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Laika Biography
Dog / Astronaut
Laika the dog was the first living being to orbit the Earth in space. She was aboard Sputnik II when it was launched by the Soviet Union on 3 November 1957. (She was a mutt, probably part husky, who had been picked up as a stray.) Laika proved that animals could survive the rigors of space travel; monitors attached to the dog sent biological data which Soviet scientists used in planning later manned flights. (The first manned flight was made by cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin in 1961.) In a cruel twist, no provision was made for Laika's return to Earth; as planned, she died in space. Original reports were that Laika was put to sleep or died when life support batteries died after a week in orbit; more recent reports from Russia say that Laika died when the capsule overheated after four days or less in orbit.
Extra credit: Laika means "barker" in Russian... Though Laika is generally given credit as the first animal to visit outer space, other animals (including American mice and the Soviet test dogs Albina and Tsyganka) had earlier been sent on brief suborbital trips into space... Laika is also the name of an alternative rock band founded in the 1990s.
Laika makes a special appearance in our loop on Female First Flights. Other space pioneers on Who2 include Neil Armstrong, Valentina Tereshkova and Ham the Chimp.
Blog posts mentioning Laika:
Four Good Links
The True Story of Laika the Dog
Space.com updates Laika's history, including her cause of death
First Dog in Space Died Within Hours
2002 BBC report on Laika's fate
New York Times 1957
The newspaper reprints its report on Laika's flight
Memorial to Laika
A fan's touching salute to the space dog
Vital Stats
Birth
c. 1954 (?)
Birthplace
Death
7 November (?) 1957
Best Known As
The first dog to orbit the Earth
