Meet the Massive Mig 105 Hypersonic Soviet Space Interceptor

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Meet the Massive Mig 105 Hypersonic Soviet Space Interceptor

Ever wondered about the Soviet Union's secret weapon in the space race? The Mig-105 Hypersonic Soviet Space Interceptor is a massive product of Cold War engineering and innovation made by the Soviet's Airforce. In the nineteen-sixties, this space craft was developed as a response to Dyna-soar, a US Airforce Program.

In this video, we'll be looking at the features of this cool space interceptor and the series of events that were associated with it. Stay tuned.

Back in the Cold War days, the US and the Soviet Union were locked in this intense rivalry. They were all about outdoing each other, especially when it came to new technology in aviation. They were pushing the limits of what was possible, coming up with all sorts of wild ideas. Some of them worked out great, but others didn't make it out because of tech issues or running out of cash.

The Soviets, especially, weren't afraid to think big. They had some seriously impressive designs, like the MiG-105. Calling it just an aircraft feels off in a way. It was more like they were aiming for something with a spaceship feeling. In the middle of the 1960s, the Soviet Ministry of Aviation Industry and the MiG design bureau teamed up to work on something seriously cool – the MiG-105. It is also called the Spiral. Their goal was to create a spacecraft that could do some serious recon and military stuff, both in suborbital and orbital missions.
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So folks! what do you think about this Massive Soviet space interceptor? Share your thoughts down below?

thespacetales
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Retractable cone on top was copied from Noguchi of early 1940s Hamgyong since reentry heat would have exceeded Curie Point

thomasciarlariello
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Like the way when the Soviets use our idea its stolen when America does it its borrowed

chrishilbilly
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Such a lifting body spacecraft had retractable cone on top to focus lens cosmic ray muons for muon catalyzed fusion since reentry heat would have exceeded Curie Point to loos magnetism and of course Soviets in of fall of 1945 pillaged Hamgyong so later Alvarez was credited only after United Nations Peacekeepers had returned from ruins of Hamgyong once a "Panmunjom Peace Village Ceasefire Treaty" was signed between North and South Korea.

I have MIT peer review endorsement of how Alvarez of 1957 and Sakharov of 1946 copied muon catalyzed fusion from Noguchi of early 1940s Hamhung Hamgyong who achieved muon catalyzed fusion rocket propulsion so my MIT Colleague Dr. Mithcell Swartz phoned me to say I should take Jerome Drexler to court for patents plagiarized.

thomasciarlariello