Object Details
Manufacturer
Dr. Robert H. Goddard
Summary
American rocket pioneer Robert Goddard (1882-1945) and his graduate students used this object between 1924 and 1928 in their experiments to determine the feasibility of ion propulsion for space travel. Ion engines, in which electrically charged particles of atoms are discharged, produce extremely high exhaust velocities. But the first U.S. experiments in space with ion propulsion took place in 1964.
This device may have been made by one of Goddard's graduate students, Louis M. Sleeper. According to 1964 observations by Russell B. Hastings, a former graduate student who helped Goddard in his ion experiments, "a large tube[,] this was probably used to produce 'clouds' of ions rather than directed beams of ions." Mrs. Goddard gave this artifact to the Smithsonian in 1965 as part of a set of laboratory glassware from her husband's pioneering ion-propulsion experiments.
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Robert Goddard
Inventory Number
A19650295000
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Type
INSTRUMENTS-Scientific
Materials
Glass; with copper wires in the larger of the glass tubes; all of the tube pieces originally connected by red sealing wax; clumps of the wax now adherred to the different (three) broken-off parts of this glass tube assembly.
Dimensions
3-D (One): 13.3 x 3.2cm (5 1/4 x 1 1/4 in.)
3-D (Two): 9.5 x 1.6cm (3 3/4 x 5/8 in.)
3-D (Three): 11.4 x 1.6cm (4 1/2 x 5/8 in.)
Country of Origin
United States of America
See more items in
National Air and Space Museum Collection
Data Source
National Air and Space Museum
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nasm_A19650295000