The first living organism that was projected from Earth to space was the fruitfly. They have very similar internal organs to humans and scientsts used them to test the g-force of take-off. Even now scientists still experiment on fruit flies because they reproduce so quickly and their internal organs are so similar to that of humans.
The first mammal in space was a Rhesus monkey named Albert II, launched by the US on 14 June 1949 in a captured German V-2 rocket. His rocket reached an altitude of 134 Km but he died on impact after a parachute failed during the return to Earth.
The first mammal to orbit the earth was the dog Laika on November 3 1957 in the Soviet satellite Sputnik 2. which was not designed for her retrieval. Unfortunately Laikia died about six hours after launch. The satellite stayed in orbit for 2570 orbits over a period of about 5 months, and burned up on reentry.
Yuri Garguin, Russia, first human to go into space, and to make a complete orbit of the Earth.
Alan Shepard, American, first American to go into space and made a suborbital flight.
Gus Grissom, American, 2nd American in space, made a suborbital flight (did not orbit all the way around the Earth).
John Glen, American, 3d American in space, made an complete orbit of the planet Earth.
Flies were the first living creatures launched into space
Laika, the dog was the first mammal sent into space. Her food was in jelly form. She was Russian, and died within hours of the mission. The soviets told the story that she was going to be up in space for weeks, but the world was shocked after a few hours of the mission. She died because she was far past overheated, even thought there was a fan that provided cool air.
The first animals to be sent into space intentionally (not including any viruses or microbes on any of the surfaces of previous space launches) were fruit flies. These were onboard a v2 rocket, sent into space in 1947.The first mammal in space was a rhesus monkey called albert 2, which was also sent in a v2 rocket on June 14 1949.
Yuri Gagarin was the first human both sent to space and also to orbit the Earth.
Neil Armstrong and some other people. Also Russia were the first people that sent something up to space because they sent a dog but that dog died when it came up to space.
the first program to send Americans into space was called "project mercury"
Nothing at all. There is no such thing as a "space tornado". Tornadoes are whirling AIR masses, and there's no air in space. But if you are referering to a wormhole or a black hole then the Earth would probably get sent through the wormhole to the phonomenom's destination.
The United States.The Space Shuttle is the first reusable orbitalspacecraft.The first craft to exceed 100 km (about 60 miles) in altitude was the experimental X-15 aircraft in 1959, also created by the United States. The capsule from the unmanned Gemini 2 test mission was reused for the also unmanned test flight of the Air Force's Manned Orbital Laboratory in 1966.
it was a dog
dog
Animals were the first living thing in space.
Laika was a mixed-breed dog, specifically a Soviet space dog, who became the first living being sent into space by the Soviet Union in 1957.
The first living thing deliberately sent by humans into space was the dog Laika (a stray taken from the streets of Moscow) aboard Sputnik 2 which was launched on November 3, 1957.
The first thing sent into outer space was a satellite
the first thing is go to space is satellite
The second living thing sent to space was a dog named Laika. Laika was a Soviet space dog who became the first animal to orbit the Earth aboard Sputnik 2 in 1957. Unfortunately, Laika did not survive the mission.
The first thing sent into space was a rocket. The V-2 rocket, developed by Germany during World War II, was launched into space in October 1942.
The first living thing to be launched into space in 1960 was a dog named Laika on the Soviet spacecraft Sputnik 2. Laika became the first animal to orbit Earth in space, but unfortunately, she did not survive the mission.
Explorer 1, a small space probe.
The first living things in space were fruit flies named Albert I and II, sent by the United States in launched in June 1947 as part of a series of high-altitude balloon flights.