jztemple2 wrote: ↑Sat Mar 20, 2021 1:00 am Glynn Lunney, NASA flight director who led from 'trench' to the moon, dies at 84
An engineer who was involved from the start in NASA's efforts to launch the first astronauts into space and who later led Mission Control through some of its most challenging and triumphant hours, flight director Glynn S. Lunney has died at the age of 84.
Lunney's death on Friday (March 19) was confirmed by NASA. A family friend said that Lunney died after a long illness.
SPACE - random thread about space stuff
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
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Seeing that reminds me we were all young once.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Hey look - a SpaceX launch! T-10 minutes - good time to be awake!
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Bummer we didn't get video of the Stage 1 landing.
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Yeah, but they still stuck it. Still impressive too! Watching the speed countdown at the same time as the altimeter, I just keep thinking there's no way they can slow down fast enough, and yet.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
These don't even wake me anymore
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Will we have fundamental changes in the space industry in the near future? Nuclear engine? Plasma engine? Any devices for changing the trajectory of large asteroids/comets?
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
hitbyambulance wrote: ↑Fri Mar 26, 2021 3:09 am this was interesting
https://www.capitolhillseattle.com/2021 ... attle-sky/
Pretty cool.from the article wrote: UPDATE: Jonathan McDowell, astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, reports the display was caused by a SpaceX rocket burning up on reentry after it “failed to make a deorbit burn” and has been orbiting the earth since early March. Estimates put the cost of a Falcon 9 second stage at around $10 million so, if you like, you can find a little extra satisfaction in seeing those streaks of light as watching Elon Musk’s money burn.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Oh, my kid is going to LOVE to hear that news. They -hate- Elon Musk.raydude wrote: ↑Fri Mar 26, 2021 8:47 amPretty cool.from the article wrote: UPDATE: Jonathan McDowell, astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, reports the display was caused by a SpaceX rocket burning up on reentry after it “failed to make a deorbit burn” and has been orbiting the earth since early March. Estimates put the cost of a Falcon 9 second stage at around $10 million so, if you like, you can find a little extra satisfaction in seeing those streaks of light as watching Elon Musk’s money burn.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
We had one of those locally (around 2006?), though I remember the angle of incidence to be much shallower.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Was going to say that looks like space debris not a meteor.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
I have mixed feelings about the Musk man, but there is no denying he is a visionary. My son loves him and tries to make me watch Musk videos.Unagi wrote: ↑Fri Mar 26, 2021 9:36 amOh, my kid is going to LOVE to hear that news. They -hate- Elon Musk.raydude wrote: ↑Fri Mar 26, 2021 8:47 amPretty cool.from the article wrote: UPDATE: Jonathan McDowell, astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, reports the display was caused by a SpaceX rocket burning up on reentry after it “failed to make a deorbit burn” and has been orbiting the earth since early March. Estimates put the cost of a Falcon 9 second stage at around $10 million so, if you like, you can find a little extra satisfaction in seeing those streaks of light as watching Elon Musk’s money burn.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
"According to the National Weather Service in Seattle, residents likely were seeing SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket debris."
Are you talking about this? And what will happen next? Now there are a lot of launches. And they all have the potential to leave debris that will not burn to the end.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Most Falcon 9 upper stages successfully deorbit at planned locations far away from land. This was a failed deorbit so it came down at a random location.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Since it was a second stage it was the expendable part of an F9, so sadly Musk had already considered that $10 million gone and it didn't cost him anything extra.raydude wrote: ↑Fri Mar 26, 2021 8:47 amPretty cool.from the article wrote: UPDATE: Jonathan McDowell, astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, reports the display was caused by a SpaceX rocket burning up on reentry after it “failed to make a deorbit burn” and has been orbiting the earth since early March. Estimates put the cost of a Falcon 9 second stage at around $10 million so, if you like, you can find a little extra satisfaction in seeing those streaks of light as watching Elon Musk’s money burn.
Fortunately it put on a show without any reported debris reaching the ground.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer and satellite tracker at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, also tweeted this:
Another fun debris fact: this is the 14th piece of space junk with a mass over one tonne that has reentered since Jan 1st this year.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
NASA is initiating the creation of a new space station at LEO. Many companies have responded to NASA's proposal. Do you think it is possible to create something that would be more efficient and cheaper than the ISS by private companies? Is it possible for companies to cooperate on this issue or again there will be one well-known company against all?
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Depends on what the new station is for. Research? Manufacturing/construction? Tourism? A spaceport? If it's purpose-built, then I think private industry can get it done, and probably more than once.
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The private industry can do it anyway. The main thing is that it does not explode. I like that in the space sector, real competition can begin in all segments.
And the fact that many companies are concerned about safety in orbit is also good news.
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Everything is contracted out already. Boeing, Lockheed Martin , Raytheon, etc.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
I recently read that in 2025 they will start building a space hotel with artificial gravity. If this project is implemented, it will be high-profile news.
I wonder if space tourism will be in high demand in the next 20 years?
I wonder if space tourism will be in high demand in the next 20 years?
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Private industry can do it. They only will do it if there's a profit in it. That's why it's takes an organization like NASA to get companies to commit to building the next space station. NASA is literally saying "here, take my money" to make companies submit proposals for building space station components or providing some service that's needed to build or operate the station. Otherwise, no prviate company to date would ever pony up the money to build a station, let alone tell other private companies "here, take my money" in order to get them to help.
