Nikolai Rynin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nikolai Alexsevitch Rynin (December 23, 1887–1942) was a Russian civil engineer, teacher, aerospace researcher, author, historian, and promoter of space travel.
He began his career in civil engineering, working in the railway industry. However in 1906 he developed an interest in aircraft and manned flight. During his career he performed research in aeronautics, became a balloonist and aircraft pilot, taught aerospace topics as a professor in Leningrad, and wrote various books and articles on airplanes and space travel.
In the April 1918 issue of the Byloye magazine, Rynin published Nikolai Kibalchich's description of a manned, rocket-propelled ship. Between 1928 and 1932 he published a nine-volume encyclopedia of space travel called the Mezhplanetnye Soobschniya ("Interplanetary Communications"). He is known to have corresponded with peers in the West, including Robert H. Goddard, concerning Russian rocketry activities.
Rynin crater on the Moon is named for him.
[edit] Interplanetary Communications
Rynin's encyclopedia contains the following nine volumes:
- Dreams, Legends, and Early Fantasies
- Spacecraft in Science Fiction
- Radiant Energy: Science Fiction and Scientific Projects
- Rockets
- Theory of rocket propulsion
- Superaviation and superartillery
- K. E. Tsiolkoviskii; life, writings, and rockets
- Theory of space flight
- Astronavigation; theory, annals, bibliography, index.
They are available in english from NASA as follows:
- Rynin, N.A. Interplanetary Flight and Communication. Washington, D.C.: NASA and NSF, 1970-71. (NASA TT F-640, TT F-642 through TT F-648) (Holdings: Vol. 1, Nos. 1 and 3; Vol. II, Nos. 4 and 6, Vol. III, Nos. 7, 8 and 9).
[edit] References
- B. F. Tarasov, Nikolai Rynin and Russia's Beginnings in Aerospace, translated by John Decker, 2000.