When Cuba joined the Intercosmos Program of the socialist countries in the mid-1960s, the great educational and scientific reform taking place at that time in the country had hardly begun to bear fruit. But when, a decade later, the Soviet Union offered all the participant countries the chance to make use of its space vehicles and related installations so that their cosmonauts could carry out original scientific experiments in space, the situation had changed radically in Cuba. In a short time around 200 people already involved in scientific and technological activities succeeded in designing and setting up—in close collaboration with various Soviet, East German and Bulgarian institutions—some 20 scientific experiments that were to be carried out in orbit around the earth during the joint Soviet-Cuban space flight of September 18–26, 1980. Those experiments, and a further one that was also set up for the same space flight—but carried out during a later flight, as mentioned below—are historically important since they were the first in their class to be carried out by humans in space under microgravity conditions.
CITATION STYLE
Altshuler, J., Calzadilla Amaya, O., Falcon, F., Fuentes, J. E., Lodos, J., & Vigil Santos, E. (2014). Cuban Techno-physical Experiments in Space. In Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science (Vol. 304, pp. 295–300). Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-8041-4_14
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