The ESA lunar probe, SMART-1, will be searching for ice and other
resources but will it provide any data useful for finding lava tubes?
Also, will the images be better quality than those from Clementine?
And when might the images be released to the public? I’ve emailed
these questions to the ESA but does anyone else know any details?


Archive for January, 2011
SMART-1 to look for lunar lava tubes?
Delta 4 Second Stage Photos
I haven’t seen many good photos of the Delta 4 second
stage before, but several are now available at
ksc.nasa.gov showing processing for the GOES-N launch,
which is to be performed by a Delta 4 Medium with two
solids. One photo is at the following link.
"http://mediaarchive.ksc.nasa.gov/detail.cfm?mediaid=24253"
This one appears to coated white (complete with an S-IVB
like black stripe at the top! Will big "USA" lettering
appear next?). Previous D4 second stage hydrogen tanks
have just had the rust-brown foam coating.
- Ed Kyle
Ukraine Troubles and Sea Launch
According to the following story,
"http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&e=2&u=/ap/20041124/ap_on_…"
The U.S. (Sec of State Powell) is saying "there will be
consequences" for U.S.-Ukrainian relations as a result
of the alledgedly fraudulant election. Could this affect
Sea Launch?
- Ed Kyle
Rocketbuilding supplies
Anyone know where I can get ahold of some HTPB/Papi94 and N20? I’m
looking around and not finding a whole lot of options.
*———————–*
Posted at:
www.GroupSrv.com
*———————–*
More on the "Planet X" controversy.
Solar System Surprise: A New View of What’s Out There.
By Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
posted: 22 November 2004
06:24 am ET
"Given that our survey has covered almost the entire region of the
Kuiper Belt, I’m willing to bet these days that nothing larger than
Pluto will be found in the Kuiper Belt," says Caltech astronomer Mike
Brown."
…
"Brown, who now bets against finding Planet X in the Kuiper Belt,
thinks his group’s discovery of Sedna portends an even more compelling
scenario.
"I’d also be willing to bet that there are many objects larger than
Pluto out in the region of space where Sedna lives," Brown said last
week. Out to about 1,000 AU, he speculates that there could be 10 or
20 Pluto-sized objects, "and a handful of larger things, too.’ Some of
these suspected worlds could be as big as Mercury or even Mars, he
said."
"I asked Brown if there might be worlds larger than Pluto clear out at
the edge of the Oort Cloud, 1.5 light-years away and nearly half the
distance to the Alpha Centauri star system.
"Absolutely," he said. "Probably even likely."
http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/mystery_monday_041122.html
Bob Clark
Re: Nanotubes, Yarn Twist, Nanoscale Friction
Hi Uncle Al,
While I read that an earthly Space Elevator would be problematic, I
was reading that a lunar Space Elevator could be feasible.
http://www.e4engineering.com/story.aspx?nid=tsj5d&id=218937
Lunar gravity is much lower, affording a wider choice of tensile
materials. Lunar orbital space is not as crowded and cluttered and
earth orbital space. A lunar Space Elevator might allow easier access
to the Moon. I was also reading that existing spacelaunch vehicles
might be suitable for trips around the moon:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6558855/
If you can loop around the moon, perhaps it’s so much farther a leap
to dock with a space elevator there.
X-33 questions
larri…@my-deja.com (Larrison) :
- — -
> Earl Colby Pottinger <ear…@idirect.com> wrote in message
> <news:W8WdnaR41dcZFjvcRVn-3Q@look.ca>…
> > "John Thingstad" <john.things…@chello.no> :
> > > In this NASA still plays a role in putting money
> > > into long term research that would otherwise not be done.
> > > In the long run this still pays off.
> > > Of course not all research projects succeed..
> > Ofcourse I think NASA should be used to research the things we don’t
> > understand/know, however this case seems to be more a case of NIH and
‘you
> > are not part of the true space boys’.
> > Basicly, a small company like Scaled Composite who already showed that
> they
> > can build cryogenic tanks were bypassed for a company with no history
> > building cryogenic composite tanks, and it is also this ‘one of the boys’
> > company who in the long run were a failure.
> > So why was the job not given to SC or why were they not partnered to the
> > company doing the tank building?
> Hi Earl — I’m not going to apologise for the X-33, as I didn’t like
> the selection of LockMart to build it, nor their basic design for a
> number of reasons.
First, if you were not upper mangement at NASA or LockMart you have nothing
to apologize for. It was the people at the upper levels accepting and
forcing thru the bad features of the X-33 and not breaking the program down
to three or more test craft that were the real problem. It is well possible
that if one of the other designs were choosen that NASA would still burden it
with requirements that would still cause it to fail.
> But I think you’re flaming about Scaled versus other companies for the
> X-33 cryo tanks.
Yes, I am flaming mad about that little detail – I guess it shows
> First accept that the cryo tank they needed to build
> for the X-33 was way and beyond Scaled’s experience range — they had
> build some small, low-load cryo tanks as experimental items.
First, you said yourself, they had built them and they worked. Second, how
much experience did the company that did build the tanks have with cryo ones.
If none, then Scaled is still the one that should have been chosen for the
very same reasons that NASA is always claiming for not using one of the
smaller companies out there, ie lack of experience.
