American physicist Robert H. Goddard is considered the father of modern rocketry. In 1926, he launched the first rocket powered by liquid fuel. It flew for less than three seconds, climbed barely 13 feet, and landed in a nearby cabbage patch on his aunt Effie’s farm. Despite these modest results, it was a huge achievement that launched modern rocket science.
In the 1950s, the federal government began developing rockets for military use based on one of Goddard’s designs. Later, it expanded its rocketry research to include space exploration. NASA engineers designed the Saturn V rocket to send astronauts to the moon, and it did just that in 1969.
To reach the moon, the Saturn V had an even more complicated design than earlier rockets. Engineers added rocket boosters that detached from the main rocket after their fuel was used up. This design was used through the 1970s. Today, NASA launches uncrewed spacecraft with the Atlas V rocket, which is smaller and wider than the Saturn V. It’s currently developing a new rocket called the Space Launch System for deep space missions with a human crew. This will be more powerful than the Saturn V.
In recent years, private companies have also been pursuing space exploration. Founded in 2002, SpaceX has been one of the most successful. Its Falcon 9 rocket routinely sends cargo to the International Space Station, a science lab in orbit 250 miles above Earth. After the successful test of the Falcon Heavy rocket in February, SpaceX is now updating the design with the new data. It also has plans for the Big Falcon Rocket. That rocket is capable of carrying a payload more than twice as heavy as the Falcon Heavy’s. SpaceX hopes it will be able to get people and all their cargo to Mars and back.