Author:
Krige John,Callahan Angelina Long,Maharaj Ashok
Reference22 articles.
1. Paul F. Langer, The Japanese Space Program: Political and Social Implications (Santa Monica, CA: Rand Corp., 1965), 1.
2. John K. Emmerson and Edwin O. Reischauer, Arms, Yen and Power: The Japanese Dilemma (New York: Dunellen, 1971), 321.
3. Ashi Shinbun, March 21, 1967, in Yasushi Sato, “A Contested Gift of Power: American Assistance to Japan’s Space Launch Vehicle Technology, 1965–1975,” Historia Scientarum 11:2 (November 2001), 180. It should be noted that ISS later came to play a major role in international collaboration. It was reorganized in 1981 into the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS). Since the early 1980s ISAS has been involved in many collaborative international projects involving the exchange of data, scientists, and occasionally instruments on spacecraft. Some of the successful cooperative programs include the 1986 encounter with Comet Halley (John M. Logsdon, “Missing Halley’s Comet: The Politics of Big Science,” Isis 80:2 (June 1989), 254–280, and the Japanese Solar-A mission launched in August 1991). A US-supplied soft X-ray telescope was one of its two major instruments. ISAS was also part of the International Solar Terrestrial Physics (ISTP) program.
4. John M. Logdson, “U.S.-Japanese Space Relations at a Crossroads,” Science 255 (January 17, 1992), 294–300, at 294, 297.
5. Takemi Chiku, “Japanese Space Policy in the Changing World,” MS thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1992.
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