Before humans traveled to space, several living organisms were sent on missions, including fruit flies, mice, and monkeys. Notably, in 1947, fruit flies became the first animals in space aboard a V-2 rocket. Monkeys, such as Albert II, were sent by the U.S. in the late 1940s and early 1950s, with Albert II being the first monkey to reach space in 1949. These early missions helped scientists study the effects of space travel on living organisms.
Voyager 1 and 2 visited the outer planets and went on into interstellar space.
challenger
no just space probes
i think that it went to mars or the culmination
Yes. your body would explode in space if you went unprotected. in-fact you will explode before you can suffocate. this because in space there is a Vacume that sucks up all the air.
space ships and satellites
no i don't think that b Aldrin ever went into space before he went to the moon
A dog I think, from Russsia.
The things i discovered in space wasthatthe moon is very rough!!
Yes, there have been a number of dogs sent into space during the early space pioneering days, mainly by the Russians to test out their equipment before risking humans. The most famous was Laika which was the first complex living organism in space in November 1957
Ten Things I Wish I'd Known Before I Went Out Into The Real World was created in 2000.
The first living thing to go into space during the space race was a dog named Laika. She was launched into space by the Soviet Union on November 3, 1957 aboard the Sputnik 2 spacecraft. Unfortunately, Laika did not survive the mission.
Christa McAuliffe taught at five different schools and then went into training to go into space.
She drinks olive oil before she goes on stage.
Valentina Tereshkova went to outer space to become the first woman to do so. It is also stated that before she went to outer space she spent every free minute skydiving and became a regional champion.
The first living creature to orbit the Earth was Laika, a Soviet space dog, who flew aboard Sputnik 2 in 1957.
A total of 32 animals, including monkeys, dogs, mice, fruit flies, and turtles, have been sent into space for scientific experiments and research purposes. These animals helped scientists study the effects of space travel on living organisms.