Chapter 714: Space Battle
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The German League was defeated in the Transcaucasian War, and Hitler had no strength to compete with the Chinese Empire in this regard, except for the courage to try his courage and urge the German army to sharpen their swords and prepare to win back face in the next Transcaucasian War. Pen, fun, pavilion www. biquge。 info
As early as the middle and late stages of World War II, when Nazi Germany was developing missile weapons on a large scale, the German army tried to launch a space offensive, and by building fortresses in space, it could attack any country on the earth.
This strategy was a very bold idea at the time, and it was completely feasible in theory, but it is a pity that Nazi Germany at that time, even if it had the intention to develop a space fortress, did not have the energy and money to invest. As the war worsened, Hitler had no choice but to abandon his space strategy.
But the end of World War II played out the same ending as in World War I, and Germany was preserved intact. Although Germany suffered the most damage in World War II, with the establishment of the German League, the economy recovered year by year, and in order to compete with the Chinese Empire for world domination, Hitler once again restarted the space program.
During the Cold War between the German Union and the Chinese Empire. The "space race" is a battlefield where the two superpowers display their technology, culture, and political skills without the risk of military conflict.
The Sino-German space war actually covered many battles from the Chinese Empire's first artificial Earth satellite, Zhonghua-1, in 1953 to the launch of Starship in the late 90s. During this period, the Moon became the focus of the "Space Race", and Mars became the first stop on the interstellar journey. The first human landing on the moon in 1965 brought the race to the top.
The Space Race is a three-in-one combination of cutting-edge technology, space theory and adequate funding. It takes a long time to accumulate. Even the Chinese Empire, which was poor and had only money left, had almost unlimited funds. It also had to be limited by the level of space theory and technology, and it was not until 1953 that the first artificial earth satellite was launched.
The Delian, which is extremely scarce in terms of funds and relatively backward in hardware technology, really has to tighten its belt if it wants to compete for space hegemony. However, the German Union has a huge advantage, that is, the scientific theories accumulated by Germany have always been in the leading position in the world, and the space technology has been perfected one step ahead of the Chinese Empire. This gave the Bundesa an early advantage in the space race.
Since World War II, the Chinese Empire and Germany have been engaged in a contest. Between 1941 and 1946, the two countries competed over their respective rocket know-how and the scientific theories of designing rockets. Even in the early days of this space battle game. The two sides have launched a race to build an arsenal of ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads. From 1950 to 1955, the focus was on who would be the first country to select an ICBM capable of hitting enemy territory. This is also a crucial step in the development of a carrier rocket and a demonstration of its space status. When orbital launches became possible, the two superpowers began to consider the role that satellites could play and began some basic research.
Since the German Union and the Chinese Empire were the only nuclear-armed states in the world, and both had built their own arsenals of nuclear weapons, the Council of International Scientific Unions, meeting in Shanghai in 1951, proposed a plan to launch an artificial satellite during the International Geophysical Year (July 1, 1952 to December 31, 1953). Only the Chinese Empire and the German Union accepted this challenge, and it also announced the official start of the Sino-German space hegemony.
On May 26, 1951, the National Security Bureau of the Chinese Empire approved a satellite project, and on July 29, the Emperor of the Chinese Empire, Wang Chenhao, officially announced the decision of the Chinese Empire to launch a satellite. At the same time, Hitler also addressed the Reichstag. It was announced that the German Union will also conduct space satellite tests in the near future.
Due to the fact that the Germans have a strong foundation in the field of space science, after the Sino-German space hegemony kicked off, the spokesman of the German Academy of Sciences and the chairman of the Interplanetary Research Committee was listed as the spokesman of the German Academy of Sciences. Sedov then announced to the world: "The German Union will be the first to launch a satellite, and it will be larger than the Chinese Empire."
Since the Chinese Empire planned to launch a satellite on a Ziyao Xingjun rocket in August 1952, it was speculated that the German Federation would also be in the autumn of the same year. Launch a satellite into the sky on Hitler's birthday.
But as it turned out, it was a planned date for both sides. However, the launch was later delayed due to problems with the Chinese Empire's Ziyao Xingjun C rocket. Delian's own hardware preparations were also insufficient, and the expected launch target of the satellite was also not achieved in the winter of the same year.
At the London Astronautical Congress in 1953, a British delegate asked the representative of the Chinese Empire: "Was the first person to go into space Chinese or German." The representative of the Chinese Empire replied with a smile: "Neither, the first astronaut will be a dog, of course the dog of the Chinese Empire!"
This news was widely publicized around the world, but it was not until the Chinese Empire actually conducted space life tests that the first person to go into space was not a Chinese purebred dog, but a Chinese purebred rabbit. When the spokesman of the Imperial Press asked by international reporters why it was not a dog but a rabbit, he replied with a smile: "This is because of the ancient myths of the Chinese Empire, Chang'e likes rabbits, so His Majesty the Emperor of the Chinese Empire gave her a purebred Chinese rabbit as a tribute." ”
In the first space race, on September 1, 1953, the Chinese Empire became the winner of the satellite race.
