Category Archives: Space

The home planet

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Whole Earth Africa was the first such photo and still is the most popular. But this one is of home. A bit north of the exact center. How we look from space anyhow.

The atomic bomb: A rabbit shoot

I well remember Richard Feynman’s performance on the federal commission studying why the Challenger space shuttle blew up on takeoff in 1986. How simply he explained what no one else seemed to know, and thus wrapped up the precise cause spectacularly. On his own.

He died a year later, just 69. So I enjoyed this essay about Feynman, one of the men who built the first atomic bomb and later said of it: “It wasn’t a lion hunt, it was a rabbit shoot.” Just what you’d expect from the man who demonstrated, with a piece of rubber and a glass of ice water, why the Challenger went down.

Via A Brief History.

Still only a dream

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Our politicians are such lightweights who are more concerned with graft and repression than actual accomplishment that their space agency is content to build tinker-toys. The real dreams of space conquest are still only dreams.

The Aliens among us…

…are not all from this planet.

“Almost half of the DNA found on the [New York subway] system’s surfaces did not match any known organism and just 0.2 percent matched the human genome.”

Try Epsilon Eridani. Maybe Men In Black was a documentary, eh?

Via Instapundit.

Horizon at Pluto

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Probably be May before we start seeing good pix from the once-and-possibly-future-planet Pluto (lower left, accompanied by a moon) now that NASA’s latest robot spacecraft Horizon is nearing it. After a 4.67 billion mile journey. NASA may be a bloated bureaucracy that can’t seem to get people beyond low Earth orbit but it sure does robots well. Or has done. Remains to be seen what, if anything, we’ll get to see this time.

Why SpaceX will succeed

Never mind the usual snooze media headlines about SpaceX botching, stumbling, or failing to softly land their Falcon 9 first stage last Saturday. What they did “astonishingly right,” as aerospace engineer Rand Simberg puts it, certainly justifies plenty of optimism for next time.

After stage separation about 90 km high, they relit three of the first stage’s nine engines to slow down from about 3,000 mph. After re-entry, three more engines were relit to aim it at the tiny (from so high up) drone ship with its bulls-eye landing platform and four small fins were deployed to help steer it. Slowed down sufficiently, a single engine relight was all that was needed for a soft landing.

“With the exception of the final landing itself, almost everything went according to plan,” Simberg writes. “The vehicle entered intact, flew to the ship, and (apparently literally) hit the deck, because the hydraulic fluid that controlled the fins ran short by 10% of that needed to control and softly land.

“But in so doing, it accomplished another major ‘first,’ not just for a private company, but for any space ship. Previous Falcon flights had demonstrated the ability to enter the stage intact by retrothrusting (as opposed to simply braking against the atmosphere), but this was the first time such a vehicle had not only survived entry, but flown precisely to a pre-designated location, without wings.”

Space X will try again Jan. 29. When they finally succeed, as they almost certainly will, the next step will be to figure out how much it will cost to quickly and reliably, reuse the stage to cut their about $61 million price of a Falcon 9 launch.

Unlike the snooze media, bureaucratic NASA must be green with envy.

Via PJMedia.

Falcon 9 now for Saturday

SpaceX’s Florida launch of a Falcon 9 for the space station has been rescheduled for Saturday before dawn at 4:47 a.m. Shortly thereafter the company will attempt to land the Falcon’s first stage on a barge in the Atlantic off Jacksonville.

The first stage of the Falcon 9 rocket is expected to land on the barge within 10 minutes of liftoff. The second stage will continue to propel the Dragon capsule to orbit” and a cargo-delivering rendezvous with the space station.

Pretty cool if they can do it. If they can’t they’re determined to try again until they do. Eventually making such landings routine to make the first stages reusable to cut costs launching to orbit.

UPDATE:  “Close but no cigar,” said Musk. He said the first stage found the barge on Saturday but landed too hard. The second stage with its cargo continued to the space station as planned.