Posts tagged technology

Posted 8 months ago

Kudos on the camera angles, China

The launch was well served throughout by some nice clear footage. At one point, we were under a fairing just in time to see it separate, but I didn’t get a picture of that one.

Posted 8 months ago

Sea Launch

It somehow escaped my notice until now, but there’s a company that specialises in launching stuff from a converted oil rig at the equator. This is simply too cool.

Less fuel is required to make orbit from the equator, thanks the Earth’s spin being amplified, making for cheaper launches. And also, it’s just ace.

http://www.sea-launch.com/

(Source: BBC)

Posted 9 months ago

Nose to nose

Endeavour and Discovery, swapping places in the decommissioning process, passed each other by this week at the Kennedy Space Centre.

It’s a shame that these multi-billion dollar pieces of technology will never fly again, except on the back of NASA’s Shuttle Carrier Aircraft. Looking forward to getting to see one in a museum, though.

More images here.

Posted 9 months ago
ckck:

Still from a video of Apollo 16’s Lunar Module Orion taking off from the moon on April 22nd, 1972.

Whenever I see this, I always think it looks like a party on the moon. I think it’s actually just an artefact of the camera. All the debris kicked off from the ascent module’s booster move so fast, it seems to be caught in different “passes” of the camera, so the red, green and blue elements are seen as clearly separate. There’s a big chunk going to the right of the module, heading off the screen, and you can see it caught in all three colours.
Also, it’s worth noting how much easier it is to make orbit from the moon. On Earth, a three-man capsule needs a big rocket with a dedicated launch pad underneath it to get to orbit, with months of preparation. Here, the launch pad is the fragile landing legs of the Lunar Module, and a single small engine is enough to get the ascent module up into orbit.

ckck:

Still from a video of Apollo 16’s Lunar Module Orion taking off from the moon on April 22nd, 1972.

Whenever I see this, I always think it looks like a party on the moon. I think it’s actually just an artefact of the camera. All the debris kicked off from the ascent module’s booster move so fast, it seems to be caught in different “passes” of the camera, so the red, green and blue elements are seen as clearly separate. There’s a big chunk going to the right of the module, heading off the screen, and you can see it caught in all three colours.

Also, it’s worth noting how much easier it is to make orbit from the moon. On Earth, a three-man capsule needs a big rocket with a dedicated launch pad underneath it to get to orbit, with months of preparation. Here, the launch pad is the fragile landing legs of the Lunar Module, and a single small engine is enough to get the ascent module up into orbit.

Posted 10 months ago

planetpic:

Space Shuttle Atlantis lands at Kennedy Space Center July 21, 2011 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Atlantis was the shuttle final mission for NASA, ending the 30 years of the shuttle program.  (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Revolutionary. Complicated. Adaptable. Flawed. Indispensable. Just plain cool.

Those are a few ways I would describe the space shuttle. Very sad to see its time pass.