion when only comparing to featured articles and good articles. InvadingInvader (userpage, talk) 12:12, 21 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I am not entirely clear what we are discussing. The survey appears to be dormant, but had I chimed in, I would have been for Option C based on the only sources I have on hand (Chertok and Siddiqi). However, since the sentence was not proper English ("However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, after 1947-48 they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used, the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal."), I'd instead say, "However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, after 1947-48 they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used; the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal." If we need further sources, I can ask Asif (we are both members of the AAS History Committee) if he can recommend other published sources on the issue. --Neopeius (talk) 22:26, 21 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks @Neopeius, if you could ask Asif for additional sources, including his thoughts or sources that also deal with Olaf Przybilski’s claims, that would be appreciated. Note that as you are obviously discussing the survey on the talk page of German influence on the Soviet space program, I will copy your response to that page. Ilenart626 (talk) 00:47, 22 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Ilenart626 Which claims specifically are in question? --Neopeius (talk) 14:47, 22 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Neopeius Claims that after 1947 German specialists had an extensive influence on Soviet rocketry. In particular Dr. Olaf Przybilski pointed out similarities between later Soviet rockets and the studies carried out by German specialists, for example, resemblance between a cone-like aerodynamic shape the Gröttrup team had proposed for several rockets and the conical shape of Korolev’s largest designs—the R-7 and the N1 moon rocket. Ilenart626 (talk) 15:04, 22 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Ilenart626, I have posed the question to the committee as a whole. We shall see what they turn up. :) --Neopeius (talk) 18:58, 22 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Neopeius, in the following I'm summarizing arguments which I brought up in the early moderated dispute. Many of these details were already mentioned by Ordway/Sharpe's The Rocket Team (1979), pp. 329-344. Surprisingly they had access to the 1953 CIA interrogation of German returnees (see reference on p. 442) which describes the full details of G-4/R-14, although this secret CIA document was not released until 2010. Based on this insight knowledge they concluded: "The R-14 finally proposed by the Germans [in October 1949] was certainly no 'uprated' V-2. It was a new departure in rocket design. Indeed, at the time, it was considerably in advance of anything proposed or thought of by von Braun and his team in the United States."
The most important details are as follows (referring to the item numbers in the 1953 CIA interrogation):
  • Item 50: Conical shape of G-4 (with its astounding similarity to the R-7 boosters as documented by comparative drawing). This essential design approach is also described by Helmut Gröttup's 1954 CIA interrogation, his comprehensive book Über Raketen (1959) and Werner Albring's Gorodomlia (1991) (available as Gorodomlya Island in English since 2016 with additional material from Soviet archives).
  • Items 26-33: The use of pressure-stabilized balloon tanks based on thin-walled self-supporting (monocoque) structures (1 mm) to reduce weight (documented by Uhl (p.177-178) and applied for R-7);
  • Items 8d, 8g: Low initial acceleration by thrust/weight ratio of 1.44 (instead of typically 2.0) (R-7's Sputnik shot had a value of 1.4);
  • Items 36, 72: Gimbal arrangement of the motor instead of rudders (first used by Soviet design of R-9 (Russian source);
  • Item 50: Exhaust nozzles adjustable in direction (vernier thrusters) for roll control (used by RD-107/108 for R-7 and R-9, see above);
  • Item 42: System for simultaneous emptying of both tanks as described by Ustinov's 1948 task "fuel level sensor in the rocket’s tanks" (also documented by Russian Tank emptying system and Chertok (p. 292, Vol 2);
  • Items 28, 29: Arrangement of the oxygen tank ahead of the fuel tank to solve structural issues during fueling and to improve the center of gravity position (applied for R-5 and R-7).
All German ideas were limited to theoretical design sketches, accompanied by some experiments for areodynamics and engine trials. In parallel, the Soviet teams under Korolev in NII-88 and Glushko in OKB-456 successfully solved the challenges of the technical implementation, based on adopted approaches (until 1952 continuing to ask advice from the 100+ German scientists isolated on Gorodomlya) and own ideas.
Due to strict consealment during Stalin's era it is hard to find Soviet documents which explicitly prove the level of German contributions to the early Soviet rocketry (Uhl's, Zak's and other historians' dilemma). Nevertheless, the Russian 70 Years of Zwezda 1946-2016 document (2016) acknowledged them as follows: "The German experience in terms of basic research and practical engineering application became a good school for the Soviet scientists. Many valuable ideas were adopted from the German collective, which saved the Soviet rocket industry many years of development and mistakes. [...] In the technically simplified design of a single-stage rocket with a conical shape, many innovations were again implemented: For the first time there were no gas thrusters, the rocket was equipped with stages in longitudinal and transverse pitch, with a bundle of three engines as a propulsion block and engine control during acceleration."
