Îáû÷íûéÒåðìèíÑïèñîêîïðåäåëåíèéÀäðåñÖèòàòûÔîðìàòèðîâàííûéêîíåöôîðìûíà÷àëîôîðìûÅ. Ingemar Skoog, The Alfred Nobel Rocket Camera: An Early Aerial
Photography Attempt, in: John
Harlow (ed.), History of Rocketry and Astronautics. Proceedings of the
Forty-Second History Symposium of the International Academy of Astronautics,
Glasgow, United Kingdom, 2008, San Diego, California, 2013, ñòð. 169-189
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"Alfred B. Nobel (1833-1896), mainly known for his invention of dynamite and
the creation of the Nobel Prizes, was an engineer and inventor active in
many fields of science and engineering (...) In mid-1896 Nobel applied for
patents in England and France for 'An Improved Mode of Obtaining
Photographic Maps and Earth or Ground Measurements' using a photographic
camera carried by a '... balloon, rocket or missile ...'. During the
remainder of 1896, the mechanical design of the camera mechanism was pursued
and cameras manufactured. In April 1897 (after the death of Nobel), the
first aerial photos were taken by these cameras. These photographs might be
the first documented aerial photos taken by a rocket-borne camera. Cameras
and photos from 1897 have been preserved. Nobel did not only develop the
rocket-borne camera but also proposed methods on how to use the photographs
for ground measurements and preparing maps."