Maybe in the future there will be a mega-corp rich enough to say "I am building a space station myself, and here is money I am putting up for it" in the hopes of making money off the station later, but currently a space station is such a capital investment that no private company wants to sink that cost.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
PopMech
In major international tests, the physics-defying EmDrive has failed to produce the amount of thrust proponents were expecting. In fact, in one test at Germany’s Dresden University, it didn’t produce any thrust at all. Is this the end of the line for EmDrive?
...
Now, however, physicists at the Dresden University of Technology (TU Dresden) are saying those promising results showing thrust were all false positives that are explained by outside forces. The scientists recently presented their findings in three papers at Space Propulsion Conference 2020 +1, with titles like “High-Accuracy Thrust Measurements of the EmDrive and Elimination of False-Positive Effects.”
...
Using a new measuring scale and different suspension points of the same engine, the TU Dresden scientists “were able to reproduce apparent thrust forces similar to those measured by the NASA team, but also to make them disappear by means of a point suspension,” researcher Martin Tajmar told the German site GreWi.
The verdict:
“When power flows into the EmDrive, the engine warms up. This also causes the fastening elements on the scale to warp, causing the scale to move to a new zero point. We were able to prevent that in an improved structure. Our measurements refute all EmDrive claims by at least 3 orders of magnitude.”
It's almost as if people are the problem.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
And in a follow-up, Fallen debris from SpaceX rocket launch lands on a farm in central WashingtonEthan13 wrote: ↑Fri Mar 26, 2021 12:45 pm"According to the National Weather Service in Seattle, residents likely were seeing SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket debris."
Are you talking about this? And what will happen next? Now there are a lot of launches. And they all have the potential to leave debris that will not burn to the end.
A piece of debris from a SpaceX launch has turned up on someone's farm in central Washington, local authorities reported Friday (April 2) — about one week after the falling rocket debris sparked reports of "shooting stars" the U.S. Pacific Northwest.
According to the Grant County Sheriff's Office, the recovered object appears to be a composite overwrapped pressure vessel, or COPV, belonging to the second stage of the Falcon 9 rocket that launched March 4 from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, on a mission dubbed Starlink 17.
"SpaceX recovered a Composite-Overwrapped Pressure Vessel from last week’s Falcon 9 re-entry. It was found on private property in southwest Grant County this week," the Grant County Sheriff's Office wrote in a statement on Twitter, adding that they would not provide the exact location or the name of the man whose property it fell on.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
The ahole just throws his garbage everywhere. When it kills someone it will cost him.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
It'll cost his insurance company you mean.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
From NASASpaceFlight.com, New permits shed light on activity at SpaceX’s Cidco and Roberts Road facilities
Both those sites are just a few miles from me, so I'll have to take a little road trip to them soon.Building and testing SpaceX’s next generation launch system, Starship, has primarily been conducted at the village of Boca Chica, Texas. But just a couple years ago, Starship hardware was also being built at a SpaceX facility on Cidco Road in Cocoa, Florida, near America’s most active spaceport at Cape Canaveral.
Today, only a single Starship nosecone section remains at the site, but new permits have been filed showing that the facilities at both Cidco and Roberts Road in Florida still hold very active roles in the Starship program.
My father said that anything is interesting if you bother to read about it - Michael C. Harrold
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Rocket launch and stage reentry as seen from space.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
That's a super cool video!
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
I've been at the beach today so I expected that someone else would post about these two significant anniversaries, but I guess not.So here goes.
Today is the sixtieth anniversary of the flight of Yuri Gagarin, first man into space. His flight aboard Vostok 1 was short, only 108 minutes, but being the first, it was very important.
Today is also the fortieth anniversary of the first Space Shuttle launch. The flight, STS-1, was originally supposed to be on April 10th, but a glitch pushed it back a couple of days, unknowingly turning into an "also today" story each year following a piece about Gagarin.
My wife and I wished each other "happy anniversary" this morning, since I was part of the Shuttle program for the entire duration (and then some) while she kept me health and sane and ran pretty much everything else in our lives so I could concentrate on work. We'll be having sandwiches for dinner to celebrate.
Today is the sixtieth anniversary of the flight of Yuri Gagarin, first man into space. His flight aboard Vostok 1 was short, only 108 minutes, but being the first, it was very important.
Today is also the fortieth anniversary of the first Space Shuttle launch. The flight, STS-1, was originally supposed to be on April 10th, but a glitch pushed it back a couple of days, unknowingly turning into an "also today" story each year following a piece about Gagarin.
My wife and I wished each other "happy anniversary" this morning, since I was part of the Shuttle program for the entire duration (and then some) while she kept me health and sane and ran pretty much everything else in our lives so I could concentrate on work. We'll be having sandwiches for dinner to celebrate.
My father said that anything is interesting if you bother to read about it - Michael C. Harrold
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
What happened on this date in 1970?
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
Jim Lovell and crew had a really bad day?The Meal wrote:What happened on this date in 1970?
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
And I turned 13.
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Re: SPACE - random thread about space stuff
1969 was cancelled and I was 1 year old.
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