SNAP-8 is an example of what I'll call "glitch history," where it was real, people worked on it, money was spent, but somehow due to a glitch in the space-time continuum, it has been completely forgotten. Another example, which I have written about, is the M-1 rocket engine. Look through space histories and rocket histories and you may find a paragraph about the M-1 at most. I had never heard about it. And then over a decade ago I was in the NASA history archives looking at their file on the F-1 engine and I found this thick set of files on the M-1. My first thought was that they had been mislabeled. And then I looked at them and discovered that not only was the M-1 a real program, but that a bunch of very large test stands had been built to test it, and turbopump tests had been conducted. It was canceled before it went to full-scale testing.Like SNAP-8, I had no idea...Now the reason for the glitch is that it never flew, so you could argue that it was not important. But I don't think that's the way to look at historical projects. First of all, did it have impacts on other programs that did fly? Or other impacts in general? Second, understanding why projects fail can be valuable.
There is an official Vela history, right?
Okay, so the thread title refers to "new data" that has not yet been examined. But I think we could parse that out a bit.
(Just to be clear, by "data" we're referring to historical records, for the most part.)-new data (as in newly declassified records, archives, or records)-old data that has been around but nobody has really done anything about it-subjects that should be explored and can be explored, but have not been-newly emerging/available subjects and dataOn the last point, the NRO and the shuttle is one that I think is ripening, but slowly. Jim David and Parker Temple did books that deal with this subject and since their publication, more information has emerged. I've written about that with my articles on DAMON and more recently FARRAH and PARCAE. But there is still a lot more to explore on that matter. Not only the payloads, which remain classified, but internal NRO deliberations about how much they wanted to use the shuttle and for what. We now have an emerging picture of the payload choices by NRO (putting FARRAH and PARCAE on shuttle, then pulling FARRAH off). But we don't have any good insights into whether NRO in the early 1980s considered using shuttle for satellite servicing and/or recovery. It would be great to know more about that.
Quote from: Blackstar on 12/05/2025 01:39 pmOkay, so the thread title refers to "new data" that has not yet been examined. But I think we could parse that out a bit. My draft title for the thread was "So, Blackstar, what do you think we should be working on then ... ;-)" so I am very happy to have it parsed further by you, and indeed anyone else. I like those subthreads.
Quote from: LittleBird on 12/06/2025 11:14 amQuote from: Blackstar on 12/05/2025 01:39 pmOkay, so the thread title refers to "new data" that has not yet been examined. But I think we could parse that out a bit. My draft title for the thread was "So, Blackstar, what do you think we should be working on then ... ;-)" so I am very happy to have it parsed further by you, and indeed anyone else. I like those subthreads. But I only represent one corner of the space history field. The historians who focus on cultural and social history will have their own lists of what is important.My own biases: I tend to be focused on intelligence space programs, military space programs, and civil space programs (probably in that order). I tend to be interested in space science programs more than human spaceflight programs. And my interest is American programs, not non-American programs. I also am document/archives oriented.
There are historians interested in the cultural impact of spaceflight, the way different social, racial and ethnic groups view and participate in spaceflight and space exploration. And of course there are those who focus on non-American programs, like Russia. We have some history of India's space program, and only a superficial understanding of China's space program. But there are also the social and cultural aspects of those programs as well. Americans tend to view and talk about spaceflight in a certain way, but other cultures will view and talk about it in a different way.
a websitehttps://www.secretprojects.co.uk/forums/aviation-space.7/Aviation and Space discussions on historic program