(Samuel P. Langley was born August 22, 1834 in Roxbury, Massuchusetts, U.S. and died in Febuary 27, 1906, Aiken, South Carolina)


    Samuel P. Langley was a U.S. astronomer, physicist, and aeronautics pioneer who contributed to the knowledge of solar phenomena as related to meteorology and built the first successful heavier-than-air flying machine. After practicing civil engineering and architecture in Chicago and 'St. Louis, Mo., he returned to Boston, received an assistantship at the Harvard Observatory, and later taught mathematics at the U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. In 1867 he accepted the directorship of the Allegheny Observatory and became professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Pittsburgh. His chief interest was solar activity and its effect on the weather. In 1878 he invented the bolometer, a radiant-heat detector that is sensitive to differences in temperature of one hundred-thousandth of a degree. This device enabled him to study the solar spectrum (light rays from the Sun) far into its infrared (heat-ray) region and to measure the intensity of solar radiation at various wavelengths. While at Allegheny, Langley made important experiments on the lift and drag of an aircraft moving through the air at a measured speed. Backed by these experiments, he was the first to offer a clear explanation of the way birds soar and glide without appreciable wing movement.
    In 1896 he became the first man to build a successful unmanned heavier-than-air flying machine. Propelled by a steam engine, the 26-pound (9.7 kilograms) craft flew 4,200 feet (1,280 metres). His first manned aircraft, powered by a five-cylinder air-cooled gasoline engine designed by Langley's assistant Charles M. Manly and piloted by Manly, snagged upon launching from a catapult, and it crashed into the Potomac River for the second and last time on Dec. 8, 1903, just nine days before the successful nights of the Wright brothers near Kitty Hawk, N.C. It had a wingspan of 48 feet and a total weight (with pilot) of 850 pounds. Some authorities believe that if his catapult had not failed, Langley would have been the first to fly a manned heavier-than-air machine.



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