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(单词翻译)
VOICE ONE:
This is Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Shirley Griffith with the VOA Special English program, EXPLORATIONS. Today, we report on
some of the early research in the development of rockets. We tell the story of American physicist1 and rocket
scientist Robert Hutchings Goddard.
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
Robert Goddard once said that "the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of
tomorrow." It was his scientific work that gave hope to many of our dreams about space ...
and then turned them into reality.
Robert Goddard's many studies and tests in the early Nineteen-Hundreds led to the first
rocket. Then he developed rockets with more than one engine. Each engine pushed the rocket
higher and higher out of Earth's atmosphere. His ideas are still used today. So, in a way, every rocket that flies
today is a Goddard rocket.
VOICE TWO:
Robert Goddard was far ahead of his time. Orville and Wilbur Wright made the first
controlled airplane flight at Kitty Hawk2, North Carolina, in Nineteen-Oh -Three. Other
scientists and inventors after that experimented with planes. But Robert Goddard wanted
to make a machine that flew in a different way from a plane. He called his first two
designs, "rocket apparatus3."
Goddard developed and flew many rockets that got their power from solid fuels -chemicals
made hard. Then, in Nineteen-Twenty-Five, he made and tested the first rocket
engine using a soft chemical fuel. In Nineteen-Twenty-Six, he successfully fired the world's first liquid-fuel
rocket.
Many historians4 consider that rocket flight as important as the first airplane flight by the Wright
brothers. Goddard's work proved that machines could travel out of Earth's atmosphere, into
space.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE ONE:
Robert Hutchings Goddard was born in Worcester, in the state of Massachusetts, in Eighteen-
Eighty-Two. His father knew a lot about machines. When Robert was a child, his family moved
With the first
liquid fuel to Boston, Massachusetts. There his father became a part owner of a business that made knives
rocket, holding for different machines.
launch stand.
(Photo NASA/
Goddard Robert was the only child. His mother suffered from the lung disease tuberculosis5. She was sick
Space Flight and weak, because at that time, there were no medicines to treat tuberculosis successfully.
Center)
Robert, too, was often sick. He could not keep up with his school work. His family moved back to Worcester
when he was seventeen. He was almost too old to remain in high school. Yet he was behind other children his
age. He was not a good student. He hated mathematics. This subject, of course, was what would help make him
famous later.
VOICE TWO:
One beautiful autumn day, Robert was sitting in a tree in the back of his house. He was reading a book by British
author H. G. Wells. The book was called War of the Worlds. Something strange happened to him. He later
thought that perhaps Wells' book had something to do with it.
"As I looked toward the fields in the east," he said, "I imagined how wonderful it would be to make something
that could rise to the planet Mars6. I imagined how this thing, in a small size, would look if sent up from the
ground at my feet. I was a different boy when I came down from that tree. For, at last, my life seemed to have
some purpose."
VOICE ONE:
Robert Goddard never talked much about what happened to him up in the tree on that day, October Nineteenth.
But he celebrated7 October Nineteenth as a holiday for the rest of his life. On that day, he had formed the idea of
making something that would go higher then anything had ever gone before.
He felt this was the whole purpose of his life. He was sure he could do it.
"I know," he said, "the first thing I must do is to get an education, especially in mathematics. Yes, I must become
an expert in mathematics, even if I hate it.
"
VOICE TWO:
Two years passed before Robert was healthy enough to go back to school. He entered South High School in
Worcester. He worked and worked until he no longer hated mathematics.
Robert's father spent all his money to care for his sick wife. He did not have enough to pay for Robert's education
after high school. Robert got financial help from others so he could go to a technical school in Worcester.
There he had very good teachers. They helped him become an expert in mathematics and physics.
VOICE ONE:
Robert completed his studies at the Worcester Polytechnic8 Institute and became a teacher of physics there. He
also continued his studies at Clark University.
