Archive for the ‘Space’ Category

Interesting

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

I took some time to watch the NASA channel today on TV. I find it interesting that the press conference that NASA was holding in regards to the upcoming shuttle flights was informative and stunning in its inability to convey what is going on. THe most interesting part for me was a follow-up question that was asked about the state of the debris from the recent satellite collision. When they mentioned that there were concerns over the Hubble repair mission due to the impact I could understand that. I don’t see how there can be any discussions about scrubbing a mission when, as the NASA people admitted, they don’t even know the total amount of debris in orbit.

Huh?

The news is filled with how much danger there is in flying this mission now. CNN, FoxNews, MSNBC - all of them have carried the story. Now either the story is sensationalist or NASA is pulling numbers out of its hat. One or the other (probably both) is wrong. Neither does anyone any good. The public will think that NASA is either too risk averse and should go away or they will think that NASA is incompenent because they can’t pin down with any certainty what they are doing.

I wish I had the answer for fixing this mess.

The Dream of Space

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

Space Cadet

Space Cadet

The young man over on the right there is one starry-eyed space cadet. While spending the summer at his grandparents (affectionately known as Maw-maw and Paw-paw) this young fellow showed his parents, family and some neighbors what model rocketry was all about. While they had seen him build a few rockets, no one had ever bothered to go to see one of his launches except his little brother, but that didn’t count. That green tackle box is worn and beat up, but it holds the magical components that allow his rockets to take flight and return safely, just like the big boys at NASA. He’s getting ready to launch his current pride and joy - a Mars Lander. At the time this was one of the hardest rockets to build. Little does he know that the launch controller is not going to work. In a fit of desperation (and probably stupidity) this thirteen year old will launch that rocket by connecting directly to a car battery. It will have a beautiful flight, land safely and be ready to go again.

1981 was a very long time ago for me. Somehow, the bug just hasn’t gone away.