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On algebraic compilers and planetary fly-by orbits
Authors:Richard H Battin
Institution:

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

Abstract:This paper reports on two major technology events of great significance in the field of Astronautics which were conceived and developed at the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory during the decade of the fifties. It is a personal memoir by the author on two important topics which should be a part of the written history of our field.Part one details the conception and development by Dr J. Halcombe Laning, Jr of “George”, the world's first algebraic compiler for use on Project Whirlwind—MIT's first experimental all-digital computer. This was indeed challenging since Whirlwind at that time had but 1024 sixteen-bit words. Dr Laning began work in the summer of 1952 and the first version of the George compiler was finished in March of 1953.In the early fifties many people were debating the feasibility of a system for translating algebraic formulae into computer programs which would allow the engineer to avoid the all too painstaking and error-prone task of writing programs using basic computer code. But Hal Laning was the first to do it.In part two of this paper, the author explores the early concepts of energy exchange between a spacecraft and a planet during a close encounter of these two celestial objects. The fact that this energy transfer could be exploited for useful purposes in the development of interplanetary orbits was first documented in an MIT Instrumentation Laboratory report published in April of 1958. The topic has been the subject of recent papers at several IAF congresses, but they failed to recognize the early work at MIT. As a part of this important history, the author describes his own work to develop a round-trip orbit to Mars using the planet Venus for a gravity assist to shorten the flight time from three years to one and a quarter years. The first orbit of this type was obtained by the author on 26 January 1961. To the author's knowledge, no one has even suggested that practical three-dimensional multiple fly-by orbits had been constructed at an earlier date.
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