Episode 77: Satellite tracking the early days

Published: July 13, 2018, 5 a.m.

Sven Grahn has been working in the space field in one way or another for over fifty years. Officially retired, he continues to work as a project leader of a student satellite at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.\n\nHe is perhaps best known for his work in tracking satellites launched by the secretive Soviet Union during the 1960s and 1970s.In those pre-internet days, his work along with others helped to identify\xa0individual mission characteristics such as mission types, members of the crew, take off and landing times. He recorded over 1000 conversations from orbiting spacecraft as they flew over Sweden.\n\nIn this interview, he speaks about\n\n \tThe impact\xa0of the space race on his choice of career\n \tHis work on sounding rockets and meteorology in Sweden and beyond\n \tSatellite tracking. What he tracked, heard and recorded using radio and tape recorders.\n \tHow he came to research and write about the\xa0 satellite tracking conducted at Jodrell \xa0Bank radio telescope in England\n\nAs an 11-year-old, Sven had seen Sputnik in the sky over Sweden with his own eyes. I started by asking him how the onset of the space race had impacted his choice of career?