Jump to content

Valentin Glushko

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Paul Drye (talk | contribs) at 00:55, 23 June 2006 (Removed some Dept. of Redundancy Department phrasing....). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

File:200px-Glushko Valentin Petrovich.jpg
Valentin Glushko

Valentin Petrovich Glushko (born September 2, 1908 in Odessa, Ukraine, died January 10, 1989) was a Soviet engineer of Ukrainian descent, and one of the three principal Soviet "Chief Designers" (along with Vladimir Chelomei and Sergei Korolev) of spacecraft and rockets during the Soviet/American Space Race.

Biography

His father was Ukrainian and his mother worked as a nurse. At the age of 13 he became interested in aeronautics after reading novels by Jules Verne. He is known to have written a letter to Konstantin Tsiolkovsky in 1923. He studied at an Odessa trade school, where he learned to be a sheet metal worker. After graduation he apprenticed at a hydraulics fitting plant. He was first trained as a fitter, then moved to lathe operator.

During his time in Odessa, Glushko performed experiments with explosives. These were recovered from unexploded artillery shells that had been left behind by the White Guards during their retreat. From 1924-25 he wrote articles concerning the exploration of the Moon, as well as the use of Tsiolokovsky's proposed engines for space flight.

He attended Leningrad State University where he studied physics and mathematics, but found the specialty programs were not to his interest. He reportedly left without graduating in April, 1929. From 1929-1930 he pursued rocket research at the Gas Dynamics Laboratory. A new research section was apparently set up for the study of liquid-propellant and electric engines. He became a member of the G.I.R.D. (Group for the study of Rocket Propulsion Systems), founded in Leningrad in 1931.

On March 23, 1938 he became caught up in Stalin's Great Terror and was rounded up by the NKVD, to be placed in the Butyrka prison. By August 15, 1939 he was sentenced to eight years in the Gulag. Despite his supposed imprisonment, however, Glushko was put to work on various aircraft projects with other arrested scientists. In 1941 he was placed in charge of a design bureau for liquid-fueled rocket engines. He was finally released in 1944 by special decree.

At the end of World War II, Glushko was sent to Germany and Eastern Europe to study the German rocket program. In 1946 he became the chief designer of his own bureau, the OKB 456, and remained at this position until 1974. This bureau would play a prominent role in the development of rocket engines within the Soviet Union.

His OKB 456 would design the 35-metric ton thrust RD-101 engine used in the R-2, the 120-ton thrust RD-110 employed in the R-3, and the 44-ton thrust RD-103 used in the R-5 (SS-3 Shyster). The R-7 would include four of Glushko's RD-107 engines and one RD-108. In 1954 he began to design engines for the R-12 (SS-4 Sandal), which had been designed by Mikhail Yangel'. He also became responsible for supplying rocket engines for Sergei Korolev, the designer of the R-9 (SS-8 Sasin). Among his designs was the powerful RD-170 liquid propellant engine.

In 1974, following the successful American Moon landings, Brezhnev decided to cancel the troubled Russian program to send a man to the Moon. He fired Vasily Mishin and placed Glushko in charge of the OKB-1, Korolev's former design bureau, later named NPO Energia. Glushko's first act was to cancel the N-1 rocket, a program he had long criticized.

Glushko was an advocate of a new line of powerful launchers that he wanted to use for the establishment of a Russian lunar base. However the American Apollo program was coming to an end at about that time, and the government wanted to build a competitor to the Space Shuttle.

After his death, his obituary was signed by multiple Communist Party leaders, including Mikhail Gorbachev. It was only following his death that Glushko's efforts became known to most of the Russian populace.

For many years had Glushko worked in Korolev's shadow, and certainly never received the credit he deserved (at the time) for his contributions. His personality was reputed to be bull-headed, and he never lacked for an ego.

Perhaps his most significant engineering failure, as noted by the division chief Yuri Demyanko, was his insistence that hydrogen was unsuitable for use as a rocket fuel. As a result the Russian space program were still discussing the use of hydrogen-fueled engines while the American's were assembling the Saturn V launcher. Also, Glushko's design bureau consistently failed at building a rocket engine with a large combustion chamber to rival the American F1 used on the Saturn V. This was a primary reason for the failure of the N1 which was forced to rely on a multitude of smaller engines for propulsion. Glushko never did overcome the combustion instability problems of large rocket motors; his eventual solution for this is seen on the RD-170 which is basically four smaller combustion chamber/nozzle assemblies sharing common fuel delivery systems. This elegant solution and engine gave the Soviets the large thrust propulsion needed to build the Energia superbooster, and is probably the finest technical example of Glushko's abilities when he was at his best. The fact that he never developed this solution until the firing of Mishin and his his gaining ultimate control of the entire Soviet space program is a testament to the paralyzing intrigue and in-fighting that went on within the Soviet effort to reach the moon.

Bibliography

  • V. P. Glushko and G. Langemak, Rockets, Their Construction and Application, 1935.
  • Glushko, V. P., Rocket Engines GDL-OKB, Novosti Publishing House, Moscow, 1975.

Honors

References

  • Hanford, James, Korolev: How One Man Mastermined the Soviet Drive to Beat America to the Moon, 1997, John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 0-471-14853-9.