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Rockets and Missiles

Air and Space Museum

The rocket, a reaction-propulsion device that carries all of its propellants internally, has been around for almost a millennium since its invention in China. But the twentieth-century saw a technological explosion of new rocket-propulsion systems, using both solid and liquid propellants. Rocket-powered vehicles were developed for two primary purposes: spaceflight and weaponry. Guided missiles also appeared in the mid-twentieth century with air-breathing propulsion systems, and these are included in the National Air and Space Museum’s Rockets and Missiles collection. Among its highlights are: the world’s best collection of artifacts from American rocket pioneer Robert Goddard, an extensive collection of German World War II missile and rocket artifacts, a large number of American Cold War missiles and launch vehicles, and rocket engines from small thrusters to a gigantic F-1 motor from the Saturn V Moon rocket.


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Filter Settings

Included:

  • Remove Resource Type: Testing equipment close

Flow Indicator, Liquid Oxygen, Rocket Engine, R.H. Goddard

Flask, Liquid Oxygen, R.H. Goddard

Flask, Liquid Oxygen, R.H. Goddard

Carrier, Liquid Oxygen Flasks, R.H. Goddard

Scale, Fish, to Measure Rocket Thrust, Cleve H. Shaffer Experiments

Ion Propulsion Test Tube, R. H. Goddard

Ion Propulsion Test Tube, R. H. Goddard

Ion Propulsion Test Tube, R.H. Goddard

Ion Propulsion Test Tube, R.H. Goddard

Ion Propulsion Test Tube, R. H. Goddard

Ion propulsion test tubes, Robert H. Goddard

Electrodes, ion-propulsion test, R.H. Goddard

Box, Magnesium Powder Experiment, R.H. Goddard

Rocket Test Stand No. 2, American Rocket Society (ARS)

Launcher, Rocket, Solid-Fuel, Test Vehicle, Little Joe II

Gyrostat, Gyroscope Testing Device for Rockets, 1929

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