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Learn
about Von Braun |
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Von Braun was a German engineer who played a prominent
role in all aspects of rocketry and space exploration, first in
Germany and, after World War II, in the United States.
Braun was born into a prosperous aristocratic family.
His mother encouraged young Wernher's curiosity by giving him a
telescope upon his confirmation in the Lutheran church. Braun's
early interest in astronomy and the realm of space never left him
thereafter. In 1920 his family moved to the seat of government in
Berlin. He did not do well in school, particularly in physics and
mathematics. Frustrated by his inability to understand the mathematics,
he applied himself at school until he led his class.
In the spring of 1930, while enrolled in the Berlin
Institute of Technology, Braun joined the German Society for Space
Travel. In his spare time he assisted Oberth in liquid-fueled rocket
motor tests. In 1932 he was graduated from the Technical Institute
with a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering and entered Berlin
University.
By the fall of 1932 the rocket society was experiencing
grave financial difficulties. At that time Capt. Walter R. Dornberger
(later major general) was in charge of solid-fuel rocket research
and development in the Ordnance Department of Germany's 100,000-man
armed forces, the Reichswehr. He recognized the military potential
of liquid-fueled rockets and the ability of Braun. Dornberger arranged
a research grant from the Ordnance Department for Braun, who then
did research at a small development station that was set up adjacent
to Dornberger's existing solid-fuel rocket test facility at the
Kummersdorf Army Proving Grounds near Berlin. Two years later Braun
received a Ph.D. in physics from the University of Berlin. His thesis,
which, for reasons of military security, bore the nondescript title
"About Combustion Tests," contained the theoretical investigation
and developmental experiments on 300- and 660-pound-thrust rocket
engines.
By December 1934 Braun's group, which then included
one additional engineer and three mechanics, had successfully launched
two rockets that rose vertically to more than 1.5 miles (2.4 kilometres).
But by this time there was no longer a German rocket society; rocket
tests had been forbidden by decree, and the only way open to such
research was through the military forces.
Since the test grounds near Berlin had become too
small, a large military development facility was erected at the
village of Peenemde in northeastern Germany on the Baltic Sea, with
Dornberger as the military commander and Braun as the technical
director. Liquid-fueled rocket aircraft and jet-assisted takeoffs
were successfully demonstrated, and the long-range ballistic missile
A-4 and the supersonic anti-aircraft missile Wasserfall were developed.
The A-4 was designated by the Propaganda Ministry as V-2, meaning
Vengeance Weapon 2.
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