As ever in technology, the success was based on 10% inspiration and 90% perspiration - but with more than marginal contributions by the German team in 1948-49. SchmiAlf (talk) 11:28, 23 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SchmiAlf It sounds as though the Soviets had a quantum leap from the R-1/R-2 (German copies) era and the R-5/R-7 (German ideas/home-grown) era. If Zwezda be a reliable source, it certainly seems that insight (which you quoted in italics) should be reflected in an article that incorporates the German impact on the Soviet program. Otherwise, you make a compelling argument, but it would be OR-ish without dispositive external sources. --Neopeius (talk) 15:35, 23 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SchmiAlf 70 Years of Zwezda 1946-2016 is sourced from https://owncloud.birkenwald.de/owncloud/index.php/s/XTAeeiz4wfbS3X7 and I have noticed that a number of your sources are linked to “owncloud.birkenwald.de. Can you clarify how you found this source? In particular, is this your own website? Ilenart626 (talk) 16:20, 23 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
True, this is "my" cloud for providing documents which cannot be found otherwise in the web. The Zvezda document was handed over as a printed copy to Ursula Gröttrup, Helmut Gröttrup's daugther who grew up on Gorodomlya.
More information can be found for Zvezda history. Zvezda has its origins as Branch No. 1 of NII-88 in 1946 to 1950 and has been continued as a plant for Soviet and Russian space technology in Solnetschny (Twer) on Gorodomlya island. SchmiAlf (talk) 16:46, 23 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SchmiAlf I suspect using your own cloud website to provide documents would not be a reliable sources, as per WP:RS particularly WP:USG. I believe the quickest way to resolve will be to raise the issue on the reliable sources notice board, will do so and you can respond with your explanation. Ilenart626 (talk) 11:35, 24 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
refer Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#using your own cloud for providing documents which cannot be found otherwise in the web. Ilenart626 (talk) 14:36, 24 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
As some have noted in that discussion, hosting a document does not make it unreliable. It just makes it publicly accessible, which is desirable. For instance, I got a list of R-5 launches from Asif Siddiqi (no one is going to challenge that he's a reliable source given how many articles use his published works), but because I have my own hosting, I wanted to make the list accessible to everyone. It can be found here. That doesn't necessarily make @SchmiAlf's documents reliable, but his hosting them does not prima facie make them unreliable. --Neopeius (talk) 19:56, 24 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
As already stated in the RSN, the Zvezda document was published in 2016 with an edition of 2000 pieces. This can be evaluated from the bottom of page 9 of the document (including the reference of the printing works). SchmiAlf (talk) 17:32, 25 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@Neopeius, obviously the current discussion on "reliability of source" and "copyright" noticeboards is trying to discredit the sources mentioned above. If needed, an original print of the Zvezda document can be added to the public library of the Deutsches Museum as part of Helmut Gröttrup's inheritance (NL 281). I provided this and other documents under the conditions of fair use as common ground for our dispute.
For further discussion of the content I'm asking how I can support you to reconsider your initial preference for Option C (as you stated on 22:26, 21 November 2023 (UTC)) which was copied by @Ilenart626 to the survey of the RFC. Any proposal to get out of the deadlock is welcome. SchmiAlf (talk) 17:34, 28 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
obviously the current discussion on "reliability of source" and "copyright" noticeboards is trying to discredit the sources mentioned above. @SchmiAlf I raised the issue on the reliability board as I have never heard of an Editor using their own website to provide links to articles. Sharing documents for the benefit of other editors on talk pages may be acceptable, but you currently have your own website linking your sources to the Helmut Gröttrup and German influence on the Soviet space program articles to support your claims, a practice the majority of Editors on the reliability board find unacceptable. It has also highlighted the issue of wp:PUBLISHED to ensure that your sources were not “found in my grandmother’s attic”, as one of the Editors has elegantly stated. Many of these Editors also raised serious concerns over the copyright issue, including not complying with wp:COPYLINK, WP:ELNEVER and WP:LINKVIO. Hence it has nothing to do with “discrediting” your sources, but all about ensuring you are complying with Wikipedia policies.Ilenart626 (talk) 10:21, 29 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
