Konstantin Tsiolkovsky

@Russian-soviet Rocket Scientist, Timeline and Childhood

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky was a Russian rocket scientist and a pioneer of astronautics

Sep 17, 1857

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 17, 1857
  • Died on: September 19, 1935
  • Nationality: Russian
  • Famous: Russian-soviet Rocket Scientist, Scientists
  • Spouses: Varvara Yevgrafovna Sokolovaya (m. 1880)
  • Siblings: Aleksandr Tsiolkovsky, Boris Tsiolkovsky, Dmitriy Tsiolkovsky, Ignatiy Tsiolkovsky, Iosif Tsiolkovsky, Mariya Lyubimova, Yekaterina Tsiolkovskaya
  • Known as: Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky born at

Izhevskoye, Ryazan Governorate

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Birth Place

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky had devoted his entire life to science and technology, but his work was not acknowledged until much later in life. In 1918, he was made a member of the ‘Socialist Academy.’ He worked as a school teacher until the age of 63. Since 1921, he was put on a pension scheme.

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Personal Life

Only toward the mid-1920s did the Russian government begin to understand the genius that he was. Soon, the government provided financial backing to his research. He became highly popular in Russia by 1931, when popular science-fiction writers began mentioning his name as one of their key inspirations.

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Personal Life

Konstantin died on September 19, 1935, due to the complications arising from stomach cancer.

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Personal Life

Konstantin Tsiolkovsky was born on September 17, 1857, in Izhevskoye, present-day Spassky, in the Russian Empire, into a middle-class family. He was the fifth of the 18 children in the Polish immigrant family. His father, Edward, was a teacher, forester, and a minor government employee. His mother was a homemaker.

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Childhood & Early Life

Konstantin’s childhood was not too easy. At the age of 10, he suffered from scarlet fever, which was regarded as a life-threatening disease back then. He recovered, but his sense of hearing was affected, and he became deaf. This made it difficult for him to pay attention in school. As a result, he resorted to homeschooling. To make things worse for him, his mother passed away when he was just 13 years old.

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Childhood & Early Life

He studied almost all the basic subjects. Being homeschooled gave him enough time to study several books on topics that interested him greatly. He became increasingly addicted to reading books related to physics and mathematics. During his teenage years, he started fantasizing about space travel and believed that if humans ever colonized space, it would lead to immortality and a carefree existence.

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Childhood & Early Life

Konstantin was almost always reading books and working on his theories, which had his father worried about his future and well-being. His father thought that Konstantin, being deprived of formal education, would not be able to make enough money for himself and his family. At the age of 19, Konstantin moved back to his paternal house.

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Childhood & Early Life

Konstantin then moved to the small town of Borovsk and started working as a school teacher. Around the same time, he met Varvara Sokolova and got married to her soon after. Soon, he was sent to another school in Kaluga, and he remained there for the rest of his life. His little home there became the center of a number of scientific achievements that would later be known to the entire world.

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Childhood & Early Life

Initially, Konstantin was interested in the philosophical aspects of space travel, as the concept seemed very impractical at that time. He often wrote science-fiction stories, where he elaborately mentioned designs for rockets, space stations, and airlocks, which could be crucial for humans exiting their spaceships and entering the vacuum of space.

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Achievements

One of the very first of his scientific theories dates back to 1880, when he published a paper titled ‘Theory of Gases.’ His paper focused on the kinetic theory of gases, but it was rejected by the ‘Russian Physico-Chemical Society’ on the basis of research made years before Konstantin came up with his theory. His second paper, ‘The Mechanics of the Animal Organism,’ made him a member of the society.

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Achievements

In 1883, he published a paper that explored the effects of zero gravity in space. After 1884, Konstantin concentrated all his attention on airships and rockets for future interplanetary travel. In the late 19th century, he devoted a lot of his time to the development of an all-metal airship balloon, which could be expanded or shrunk upon requirement. At the same time, he worked on developing the first all-Russian wind tunnel.

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Achievements

In 1903, he came up with the research paper ‘The Exploration of Cosmic Space by Means of Reaction Devices,’ which was published in ‘The Science Review.’ Konstantin then published several other articles, which collectively became the first-ever scientific research study that solely dealt with realistic space explorations.

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Achievements

Konstantin made the path-breaking discovery that spaceships could be fueled by liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen. Liquid hydrogen had only been discovered a few years prior to the paper being published. His proposed design is the one used in current space rockets. He suggested that a rocket must have three parts and that the pilot and the co-pilot must sit in the first compartment. He further suggested that the remaining two parts should contain liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, to push the first compartment into space.

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Achievements

Apart from science fiction, Konstantin had an interest in philosophy and advocated the philosophy of panpsychism in his book ‘The Will of the Universe. The Unknown Intelligence.’ He believed that someday, humans would be able to colonize the Milky Way using their technological advancement.

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Other Works