I shall assume you mean mass. 83.6Kg. or 184.3Lb.
No, the Russian's Sputnik was unmanned.
Sputnik is Russian, and it means something like "travelling companion". It became the name for an early series of articifial satellites.
Sputnik is typically silver or metallic in color.
Sputnik Caledonia was created in 2008.
It means it was the first sputnik.
the 2 in Sputnik 2 means it is the second to be built.
Not an English word-closest match, sputnik, soviet satellite.
I think you mean "Sputnik", but anyways, Sputnik 1 was a satellite launched from Soviet Russia on the 4th of October in 1957.
The unique thing concerning the Sputnik 2 (compared to previous Sputnik 1 satellite) was the fact it carried the first living being into other space - a dog named Laika. "Laika" translates to English as "Barker".
Yes, the Soviet satellite called Sputnik in the English-speaking world was visible in the US, and many people went out at night to try to spot it.
Russian is the language of origin for the word sputnik. The word in question functions as a noun whose translation into English generally is as "companion". "co-traveler," or "fellow traveler." But regardless of meaning or use, the pronunciation remains "spuht-nihk" in Russian.
I shall assume you mean mass. 83.6Kg. or 184.3Lb.
Because the Sputnik program ended with Sputnik 3. Albeit there was a Sputnik 40 and 41 but these were to commemorate the 40th anniversary of Sputnik 1.
In Russian, the word 'Sputnik' is translated to the English word 'Satellite'.The actual name of the SATELLITE was 'Vostok' or 'Vostok 3KA'.
The book was written by Mark Twain. It has 24 pages in the Createspace version. The Aeon hardcover version has 40 pages.
sputnik