My support of Option C was solely based on my materials at hand. As I said before, Zvezda seems to support your amendment, and so long as it's a reliable source, I'm fine with it. I just don't know how to assess Zvezda's reliability (the primary documents are less useful since interpreting and synthesizing them becomes OR). So tell me what Zvezda is and why it's reliable. Everything else, including the specious "it's invalid because it's hosted on a personal website", is immaterial. --Neopeius (talk) 19:51, 28 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Zvezda (see homepage) is a Russian company (full name: Филиал АО «НПЦАП им. академика Н.А. Пилюгина» «Завод «Звезда») which goes back to August 1946 prior to the Operation Osoaviakhim to host the 170+ German rocketry specialists on Gorodomlya Island. As "Branch No. 1 of NII-88" it was under supervision of the Soviet minister of armaments Dmitry Ustinov and headed by Sergei Korolev as chief desginer. From December 1946 to October 1953 it was base for
  • Design studies (e.g., G-1, G-2, G-4) and labs for radio-control systems, simulation of rocket trajectory, shallow water channel, supersonic wind tunnel, test stand for engines) (more information and pictures can be found in Werner Albring's Gorodomlya Island (English edition of 2016 includes research by Irina Suslina, pp. 1-34 of attachment);
  • Transfer of German knowledge to the Soviet rocketry team under Korolev who visited the branch (at least) in 1948 and 1949 for technical discussions;
  • In autumn 1950 several German experts for the trajectory simulation ("Bahnmodell", called "MU simulator" by Ustinov) were transferred to Moscow (among them Johannes Hoch) to work on the control of anti-aircraft missiles further developed from Wasserfall surface-to-air missile. (But this is another story.)
After the last Germans had been returned from Gorodomlya by October 1953, the site was continued as a Soviet only branch and, based on Zvezda's history, "switched to the production of high-precision float gyroscopic devices for their installation on rocket and space technology" in 1958. Under the Russian era it was reorganized as "Research and Production Center for Automation and Instrumentation named after Academician N.A. Pilyugin" known as Federal State Unitary Enterprise "Zvezda" (FSUE) "Star") enterprise, part of Roskosmos.
Since 2013, the Zvezda homepage is tracked by the WaybackMachine, with an example 70 years anniversary in August 2016.
The 1946-2016 brochure was compiled by Елена Бориса (Elena Borisova) who was employee of Zvezda (and organizer of the Zwezda museum). The enterprise is the main employer on the island with its "closed administrative-territorial entity (ZATO)" Solnechny, Tver Oblast with 2,200 inhabitants (in 1948 they were about 500). Even nowadays, this area is not accessible for the public.
Since February 2022, the beginning of the Russion war on Ukraine, contact is difficult and the scope of the Zvezda homepage has been reduced (especially on the news and product page (see archived version for comparison). SchmiAlf (talk) 16:15, 29 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
So how about truth in advertising: "Historians have generally discounted the contribution of German scientists to the Soviet missile program; however, per the company history of Zvezda (the successor organization to Branch No.1 of NII-88 to which the Germans had been assigned)..." and then summarize Zvezda's view.
Perhaps you can phrase it more elegantly/accurately than I have, but this would seem to address any issues. --Neopeius (talk) 16:24, 29 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
(you might also inquire with Zvezda about permission to host and reproduce their document. That would take care of potential copyright issues.) --Neopeius (talk) 17:41, 29 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

@SchmiAlf and @Neopeius there are still issues with the reliability of the Zvezda document. And let’s be clear, we are talking about a publicity brochure promoting a Russian Company celebrating their 70th anniversary, which SchmiAlf is suggesting should overide a number of reliable sources. I note on the Reliability notice board that @Blueboar, @Slatersteven, @Selfstudier and @ActivelyDisinterested have all questioned the reliability of this source; including fails "reliable, independent, published sources with a reputation for fact-checking and accuracy", fails “been recorded then broadcast, distributed, or archived by a reputable party” and all the issues with WP:PRIMARY. I also have concerns with SchmiAlf’s suggestion that the Zvezda document can be added to the public library of the Deutsches Museum as part of Helmut Gröttrup's inheritance. What is SchmiAlf’s connection with the museum? Will the museum verify the authenticity? What fact checking will they carry out? Or will it just be filed? Given the above, I do not believe this document helps in resolving the current discussion on this Talk page, or on Talk:German influence on the Soviet space program#Survey. Ilenart626 (talk) 11:06, 30 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah… Until this document is turned over to the Deutsches Museum (or similar) authenticated and catalogued by that institution, and made accessible to the general public, I don’t think we can call it reliably verifiable as a primary source.