On June 29, the 53rd year of Guanghua, the Chinese Empire won the first battle of the space race, and the Chinese Emperor launched the first long-range intercontinental ballistic missile on the same day, as a gift for the National Day of the Chinese Empire on July 1. At 9:35 a.m. on September 1 of the same year, the Imperial Space Administration of China launched the first artificial earth satellite in human history, Zhonghua-1, using the Ziyao Xingjun B carrier rocket from the Mariana Space Satellite Launch Center. The satellite entered its scheduled orbit at a distance of 340 km from the Earth at 9:48 a.m.
The instrument compartment of the Zhonghua-1 satellite is equipped with a power supply, a radar transponder for orbit measurement, a radar beacon machine, a telemetry device, an electronic music generator and transmitter, and scientific test instruments. The satellite uses a silver-zinc battery as the power supply, but the battery life is limited, and after 50 days of satellite operation, the battery energy is exhausted, the national anthem of the Chinese Empire stops playing, and the satellite ends its working life. However, the satellite's orbital life is not over, and according to orbital calculations, the satellite, which weighs 210 kilograms, will be able to operate in space for about hundreds of years.
The success of the Chinese Empire had a great repercussion around the world, occupying an overwhelming advantage over the West, both psychologically and technologically. It came as a great surprise to the world, and especially to the German Union: no one expected the Chinese Empire to launch a satellite so soon.
In order to counter the huge negative impact of the successful launch of the Chinese Empire's satellite on the German Union, an official of the German Federation's Ministry of Defense even regarded the Chinese Imperial satellites as "a pile of scrap metal that anyone can launch."
However, the notion that the successful launch of the Chinese empire represented a threat to the core interests of the German Union was deeply ingrained in the German Union and in NATO as a whole. Some people worried that a hydrogen bomb from the Chinese Empire in Berlin would give the Germans only 10 minutes to return fire.
The pessimistic view of the German Union people does not mean that the Chinese Empire is the master of the world, but it at least shows that the current strength of the Chinese Empire is beyond the reach of the German Union. In the space race, the level of hardware and the level of software are equally important, and the Chinese Empire is undoubtedly far ahead of the German Union in terms of hardware, but the German Union is still one point ahead of the Chinese Empire in terms of technology.
By this time, the Cold War was running at full speed, and the Chinese Empire had a diplomatic advantage by virtue of artificial Earth satellites. During the three hours of the meeting, Ge Ping, the then foreign minister of the Chinese Empire to the German Federation, asked to meet with the German Federation Chancellor Albert only an hour after the launch of the Chinese Imperial Satellite, and during the three hours of the meeting, Ge Ping said to Albert in a report-like tone: "Mr. Prime Minister, your intelligence agency may have reported to you that the Chinese Imperial Space Administration has launched the first artificial satellite this morning."
In the face of this naked show-off, German League Chancellor Albert could only smile and congratulate, but his smile was uglier than crying. Ge Ping's close secretary secretly used a miniature camera to take pictures of Albert's expression at that time, and the next day it became the front page headline of the Imperial Times of the Chinese Empire, with only Albert's photo on the entire page, which really slapped the German Union and NATO in the face.
The space race between the Chinese Empire and the German Union has now become a fact. For the Deutsche people, the successful launch of the artificial Earth satellite Zhonghua-1 was tantamount to the Second Transcaucasian War, only this time it was a political, technical and public relations failure rather than a military one.
The launch of the first satellite, Explorer 1, was only launched on 31 January 1955, for which the German Union won a number of accolades, vowing that it would never again be left behind in the space race.
But Hitler did not realize that the Chinese Emperor Wang Chenhao was much more capable in this regard than they imagined, and the Chinese Empire actively carried out space exploration operations, which made the road to the supremacy of space very long for the German Federation, and the German Federation had to face the brilliant achievements of its opponents, especially after Qian Shenxue, the new commander of the Chinese Imperial Space Administration, officially took office in Guanghua 55 years, marking that the Chinese Empire will go all out in space, both to consolidate the hegemony of the Chinese Empire in space, And to leave the German Union far behind.
One thing is certain for the people of Delian - that is, the race continues, and the Chinese Empire is still ahead.
By the end of the 70th anniversary of Guanghua, the Chinese Empire had been in a state of victory in the battle for space hegemony. In the 54th year of Guanghua, the Chinese Imperial Space Administration first realized that the Zhonghua 2 satellite carried animals into space (Yutu Yingying), the first scientific satellite was launched in the same year, Guanghua 55 years realized the first time that an object was out of the earth's orbit, and the moon 1 probe was launched in the summer of Guanghua 56, announcing that the Chinese Empire was ahead of the German Union in the lunar exploration project.
In the same year, the first meteorological satellite and the first reconnaissance satellite were launched in the Chinese Empire, and the German Union was forced to carry out research on meteorological satellites and reconnaissance satellites.
On March 5, the 57th year of Guanghua, the Chinese Imperial Huoyao Xingjun-1 probe was launched, with the goal of flying to Mars orbit in two years to take the first Martian picture and send it back to Earth, announcing the start of the Chinese Imperial Interstellar Exploration Program, and Delian was once again forced to join the interstellar exploration competition. (To be continued.) If you like this work, you are welcome to come to the starting point (.) to vote for recommendation, monthly pass, your support, is my biggest motivation. )