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Nzoner's Game Room>Space Exploration megathread
DaFace 09:40 AM 06-01-2014
Since a number of cool things are happening in space exploration these days, we'll widen the scope of this thread a smidge. Conversation about all things space exploration are welcome, whether it be from NASA, SpaceX, ULA, Blue Origin, or anyone else. Chances are most of the discussion will still be about SpaceX since they love to make things public and fun, but nothing's off limits. I'll eventually get around to modifying the OP to include resources for other companies too, but in the meantime, feel free to post any cool stuff you run across.

Lists of Upcoming Missions

Spoiler!


How to Watch a Live Launch
Spoiler!


Where to Learn More
Spoiler!


Glossary
Spoiler!

[Reply]
Otter 10:26 PM 11-09-2021

Head shaped nebula
Hubble pic.twitter.com/z2fgcHwAwy

— Black Hole (@konstructivizm) November 8, 2021


Surprisingly, this is actually real. It's known as the Rosette Nebula (Caldwell 49) is about 5,000 light-years distance from Earth, 130 light-years wide, & has a mass ~10,000 × the Sun
[Reply]
DaFace 03:11 PM 11-10-2021

Falcon 9 and Dragon are looking good for tonight’s launch of Crew-3 astronauts at 9:03 p.m. EST. Webcast will go live ~4 hours before liftoff → https://t.co/bJFjLCzWdK pic.twitter.com/m1Ww2iuOJG

— SpaceX (@SpaceX) November 10, 2021

[Reply]
DaFace 07:52 PM 11-10-2021
T-10 minutes
[Reply]
DaFace 05:58 PM 11-15-2021
Sometimes I think Russia's space program is run by a bunch of half-trained chimpanzees.

NASA Administrator Nelson statement on the Russian ASAT test and fallout: pic.twitter.com/UQz4TNNLrr

— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) November 15, 2021

[Reply]
unlurking 06:07 PM 11-15-2021
It is, but my understanding is that this was the Russian military and not Roscosmos. Would not surprise me if Roscosmos learned of it the same time NASA did. :-)
[Reply]
Donger 11:37 AM 11-16-2021

STATIC FIRE and wow! Ship 20 fires up, with thrust this time, for a multi-engine test at SpaceX Starbase.

(Ship 20 has three sea-level Raptors and three RVacs. Hopefully, @elonmusk will tweet some info!)https://t.co/zCIrgzb0oI pic.twitter.com/h7IGZI0Y8g

— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) November 12, 2021

[Reply]
DaFace 02:36 AM 11-20-2021
Astra made it to orbit!

Astra just reached orbit! 7.61km/sec at our targeted 86.0 degree inclination at an altitude of 500km. The team worked hard for this. We’re just getting started, folks. #AdAstra pic.twitter.com/NiMhCEsuCI

— Chris Kemp (@Kemp) November 20, 2021

[Reply]
Rain Man 10:51 PM 11-23-2021
I read about this the other day and thought it was interesting.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/09/spin...ve-rocket.html

It essentially puts a payload in an enormous vertical centrifuge, spins it to hypersonic speeds, and then throws it up into space. I'm curious how something like a satellite could hold up to those forces, and I'd think that's a hard sell. But if you want to move a bunch of steel or uranium into orbit, this seems like a good way to do it.

You really want to be sure this baby releases on the vertical part of the spin cycle, though, or you're going to rip a big swath through Albuquerque.
[Reply]
unlurking 07:17 AM 11-24-2021
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I read about this the other day and thought it was interesting.

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/09/spin...ve-rocket.html

It essentially puts a payload in an enormous vertical centrifuge, spins it to hypersonic speeds, and then throws it up into space. I'm curious how something like a satellite could hold up to those forces, and I'd think that's a hard sell. But if you want to move a bunch of steel or uranium into orbit, this seems like a good way to do it.

You really want to be sure this baby releases on the vertical part of the spin cycle, though, or you're going to rip a big swath through Albuquerque.
Yeah, the accuracy requirements for angle of release must be insane. I pretty much dismissed this tech due to that, the satellite hardening required to survive the stresses, and the price of launch continuing to drop as SpaceX, Rocket Lab, Astra, and others push for more/cheaper launches, The idea of launching raw materials (like a chunk of steel for in-orbit manufacturing) seems like a good use case though. I'm curious to know how fast the projectile is moving as it leaves the centrifuge and if it's fast enough to have to deal with the heat from friction that things entering the atmosphere deal with.
[Reply]
GloryDayz 10:27 AM 11-24-2021
Originally Posted by unlurking:
Yeah, the accuracy requirements for angle of release must be insane. I pretty much dismissed this tech due to that, the satellite hardening required to survive the stresses, and the price of launch continuing to drop as SpaceX, Rocket Lab, Astra, and others push for more/cheaper launches, The idea of launching raw materials (like a chunk of steel for in-orbit manufacturing) seems like a good use case though. I'm curious to know how fast the projectile is moving as it leaves the centrifuge and if it's fast enough to have to deal with the heat from friction that things entering the atmosphere deal with.
So the first few tests might go like this?



Or this?



Or this?


[Reply]
Donger 10:18 AM 11-30-2021
Elon Musk tells SpaceX employees that Starship engine crisis is creating a ‘risk of bankruptcy’

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/30/elon...ankruptcy.html

Musk being Musk?
[Reply]
AdolfOliverBush 10:24 AM 11-30-2021
Originally Posted by Donger:
Elon Musk tells SpaceX employees that Starship engine crisis is creating a ‘risk of bankruptcy’

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/11/30/elon...ankruptcy.html

Musk being Musk?
His Assburgers is acting up again.
[Reply]
DaFace 12:12 PM 11-30-2021
Originally Posted by Donger:
Musk being Musk?
Probably. He likes to be a bit dramatic in order to motivate his employees. Still not a great sign that they're having production issues with Raptor, but hopefully they'll get it worked out.
[Reply]
DaFace 12:13 PM 11-30-2021
It's hard to believe, but there's actually a good chance that JWST gets off the ground in a few weeks. Definitely one of the highest-impact (and highest-risk) missions we've seen in a while.

The James Webb Space Telescope is on track for a launch date of Dec. 22.

Additional testing, which was conducted due to an incident in launch preparations, concluded no observatory components were damaged. Observatory fueling operations begin on Nov. 25: https://t.co/3E4UopkVZG pic.twitter.com/aPZJPIBtCQ

— NASA Webb Telescope (@NASAWebb) November 25, 2021

[Reply]
unlurking 01:18 PM 11-30-2021
Originally Posted by DaFace:
It's hard to believe, but there's actually a good chance that JWST gets off the ground in a few weeks. Definitely one of the highest-impact (and highest-risk) missions we've seen in a while.

Originally Posted by Berger:
This process will involve nearly 350 single-point failures, and if something goes wrong, it would scuttle the deployment without hope of repair.

https://arstechnica.com/science/2021...cember-launch/
[Reply]
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