I also have concerns relating to WP:No original research. It sounds like a Wikipedian is the first person to review this document, and is using WP to inform the world on what it says … that is a classic NOR violation. Blueboar (talk) 12:40, 30 November 2023 (UTC)[reply]
You are missing the seven (7) facts (or call them presumptive evidence) which I outlined above on 11:28, 23 November 2023 (UTC) of this talk. Each of them is contradicting the notorious claim that the "German contributions to the Soviet rocketry were marginal after 1947" (solely based on Siddiqi (2000), p. 84). The Zvezda brochure is additional evidence for the value of the German contributions and is the closest source we can expect from Russia for describing what happened on Gorodomlya Island. It was not a publicity brochure promoting a Russian Company but summarized the enterprise's history for their employees as clearly stated on its second page with its headline "Dear colleagues, employees of the company and valued veterans!" For Russian circumstances it required quite some courage to publish (!) this (overdue) admission to the factual German achievements in 1946 to 1949. Therefore @Ilenart626's last argument/question above may be perceived as the next step for discrediting the Russian brochure, trying to annihilate it by formal arguments and ignoring the testimony of contemporary witnesses and insiders.
As an example, the conical shape depicted in this sketch compares two sources (CIA 1953, R-7 design). Some Wikipedians may argue here that this visualization is "OR-ish". But this astounding similarity was already brought up by Ordway/Sharpe (p. 337), Przybilski and Zak, all of them well-known scholars and space historians. Every open mind can figure out this level of German involvement with little engineering background. Therefore the Russian brochure does not override a number of reliable sources, but confirms them as another jigsaw piece of Soviet rocketry history. Calling the Russian brochure unreliable means propagating the (incorrect) view that the German influence was finished after they had supported the design of the R-1, the Russian copy of the V-2. Under regular circumstances, the later use of these German ideas (detailed in the 1953 CIA interrogation and 1954 CIA interrogation) would be considered patent infringement because there was little information flow from the Soviet to the German team.
Basically, our dispute is mainly driven by the current wording in the section Soviet rocket development of this article:
"However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, from the late 1940s they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used, the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal."
which is not supported by Zak (2012) and Mick (2000), other than pretended by the used references. Instead, the German contributions in 1948-49 should be acknowledged as follows:
"However, due to a combination of secrecy and political requirements, the Soviets froze out the German specialists after 1949 and thereafter made little use of their expertise for the Soviet space program."
in this article as proposed per Option B in this survey. In addition, the "after 1947 ... German influence was marginal" (or similar) statement should also be revised accordingly in the following articles: German influence on the Soviet space program, Soviet rocketry, and Soviet space program. SchmiAlf (talk) 17:33, 1 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Since Zak is accepted as RS, I don't know why we're arguing given this (from the Zak reference):
"As it often happens in history, the truth might lie in between: Germans did not designed [sic] Sputnik or its rocket, however the ideas and concepts developed by Gröttrup’s team on Gorodomlya did influence Soviet designers and thus accelerated their efforts. "The work of the captive German scientists and technicians served as a yardstick against which Soviet accomplishments could be measured, and the Soviets were capable of extracting those developments useful to their program and of discarding others which they had already surpassed," concluded a US historian."
So change this line in the article:
"However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, from the late 1940s they were excluded and set to work on theoretical designs that were never used, the Soviets made very little use of German specialists and their future influence on the Soviet space program was marginal."
to
"However, due to a combination of security and political requirements, from the late 1940s they were excluded from Soviet rocket design, while they continued developing plans for the G-2 and G-4, they were never produced. Nevertheless, the Soviets used the work of Gröttrup’s team to verify their own efforts and incorporated useful innovations by the Germans into their own designs."
(as it stands, the original sentence is clumsy and also doesn't quite follow—it suggests that there were rockets beyond the G-2 and G-4 that they were working on, which wasn't the case.)
Beyond that, @SchmiAlf:, you need to write an article and submit it to Quest Space Quarterly, and then you can cite it. :) This talk page is not really the forum for your erudite arguments (though I have enjoyed them). --Neopeius (talk) 14:34, 3 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Your proposal sounds much better than any option before. And I like your idea to submit an article to Quest Space Quarterly (although this will take several weeks). It is true that neither the talk page nor the article are a forum for these distinctive arguments. SchmiAlf (talk) 17:55, 4 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
If there are no objections, I'll be happy to make that change. What say you, @Ilenart626?
