Misplaced Pages

British National Committee for Space Research

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Committee of the Royal Society

British National Committee for Space Research
AbbreviationBNCSR
Formation18 December 1958
PurposeSpace exploration research in the UK
Region served UK
MembershipSpace scientists, physicists
ChairmanSir Harrie Massey
Parent organizationRoyal Society
AffiliationsCommittee on Space Research

The British National Committee for Space Research (BNCSR) was a Royal Society committee formed in December 1958. It was formed primarily to be Britain's interface with the newly formed Committee on Space Research (COSPAR).

History

In October 1958, the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU) proposed to form a committee for space research. The Committee on Space Research (COSPAR) was the result of the proposal and first met in November 1958. Britain desired a new committee to interface with COSPAR and to organise British spaceflight activities after the International Geophysical Year (IGY). The Royal Society consolidated the Gassiot Committee's rocket and the National IGY Committee's artificial satellite subcommittees into the newly formed British National Committee for Space Research (BNCSR). The BNCSR was officially formed on 18 December 1958 and selected its members 12 February 1959. The 28-person committee was chaired by Harrie Massey and had W. V. D. Hodge as the physical secretary. The subcommittees that were to be incorporated into BNCSR submitted their final reports during the committee's first meeting on 4 March 1959 and were officially dissolved.

Subcommittees

The BNCSR formed three subcommittees: Tracking Analysis and Data Recovery (TADREC, chaired by J. A. Ratcliffe), Design for Experiments (DOE, chaired by Massey), and another to coordinate with the World Data Centre at Radio Research Station (RRS) at Slough (chaired by E. Bullard).

TADREC took over the work National IGY Committee's artificial satellite subcommittee.

DOE continued the work of the National IGY Committee's artificial satellite subcommittee. The new subcommittee had two initials tasks: to find artificial satellites to launch on and to consider if it was worth providing attitude control to Skylark for better scientific results.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Massie & Robins 1986, p. 59.
  2. Millard 2005, p. 9.
  3. ^ Massie & Robins 1986, p. 62.
  4. ^ Pounds 2010, p. S69.
  5. Godwin 2007, p. 62.
  6. ^ Massie & Robins 1986, p. 63.
  7. King-Hele 2005, p. 71.
  8. ^ Pounds 2010, p. S70.
  9. ^ Massie & Robins 1986, p. 64.

References

Politics of outer space
Space races
Chinese
space program
ESA Science Programme
Horizon 2000 (1985–1995)
Horizon 2000 Plus (1995–2015)
Cosmic Vision (2015–2025)
EU Space Programme
Other European
initiatives and bodies
Indian space policy
British
space programme
US space policy
Truman
space policy
Eisenhower
space policy
Kennedy
space policy
Johnson
space policy
Nixon
space policy
Ford
space policy
Carter
space policy
Reagan
space policy
George H. W. Bush
space policy
Clinton
space policy
George W. Bush
space policy
Obama
space policy
Trump
space policy
USSR and Russia
Soviet
space
program
Stalin
Khrushchev
Brezhnev
Gorbachev
  • Mir (1986–2001)
Roscosmos
Yeltsin
Medvedev
Putin
Other policies
United Nations
Other intergovernmental
or inter-agency bodies
Space law
Commercial use
Militarisation
Space forces,
units and formations
Space warfare
Space advocacy
Public-sector space agencies
Africa
Pan-African
and pan-Arab
National
Americas
North America
Latin America
and the Caribbean
Asia
Pan-Asian
Central Asia
East Asia
South Asia
Southeast Asia
West Asia
Europe
Pan-European
EU and EEA
Other
Oceania
World
Former
Portals: Categories: