Just see how many clichés this guy is throwing around, it's incredible. Do Americans really require this much patriotic hogwash in an essay?
The article only supplies about a quarter of the average daily American jingoism intake.
Just see how many clichés this guy is throwing around, it's incredible. Do Americans really require this much patriotic hogwash in an essay?
http://news.yahoo.com/nuclear-one-two-punch-could-knock-dangerous-asteroid-160319627.html
Sounds fun, but I'm skeptical. Thoughts?
).Love to see what the validation program looks like.
How do you test to see if it works?
The article only supplies about a quarter of the average daily American jingoism intake.
Bigelow Aerospace had to do some layoffs, because the launch capabilities were slower than expected. That said, he's started re-hiring this year. Worth a resume!
http://www.spacenews.com/article/bigelow-ends-employee-furloughs-resumes-limited-hiring#.UK4uYIaaKSp
Just see how many clichés this guy is throwing around, it's incredible. Do Americans really require this much patriotic hogwash in an essay?
I think this article mentioned geostationary orbits being forever. I'm guessing he forgot about tidal acceleration slowing down Earth's rotation, but with current geostationary orbits being about 33,800 km, would satellites there be up there that long (5 Gy) anyway?A piece of artwork headed into space this week may be on display for the next few billion years.
A collection of images called "The Last Pictures" is hitching a ride on a communications satellite today (Nov. 20) that may well orbit the Earth until our planet's predicted fiery death 5 billion years or so from now, according to the the project's creator.
"'The Last Pictures' tells a kind of story to the distant future about where these spacecraft came from and what happened to the people that made them," artist Trevor Paglen, who spent almost five years assembling the collection, told SPACE.com.
Did you hear about the new restaurant on the moon? Great food, but no atmosphere.
While that wisecrack has been floating about in space circles for decades, a NASA lunar orbiter will gather detailed information about the moon's atmosphere next year, including conditions near its surface and environmental influences on lunar dust.
NASA's Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) is to depart the Earth for the moon in August 2013. LADEE is loaded with science gear, including instruments that can address a lingering question that's rooted in space history: Are electrostatically lofted lunar dust particles present within the moon's tenuous atmosphere?


Elon Musk wants to send people to colonize Mars in "big reusable rockets"
-> I kind of don't get what he means from that article. You could have a big reusable rocket to launch a Mars lander directly from Earth, but the lander itself would *not* be reusable.
Anyway, $500,000? What would that give us - a millionaires' colony? Who's going to tidy up the habs if there are no illegal immigrants?![]()
Yeah he's been talking about this for at least a year or two, it's exciting stuff.
I wonder if they'll allow people to go there in exchange for labor either here on Earth or on Mars instead of cash payment. I wouldn't be surprised if they do once the program is on solid financial footing. Labor is going to be the most valuable commodity at a Martian colony for a long time after it's founding.
).Sending only engineers, scientists and such would be a waste of their talents. There will actually be need of people to shovel dirt, so why only send engineers to do all of the tasks? I think their would be as much of a need for unqualified labor as their would be for experts.
But other than that, I am sceptical about the prospects of sending ordinary Joes to Mars to play colonists. Mars is not the Old West.)(Of course, if a millionaire paid, say, twenty times as much as a qualified person, so that he could basically bring his own 'support team' with him (people who would do the useful work while he keeps wasting oxygen), it could work. For a time, until these people realized that nobody is going to kick them back to Earth if they break the contractBut other than that, I am sceptical about the prospects of sending ordinary Joes to Mars to play colonists. Mars is not the Old West.)
Hmm, but cannot a Joe Schmo be a Joe Schmo with enough specialized training to do basic tasks that need attention without being an expert at anything?
And I'm not even talking about the first wave of colonists who will indeed all be specialists. I'm talking about when they actually start sending people over with 500k tickets.
Practical skills, mental resilience, and an aptitude for learning might be valued more by the colonists than fancy degrees from Earth universities. Cool article, I didn't know they were looking to put people in the X-37.
Question:
What goes into 'man-rating' a rocket and why is it so hard to certify an existing, successfull system as 'man-rated' but not so hard to build an entirely new 'man-rated' system that is relatively untested compared to the workhorse systems?
What goes into 'man-rating' a rocket and why is it so hard to certify an existing, successfull system as 'man-rated' but not so hard to build an entirely new 'man-rated' system that is relatively untested compared to the workhorse systems?

Skylon spaceplane engine concept achieves key milestone
The UK company developing an engine for a new type of spaceplane says it has successfully demonstrated the power unit's enabling technology.
Reaction Engines Ltd (REL) of Culham, Oxfordshire, ran a series of tests on key elements of its Sabre propulsion system under the independent eye of the European Space Agency (Esa).
Esa's experts have confirmed that all the demonstration objectives were met.
REL claims the major technical obstacle to its ideas has now been removed.
"This is a big moment; it really is quite a big step forward in propulsion," said Alan Bond, the driving force behind the Sabre engine concept.
The company must now raise the £250m needed to complete the next phase of development.
This would essentially take the project to the final designs that could be handed to a manufacturer.
Although the British government has put significant sums into REL's technology in the past, the company's preference is to pursue city finance.
"The project to date has been more than 90% privately funded, and we intend to continue with that type of structure," explained Tim Hayter, the CEO of Reaction Engines Ltd.
"Yes, we would encourage government money but we're not reliant on it and we're certainly not depending on it.
"What is more important to us is government endorsement. That gives everyone the confidence that the UK is behind this project."
REL's idea is for an 84m-long vehicle called Skylon that would do the job of a big rocket but operate like an airliner, taking off and landing at a conventional runway.
The vehicle would burn a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen but in the low atmosphere the oxygen would be taken from the air, in the same way that a jet engine breathes air.
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Only once it had achieved very high speeds would Skylon switch to full rocket mode, burning onboard fuel supplies.
Taking its oxygen from the air in the initial flight phase would mean Skylon could fly lighter from the outset with a higher thrust-to-weight ratio, enabling it to make a single leap to orbit, rather than using and dumping propellant stages on the ascent - as is the case with current expendable rockets.
If such a vehicle could be made to work, its reusability should transform the costs of accessing space.
But its success depends on the Sabre engine's ability to manage the very hot air entering its intakes at high speed.
These gases have to be cooled prior to being compressed and burnt with the onboard hydrogen.
REL's solution is a module containing arrays of extremely fine piping that can extract the heat and plunge the inrushing air to minus 140C in just 1/100th of a second.
Ordinarily, the moisture in the air would be expected to freeze out rapidly, covering the piping in a blanket of frost and dislocating their operation.
But the company's engineers have also devised a means to control the frosting, permitting the Sabre engine to run in jet mode for as long as is needed before making the transition to full rocket mode to take the Skylon spaceplane into orbit.
It is the innovative helium cooling loop with its pre-cooler heat-exchanger that REL has been validating on an experimental rig.
"We completed the programme by getting down to -150C, running for 10 minutes," said Mr Bond. "We've demonstrated that the pre-cooler is behaving absolutely as predicted."
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The UK Space Agency asked Esa's propulsion division to audit the tests, and the Paris-based organisation has declared its satisfaction with the outcome of the experimental programme.
"One of the major obstacles to developing air-breathing engines for launch vehicles is the development of the lightweight high-performance heat exchangers," it said in a statement.
"With this now successfully demonstrated by REL, there are currently no technical reasons why the Sabre engine programme cannot move forward into the next stage of development."
The next phase is a three-and-a-half-year project. It would see a smaller version of Sabre being built on a test rig. The demonstrator would not have the exact same configuration as the eventual engine but it would allow REL to prove Sabre's performance across its air-breathing and rocket modes.
"Its parts will be spread out slightly; there's no need for us to package it as we would a real engine," said Mr Bond.
"Also, we will want the ease of access to exchange parts, so it will look a little bit like an anatomy exhibition."
The UK government is currently assessing what shape any involvement it should have in the next phase of Skylon/Sabre.
In addition, Esa is keen to do some study work with REL. Although it is currently working on new versions of its Ariane rocket - a classic expendable vehicle - the agency also wants keep an eye on future launcher technologies.

Winner said:I'd assume that a system well-optimized for unmanned launches may be difficult to "man-rate" because it encompasses messing with something that works well as it is.