(Quest is a great mag. It may yet be the only peer-reviewed space history journal out there. I've been published there four times.) --Neopeius (talk)
Neopeius, I do not support your suggestion. Also note that @Caeciliusinhorto-public has previously supported a modified option C, which I also support, where you appear to be suggesting a modified B, which SchmiAlf supports. So unfortunately their is no concensus. However considering the conflict of interest that has arisen with SchmiAlf, would suggest this discussion be suspended until that issue is resolved. Ilenart626 (talk) 12:32, 5 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SchmiAlf is not the issue (he has already conceded that WP is not the place to advance his arguments)—my suggested revision is based solely on the Anatoly Zak, which is already cited in the article. What is wrong with my proposed language? Mostly, I dislike the current sentence's awkward and misleading phrasing.--Neopeius (talk) 14:42, 5 December 2023 (UTC) @Balon Greyjoy @Gog the Mild[reply]
@Neopeius I have been busy recently so have not had the chance to respond to your message, plan to do so when I have time. In the meantime suggest you review German influence on the Soviet space program#Historical analysis which highlights other sources that argue there was minimal to no German influence, including Chertok p73 vol 2 (Germans had little influence and the R-7 rocket that propelled the Sputnik 1 to orbit was "free of the "birthmarks" of German rocket technology”) and Willey (“In reality, the Germans did not build anything for the Russians, did not “supervise" the firings, and did not "introduce innovations”). How would you include their views in your proposed wording? Ilenart626 (talk) 22:49, 7 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hello, @Ilenart626. Those rather off-hand comments don't really contradict the Zak. It's true the Germans had little influence on the R-7. The German program would have been useful only at the time it was operating, which was at the early stages of R-5 development. As Zak said, and as I hope my language suggests, the Russians used the German designs as a yardstick against which they compared their own designs. Also, while I like Ley and cite him for some of my early articles, his scholarship is ancient. He had no idea what was going on behind the Iron Curtain...and how could he? Citing him is like citing Oberg's "Red Star in Orbit"—hopelessly outdated. --Neopeius (talk) 14:37, 8 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hi @Neopeius, the same “ancient” comment equally appliies to Zak. His comment "The work of the captive German scientists and technicians served as a yardstick against which Soviet accomplishments could be measured, and the Soviets were capable of extracting those developments useful to their program and of discarding others which they had already surpassed," is a direct quote from Schwiebert, Ernest G., USAF's Ballistic Missiles - 1954-1964; A Concise History. Air Force & Space Digest, May 1964, p. 54. So your suggestion of “Nevertheless, the Soviets used the work of Gröttrup’s team to verify their own efforts and incorporated useful innovations by the Germans into their own designs." is also based on “ancient” information.
I believe the various opinions over this issue is best summarised by Siddiqi. He takes a middle ground by acknowledging Nazi Germany rocket technology and involvement of German scientists and engineers was an essential catalyst to early Soviet efforts. However his analysis of German influence after 1947-48 was “minimal” and his 2009 article provides further evidence and reasons why their influence was marginal. Siddiqi’s opinion is also supported by Nuefeld and Mick.
In addition, a major problem with SchmiAlf’s argument is the lack of evidence of German influence in Soviet records and archives, which is an issue which both Zak and Siddiqi highlight and SchmiAlf acknowlege above. I have read comments along the lines that somewhere is the missing evidence in Soviet archives. I believe there is a simpler answer; these records cannot be found because they never existed as the Soviets ignored their work after 1947-48. Ilenart626 (talk) 22:36, 8 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
That's fair. I'm in contact with Asif, so I will get his take on the situation and get back to you. But if the Zak is NOT a reliable source, it shouldn't be cited, or at least, it should be clear what specific ideas it is supporting. --Neopeius (talk) 01:41, 9 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
With regard to Mick (2003), there is misconception. In the talk on Soviet rocketry (09:47, 27 November 2023) I have laid out that the referenced abstract is not correct as compared to his original German statement (in 2000) and therefore does not support Siddqi's (2000) statement (p. 84) "after 1947 ... German influence was marginal" as ilenart626 is claiming for his preferred option A in the current RfC).
For Neufeld I have pointed to his statement that the Germans were increasingly frozen out after 1948. This is rather in line with Siddiqi's Germans in Russia: Cold War, Technology Transfer, and National Identity (2009) which provides a comprehensive update in stating (pp. 122-123):
From these sources, it seemed likely that the Germans had made significant contributions at the birth of the Soviet ballistic missile program but that their contributions (and utility) diminished in the late Stalin years. When Soviet bureaucrats no longer perceived an urgent need for their presence, the Germans were sent home.
