Rocket Taking Off Drawing

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Let's Draw Things That Go

Author: Kasia Dudziuk
language: en
Publisher: The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc
Release Date: 2016-12-15
Sports cars, trains, and airplanes are just some of the vehicles young readers can learn to draw by following step-by-step instructions. Through accessible text and clear images of each step, readers are shown how to draw a wide variety of popular things that go. Each series of instructions also includes a colorful illustration of the finished product to give readers an example as they create their own drawings. Action-packed works of art featuring helicopters, police cars, and submarines are just a few simple steps away!
Blast Off!

Author: Leona Nielsen
language: en
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Release Date: 1997-01-15
Packed with fascinating facts and motivational activities, this book helps you create a thematic unit on rocketry. Lessons include information on the beginning of rocketry and explanations of basic scientific principles of rocket flight. Featuring scientific experiments for students, language activities-even a dramatic play (based on the science of rocketry)-this book is a complete teaching package. Grades 4-8.
The Development of Propulsion Technology for U.S. Space-launch Vehicles

In this definitive study, J. D. Hunley traces the program?s development from Goddard?s early rockets (and the German V-2 missile) through the Titan IVA and the Space Shuttle, with a focus on space-launch vehicles. Since these rockets often evolved from early missiles, he pays considerable attention to missile technology, not as an end in itself, but as a contributor to launch-vehicle technology. Focusing especially on the engineering culture of the program, Hunley communicates this very human side of technological development by means of anecdotes, character sketches, and case studies of problems faced by rocket engineers. He shows how such a highly adaptive approach enabled the evolution of a hugely complicated technology that was impressive?but decidedly not rocket science. Unique in its single-volume coverage of the evolution of launch-vehicle technology from 1926 to 1991, this meticulously researched work will inform scholars and engineers interested in the history of technology and innovation, as well as those specializing in the history of space flight.