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Canadian University Principal Proposed Rocket Spaceflight In 1861, Historian Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2015 12:55 PM
    BURLINGTON, Ont. — A space historian says a Canadian university principal proposed rocket-based spaceflight 30 years earlier than previously thought.
     
    Historian Robert Godwin says William Leitch of Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., accurately described the concept of rocket-based spaceflight in 1861.
     
    Previous histories of spaceflight have maintained that the first scientific proposal of rocket-powered space travel came at the end of the 19th century by Russian Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and by American Robert Goddard.
     
    Both claimed Jules Verne as their inspiration, but Godwin says Leitch published his thoughts four years before Verne's famous "space gun."
     
    Godwin's findings were published Sunday in "The First Scientific Concept of Rockets for Space Travel."
     
    Godwin says Leitch was a scientist and understood Newton's law of action and reaction, and predicted that a rocket would work more efficiently in the vacuum of space.

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    Tension Rises At Conservative Event As Duffy Questions Continue On Campaign

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    Field Guide Highlights Edible Seaweeds On West Coast, Explains Why They Smell

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    Shallow, Magnitude 4.4 Earthquake Lightly Felt In Northeastern British Columbia

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    Drought-Stressed B.C. Timber Could Face Threat From Hungry Bark Beetles

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