Siddiqi (2009) did not repeat his "after 1947 ... marginal" statement and reported on the G-1 project presented in December 1948 (pp. 139-140). Sketches of the G-1 (Soviet R-10) with Russianized labels were found in the Gorodomlya archives (see here (p.9) and Albring (2016) pp. 14-15 of the appendix, also compare with CIA information report June 1953 pp. 31&42, also stateing that development continued until spring of 1950 (p. 26) and inquiries were answered until the beginning of 1951 (p. 29)). During 1949, the Germans worked on concepts of G-2 and G-4 which have been described by Orway/Sharpe (1979) (based on 1953 CIA interrogation R-14), Zak (2012) and Mark Wade's Encyclopedia Astronautica in more detail. Korolev visited Gorodomlya for this reason in October 1949. But we are disputing back and forth whether and how these concepts may have influenced later Soviet missile technology. Most probably, we will not find a commonly agreed answer in current space history nor the "smoking gun" in Russian archives.
@Ilenart626, there is enough evidence that the Soviets refused to officially acknowledge the German contributions after 1947 due to political reasons (Zhdanovshchina) but kept them isolated on Gorodomlya Island for another four to six years to prevent them reporting on Soviet progress of rocketry to the West. During the Cold War, all technical documents were classified top secret. So far, no original German document from 1945 to 1953 was retrieved from a Russian archive. Does this mean, by your terms, that there were no Germans in Podlipki (NII-88) and its branch on Gorodomlya Island at all and Zvezda is a fake? SchmiAlf (talk) 16:37, 9 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
@SchmiAlf I have had a lengthy discussion with Asif, and he has also provided me full copies of articles we have been using for citations. Based on these, I plan on proposing new language that will probably please @Ilenart626 and may well satisfy you, as well. With Asif's permission, I will also relay what he said to me verbatim (this is obviously not citable scholarship, but he has as much right to be heard as we do.) :) --Neopeius (talk) 17:42, 9 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Strike that last. I find I am out of time for the weekend. I'll just tell you my thoughts:
1) The current language under Soviet rocket development is thoroughly inappropriate (and I'm sorry for not catching this before). Nearly half the verbiage is dedicated to the Germans, which makes it look like the Soviets hardly had their own program. It needs a complete rewrite. You can reference my R-1 (missile), R-2 (missile), and R-5 Pobeda articles for what I think are pretty good summaries of the early history of Soviet work. Mentioning the German involvement in Germany from 1945-1947, and the marginal work done in the USSR till 1953 is fine, but it honestly should not be more than two sentences, and more work done on the Soviet side.
2) I have a copies of Siddiqi's 2001 "Rocket engineers from the Glushko Design Bureau" and his 2009 article "Germans in Russia: Cold War, Technology Transfer, and National Identity"—if you need them, email me at gideon@galacticjourney.org. The former details the contributions of Baum (the second highest paid employee in Glushko's OKB for a time). He concludes: "In sum, there is evidence to suggest that the Soviets benefited from the German contribution [to rocket engine design] much more than they have admitted so far, but much less than some recent German accounts [such as from Przybilski] have claimed."
3) At the end of the email to me, Asif concluded:
"1. German technology (V2, rocket engines, test stands, guidance systems) were absolutely crucial to the foundation of the postwar Soviet missile program. There's no way that the Soviets do anything without that.
2. I know I differ from Przybilski on the interpretation of the contribution of German expertise in the 1946-51 period. Besides a few significant things, I don't think it was that important. I will say that while I don't agree with Przybilski (he depends almost entirely on post-facto German memoir material), I am glad that it's out there for people to decide."
In the body of his email, he says that, while German innovations were incorporated into the R-2, the R-3/R-5/R-7 were wildly different designs, starting with their change in propellants.
Long story short: German influence on initial program, profound. On rocket engines, not inconsiderable, but probably not profound. On post-R-2 designs, negligible.
So a rewrite of that whole section would:
A) Reduce the German content while expanding the Soviet content
B) Reflect Asif's scholarship, which I think is solid, though a side note to Przybilski, if there be any space, might be okay. I doubt this article is the place to go in depth into this discussion, however. There just isn't room, and it takes emphasis away from the main point—the Soviet ICBM is a Soviet invention "free of the fingerprints of German designers".
