Space travel is science fiction. No human-made object can escape Earth's gravity and orbit the planet.
Earth orbit is achievable with sufficient rocket velocity (~7.9 km/s). The Soviet Sputnik 1 achieved orbit on October 4, 1957, making this the first artificial satellite - proving orbital spaceflight was possible.
What changed?
To a student finishing high school in 1957, space travel was science fiction, not dismissively, but literally. Rockets existed: Germany’s V-2 had reached the fringe of space during World War II, and both the United States and the Soviet Union were testing successors at missile ranges in Nevada and Kazakhstan. But reaching orbit required velocities so extreme, roughly 28,000 kilometres per hour, that placing even a small payload there seemed like a project for the next decade at the earliest. That it might happen this year, this autumn, was not a serious part of mainstream American science education.
On October 4, 1957, Sputnik 1 beeped.
The Soviet satellite, a polished aluminium sphere 58 centimetres across, weighing 83.6 kilograms, completed its first orbit in 96 minutes and 12 seconds. It was visible to the naked eye in the night sky and audible to any shortwave radio operator worldwide: a steady, repeating tone broadcasting from orbit. The reaction in the United States was immediate and profound. Sputnik wasn’t just a space first. It demonstrated that Soviet rockets were powerful enough to place a payload in orbit, which meant they were, in principle, powerful enough to deliver a nuclear warhead to any point on Earth without warning.
The policy consequences were sweeping and fast. President Eisenhower signed the National Defense Education Act in 1958, the first major federal investment in American science, mathematics, and foreign language education. NASA was founded the same year, replacing the earlier National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics. University programmes were retooled, curricula revised, and a generation of students pointed toward science and engineering with new urgency. The Sputnik crisis reframed space not as a scientific frontier but as a strategic domain, and that framing accelerated rocket development on both sides faster than any peacetime programme would have.
Sputnik 1’s direct scientific output was modest: it measured upper-atmosphere density through its orbital decay rate and monitored ionospheric radio propagation. But its historical weight was anything but. It marked the precise moment when “can a human object orbit Earth?” ceased to be a theoretical question. The Space Age didn’t begin with a plan or a proclamation. It began with a beep.