He began to develop the idea of multiple-stage rockets. These were rockets with more than one engine. Each
engine would push the rocket higher and higher. The power for the rockets would come from burning two gases,
hydrogen and oxygen.
After one year at Clark University, Robert went to Princeton College in New Jersey9 to do more studies on
rockets.
VOICE TWO:
"Often," he said, "I worked all through the night. At last I learned how to send a rocket higher than anything had
ever gone before. But the work was too much for me. I was feeling sick again. I had to stop my work and go to
a
doctor.
"X-rays showed that, like my mother, I was very sick with tuberculosis. The doctor said I had just two weeks to
live. He put me in bed for a long rest. But I meant to live. I told myself I could not die. I had work to do.
"
VOICE ONE:
At the end of two weeks, Robert Goddard was still alive. In time, he started to work again.
In October, Nineteen-Thirteen, Goddard completed plans for his first rocket. In May of the next year, he
completed plans for another rocket. These two plans are the first ever made for a rocket that would carry people
into space. In Nineteen-Fourteen, he received two patents from the United States government to protect his rights
to his inventions.
((MUSIC BRIDGE))
VOICE TWO:
Robert Goddard received money from the Smithsonian Institution to help him continue his work. In Nineteen Nineteen,
the Smithsonian published several of his reports explaining his research. The publication was called "A
Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes." It told about his search for methods of raising weather recording10
instruments higher than balloons could go. It told about how he developed the mathematical theories of rockets.
In the report, Goddard also noted11 the possibility of a rocket reaching the moon. There was a big dispute in the
press about the possibility of this. Many people thought he was foolish for suggesting such an impossible thing.
VOICE ONE:
Goddard continued to need money to continue his research. The world famous pilot Charles Lindbergh helped
him get money from the Guggenheim Foundation.
Goddard quickly began to work on plans for bigger rockets. During the Nineteen-Thirties, he tested his rockets at
a research center in Roswell, New Mexico. He tested the first rocket controlled by electricity. The control
equipment was three-hundred meters from the place of launching. He also tested the first rocket controlled by a
gyroscope. Gyroscopes help keep rockets aimed in the right direction.
VOICE TWO:
Goddard did all his work in the United States, yet his work became known around the world. Scientists in
Germany used his ideas to help build the V-Two rocket that was used in World War Two.
During World War Two, Goddard helped the United States Navy develop some rocket motors and ways to
launch jet planes. He continued work he had begun at the end of World War One that led to the bazooka, a
weapon that fires small rockets.
VOICE ONE:
Robert Goddard died in Ninety-Forty-Five of cancer. He was sixty-three years old. He had been sick most of his
life, but he died a happy man. He received many honors for his work. He believed his life had been a full one. He
felt lucky that the great dream that came to him, out of nowhere, when he was only seventeen years old had
become real.
VOICE TWO:
Robert Goddard received a special honor many years after his death. In Nineteen-Fifty-Nine, the United States
established the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, near Washington, D-C. It was the
government's first major scientific laboratory used completely for space science.
The Goddard Space Flight Center honors the man whose work proved that machines could travel out of Earth's
atmosphere, into space.
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
This is Steve Ember.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Shirley Griffith. Listen again next week at this time to the Special English program,
EXPLORATIONS, on the Voice of America.
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1 physicist | |
n.物理学家,研究物理学的人 | |
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2 hawk | |
n.鹰,骗子;鹰派成员 | |
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3 apparatus | |
n.装置,器械;器具,设备 | |
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4 historians | |
n.历史学家,史学工作者( historian的名词复数 ) | |
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5 tuberculosis | |
n.结核病,肺结核 | |
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6 Mars | |
n.火星,战争 | |
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7 celebrated | |
adj.有名的,声誉卓著的 | |
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8 polytechnic | |
adj.各种工艺的,综合技术的;n.工艺(专科)学校;理工(专科)学校 | |
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9 jersey | |
n.运动衫 | |
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10 recording | |
n.录音,记录 | |
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11 noted | |
adj.著名的,知名的 | |
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