Thanks for bringing me in to offer my opinion. I'm sorry I don't have the energy to do the rewrite myself. --Neopeius (talk) 19:14, 9 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Thankyou @Neopeius your input and Asif’s comments are highly valued. Would suggest that your above comments be copied to Soviet rocketry and German influence on the Soviet space program talk pages, with the Soviet rocketry being the article that goes indepth into this discussion. I should have some time available over the Xmas break to work on an update referencing the articles you mentioned. Then summaries can be included in this article, Soviet space program and similar articles, that point back to Soviet rocketry. The German influence of the Soviet space program can then be the main article to include Przybilski’s view. What do you think? Ilenart626 (talk) 23:39, 9 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
If you're not opposed, I'd be obliged and grateful if you copied them there. You have my license to do so. And I agree. Even Asif says it's good to represent that view, even if it is a minority. And who knows? Maybe when @SchmiAlf publishes his article, it'll be convincing. :) --Neopeius (talk) 06:11, 10 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
Hi @Neopeius, as discussed above, I have updated the “Soviet rocket development” of this article, mainly from the Soviet rocketry article. Let me know if you have any comments. Ilenart626 (talk) 23:53, 30 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]
I like it! Good job. :) Neopeius (talk) 06:00, 31 December 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Did the Soviet win the Space Race[edit]

Professor Jennifer Frost opine that they did but I think the argument they made is hugely flawed and should be removed. Nguyen280405 (talk) 10:17, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Professor Frost is providing balance to the opinion from American political scientist Richard Samuels that the space race was a "decisive American victory". I believe the two comments read together provide a reasonable NPOV. Also note the comments in the FAQ section above “Shouldn't this article say that the Soviet Union or the United States won the space race?” which concludes with “In essence, the space "race" concluded with a "tie," as both nations achieved feats of technological mastery and exploration that significantly improved humanity's understanding of the cosmos.”. I would be ok to add this, or similar wording to the article.Ilenart626 (talk) 11:43, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
https://youtube.com/watch?si=qWG8z7WmeZqkfmIY&v=rSK7rUSnFK4
If this does not convince you that I am right, I have nothing else. Nguyen280405 (talk) 12:46, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So you are saying that a utube video by “DeadKennedyInSpace” is a reliable source? What about his other videos, ie “How Flat Earth Uses deception”? “The Day the Internet Failed the Sarcasm Test”? What about “The next level of (stupid) parts 1 to 5”Ilenart626 (talk) 13:14, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
No, I am showing you why I think the source is flawed.Besides, those videos, though they can't be considered "reliable", are still insightful Nguyen280405 (talk) 13:33, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If you enter Timeline of the Space Race, you can see that the achievements of the US are more meaningful than the Soviet's Nguyen280405 (talk) 13:42, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
and why do you talk like those videos are nonsense? They are actually pretty in-depth. Nguyen280405 (talk) 14:19, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Her argument is not factual, so how can that be counterbalance Nguyen280405 (talk) 14:37, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Frost is, according to her page, "a United States women's historian, focused on social, cultural, and political developments in the twentieth-century United States". She's not a space historian, nor a specialist in USSR space program or even USSR in general. I don't think that it's a 'balanced view' of a specialist. Artem.G (talk) 11:59, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This arguement equally applies to Richard Samuels as his website states that he is a “Professor of Political Science” and is not a space historian, nor a specialist in the USSR space program or even the USSR in general. So should we remove his statement that the space race was a "decisive American victory"? Ilenart626 (talk) 13:31, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If you think my edit is correct, just do what you think is right to do Nguyen280405 (talk) 12:30, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You do realise this subject has been extensively discussed in the past. Suggest you search the archives to understand the history behind the FAQ above. Ilenart626 (talk) 13:43, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
the Faq is about german influence, why do you tell me to read that Nguyen280405 (talk) 13:47, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
my mistake, let me say again.Like I said, American achievements are overall more meaningful than the Soviet's, as you can see in the timeline;therefore, theUS overall had an edge overthe Soviet Union in the "race". Nguyen280405 (talk) 14:02, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
So that we are clear on “meaningful” the Cambridge dictionary defines it a “useful, serious, valuable or inportant”. Looking at the Timeline of the Space Race, for the Soviets, a sample of 10 include:
  • Sputnik - 1st satelite
  • Luna 2 - 1st spacecraft moon landing
  • Luna 3 - 1st photos of far side of the Moon
  • Yuri Gagarin - 1st man in space
  • Valentina Tereshkova - first woman in space
  • Mars 1 - 1st Mars flyby
  • Venera 3 - First hard landing on another planet (Venus)
  • Soyuz 4/5 - First docking of two manned spacecraft
  • Venera 7 - First soft landing on another planet (Venus)
  • MIR - First consistently inhabited long-term research space station.
