AFP
Published:07 Apr 2021, 12:33 PM
From Sputnik-1 to Sputnik V: Russian scientific achievements
Russia
boasts a rich history of scientific invention across a wide variety of fields,
from the Sputnik satellite to the coronavirus vaccine of the same name.
On the 60th anniversary of Soviet cosmonaut
Yuri Gagarin becoming the first man in space, here are some of the country’s
most notable scientific and technological achievements:
– Sputnik satellite –
In one of the most significant modern
inventions, Russia launched the first artificial satellite on October 4, 1957.
At the time, the beep-beep sent back to
Earth from Sputnik-1 represented the start of the space race between the Soviet
Union and the United States during the Cold War.
Sent to space by an intercontinental
ballistic missile, which forced Washington to realise that Moscow would be able
to strike its territory.
The Soviets maintained their lead in the
initial years of the race. They boasted the first manned flight to space by
Gagarin on April 12, 1961, the first spacewalk four years later by Alexei
Leonov and the first lunar probe in 1966.
But the United States beat them to the moon
with the first manned landing in 1969.
– The AK-47 –
Ten years before Sputnik, Russia had
invented a more nefarious tool: the Kalashnikov assault rifle, also known as
the AK-47 and created by Soviet military engineer Mikhail Kalashnikov.
With some 100 million Kalashnikovs
currently in circulation, the weapon became ubiquitous globally for its low
price and reliability in harsh climates from frozen tundras to dusty Middle
Eastern environments.
The weapon also became a symbol of
struggles against colonisation and still adorns the flag of Mozambique, representing
the struggle for national sovereignty.
– Tetris and Kaissa –
Less deadly was Russia’s invention of
Tetris, though it is just as popular around the world.
The tile-matching video game was thought up
in 1984 by software engineer Alexei Pajitnov, whose stated ambition was to make
people happy through computers.
Russia also used software to revolutionise
an existing game: chess.
The chess powerhouse, which as the Soviet
Union held the world title from 1948 to 1972, invented the chess computer
programme Kaissa that won the world computer chess championship in 1974.
– Hypersonic weapons –
But the bread and butter of Russia’s
inventions has long been military technology.
Most recently Russia has led the way, it
has claimed, in developing hypersonic missiles that can go faster than the
speed of sound, which would render existing missile defence technology useless.
Vladimir Putin in 2018 unveiled a nuclear
hypersonic missile system dubbed Avangard that he described as “invulnerable”.
The Russian president said its creation
represented a technological breakthrough comparable to the launch of Sputnik.
– Sputnik V vaccine –
Harkening back to Sputnik even more recently,
Russia registered the world’s first coronavirus vaccine, which it named Sputnik
V, in August 2020 in the midst of the world’s worst pandemic in a century.
Although the move triggered criticism both
at home and abroad over the fast-track procedure, a leading medical journal
later said it is safe and highly effective.
The vaccine has been registered for use in dozens of countries.