Looking at the US list a sample of 10 include:
  • Vanguard 1 - First solar-powered satellie
  • Mariner 2 - First successful planetary flyby mission (Venus)
  • Syncom 2 - First geosynchronous satellite
  • Apollo 8 - First return to Earth after orbiting the Moon
  • Gemini 8/aTV - First spacecraft docking
  • Apollo 11 - First humans on the Moon
  • Mariner 9 - First spacecraft to orbit another planet (Mars)
  • STS1 - First spaceplane in orbit, the Space Shuttle (test flight)
  • Pioneer 11 - First Saturn flyby
  • Voyager 2 - First Uranus flyby.
Nguyen280405, can you please explain to me how the above US list is more “meaningful” (ie useful, serious, valuable or inportant) than the Soviet list? For example:
  1. How is “First humans on the Moon” more meaningful than “first man in space”?
  2. How is “First spaceplane in orbit” more meaningful than “ First consistently inhabited long-term research space station”?
  3. How is the “First Saturn flyby” more meaningful than the “first Mars flyby”
  4. How is the “First geosynchronous satellite” more meaningful than the “first satelite”?
Ilenart626 (talk) 15:16, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
1.The US only need a few month to catch up.
3.The US conducted first successful Mars flyby.
4.The US lauched the first truly useful satelite. Nguyen280405 (talk) 16:15, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
1I am sorry, a few week. Nguyen280405 (talk) 16:18, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
sorry but you a comparing a sub-orbital ballistic flight to an orbital flight, which was also second and therefore not relevant / not on the timeline. Ilenart626 (talk) 16:42, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

I trimmed it without completely removing the source. But it's an undue weight given to a single opinion of non-specialist, so I would agree with its removal for a better source. Artem.G (talk) 15:59, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]

@Artem.G the "decisive American victory" is also only supported by a single opinion of a non-specialist, so is’nt this also been given undue weight and should be trimmed / removed for a better source? Ilenart626 (talk) 16:12, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
If you want a reference from a space historian, how about Asif A. Siddiqi, this is from a statement he made in 2023
”Because the United States first made it to the Moon, they are widely assumed to have won that space race, but Siddiqi suggests otherwise. “Before that landing, there was an enormous amount of investment in the robotic exploration of the Moon, both by the Soviets and the US, in terms of all sorts of smaller benchmarks like the first lunar impact, the first pictures of the far side of the Moon, the first soft lunar landing, and the first lunar orbit. We forget, but in those little races, the Soviet Union dominated almost every benchmark, but it is forgotten as the United States won the big one.”
Ilenart626 (talk) 16:34, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Added! Artem.G (talk) 20:23, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
then let's remove this as well! These quotes oversimplify the history. Siddiqi is a much better source that should be used instead. Artem.G (talk) 17:20, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, have trimmed the lead, fixed a broken link and added Siddiqi to the Lead. Perhaps we could summarise the Lead even more, say who won is contested by historian’s and include a summary of what Siddiqi said? Ilenart626 (talk) 23:53, 25 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I think it might be useful to actually define dates for the Space Race in the lead. Also, I appreciate Asif's quote:
"Because the United States first made it to the Moon, they are widely assumed to have won that space race, but Siddiqi suggests otherwise. “Before that landing, there was an enormous amount of investment in the robotic exploration of the Moon, both by the Soviets and the US, in terms of all sorts of smaller benchmarks like the first lunar impact, the first pictures of the far side of the Moon, the first soft lunar landing, and the first lunar orbit. We forget, but in those little races, the Soviet Union dominated almost every benchmark, but it is forgotten as the United States won the big one.”
That said, by any measure, the United States took the lead in any Space Race you want to mention by 1965, and it never really ceded it. Source: me, a space historian. :) Anyway, I know this isn't an internet forum, and again, I think the lead is fine (though dates would be a good addition), but don't kid yourself. It was a clear American victory in accomplishments, which was inevitable—we had far more money to spend. --Neopeius (talk) 01:15, 26 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Space Race was predominantly a propaganda victory. No one disputes that the Soviets also made significant advances in space exploration.
Minority views should be it in the article. But saying that the Soviets "tied" or "beat" the United States in the Space Race (in popular consciousness) is not one of those. KlayCax (talk) 01:52, 9 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The consensus for current Lead was reached after considerable discussion, as detailed above. If you want to propose changes please do so on the Talk page and follow WP:MOSLEAD, in other words, the Lead needs to summarise the conclusion in the Legacy section. Ilenart626 (talk) 00:13, 10 February 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Page titles[edit]

Right now, the article is structured chronologically, with titles such as "Disaster strikes both sides" and "Both programs recover". Is this proper formatting? This seems more like a story than separate sections about a topic. Maybe this should be a series? WikiFloath (talk) 15:36, 28 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]