> I’m not
> a composites or cryo expert, but some of the folks I know in the
> business tell me the X-33 (and other company’s designs) for cryo tanks
> needed to be made in a different manner and of different materials
> (particularly the expoxy matrix) than Scaled’s usual working
> materials.
Needed to be diffirent, or choosen to be diffirent? – Remember NASA was the
contractor and they have the nasty habit of telling outside experts what
materials or tests should be used in a design.
> With 3 minutes of internet research, I found the company which build
> LockMart’s tanks was Alliant Techsytems (ATK) in Utah. ATK is not a
> dummy about composites, and after reading through their site and some
> of the articles on them, I would be willing to bet they turn out more
> composite structures in a week than Scaled does in a year. They also
> build highly-loaded (pressure and acceleration) composite structures
> which I don’t believe Scaled ever has really built, with SS1 being the
> first one I recall.
Maybe, I would have to look back over thier older designs but thier racing
masts for AeroRig boats are highly stressed too. But (a) had ATK built cryo
tanks before? (b) the X-33 was not a high-G design, it was not doing
anything that the ROTON or DC-X were not already planned to do and both of
these used tanks from Scaled.
> But it appears that ATK has two critical capabilities, which Scaled
> didn’t have for large cryo tanks; fiber placement and fiber winding
> machines in large scale, as well as the autoclaves to cure large
> structures. Most (all?) of Scaled’s work is hand layup.
Fiber machines, yes you are right. But it is my understanding that at the
time of the contract that ATK did not have an autoclave large enough either
and had it built after winning the contract. (Correct me if I am wrong – I
may have another company mixed in here) There is no reason that Scaled could
not do the same. And as for machine vs hand layup – it is clear that machine
layup did not save the design. If it gets laid by machine and fail or laid
by hand and works clearly using the machines as a reason to award the
contract is not a good one. No, I am not saying machine layup was at fault,
I am saying it is just like the present day NASA’s management to look at the
shiny machines first before the skills of the hand layers.
> But for a
> light weight cryo tank that is going to have to take 6 G’s or so in
> standard load with a pressurized capability, plus up to around 20 G’s
> or so in emergency loads (estimate on my part, based upon the 20G
> emergency load requirement from the Shuttle) — you really need to do
> fiber winding and fiber placement to get light weight with the right
> material and structural property.
You did read what you wrote above right? A SSTO that does 6 G’s in normal
operation, if that is not a crazy requirement I don’t know what is – almost
all SSTO designs work best at 2 to 3 Gs. Assuming you are right it is not
clear to me that Scaled who has been doing this sort of thing for years could
not do the placement by hand. Again I could be wrong, but I would not have
bet against them.
> I note that ATK produced more fiber placed and fiber-wound structures
> than the rest of the industry put together, if you believe their press
> releases.
But what precentage is precision placed fibers vs quick and ditry jobs that
get the needed job done? And do they have any cryogenic designs in use?
> Now — why did the X-33 tank fail? It wasn’t the cryo tank that failed
> — it was the face sheet on the honeycomb insulation that cracked and,
> coupled with something mis-manufactured (a piece of tape, left over
> from when the cryo insulation was applied on top of the composite tank
> structure), that encouraged crack formation, leading to cryo pumping
> and the failure of the insulation (debonding from the underlying
> composite structure).
It was my understanding that the debonding was in the composite itself or
directly affected the composite structure, if it was just the insulation they
could have just left it loose or reglue it as it was not a structural
element. At some level the composite tank itself was damaged.
> Who did the installation of the honeycomb insulation on the cryo tank?
> Was it ATK? Was it Lockheed Martin? or was it another contractor?
Don’t know. Was not Scaled
> And I’m not sure if Scaled made the cryo LH2 tank for the DC-XA.
I was pretty sure they did but the following does not say so:
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/x-33/dc-xa.htm
nor does the following:
http://media.armadilloaerospace.com/DCX/
I don’t know why I thought it was Scaled who built the new hydrogen tank when
it became the DC-XA? But it looks like I am wrong:
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_pasa/is_199601/ai_2638499539
> I
> dont’ find any reference to them making the tank. That tank also had
> problems with cryo pumping leading to failure of the insulation during
> test cycles — although not in as spectacular of a manner (it also
> wasn’t integral to the structural integrity of the vehicle, if memory
> serves).
Cite? URL? I only know about hydrogen leaks but not debonding.
> However, there was a not-highly publicized announcement that Northrop
> Grumman had successfully completed 9 months of testing on a composite
> LH2 tank at a NASA test faciliity, including scores of fill,
> pressurized, drain, warm, refill etc cycles.
Again Cite? URL? Thank you.
Earl Colby Pottinger [ Idiot at Large, and we do mean large
]
–
I make public email sent to me! Hydrogen Peroxide Rockets, OpenBeos,
SerialTransfer 3.0, RAMDISK, BoatBuilding, DIY TabletPC. What happened to
the time? http://webhome.idirect.com/~earlcp
Space station future adrift (Soyuz purchase crisis)
Space station future adrift
By Philip Chien
27 November 2004 // SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES
http://washingtontimes.com/national/20041126-121743-6276r.htm
NASA and the nations involved in the International Space Station project
will run out of emergency rescue craft within 18 months and have not decided
what to do after April 2006, when the final Russian Soyuz spacecraft leaves
the station and returns to Earth.
Soyuz, the three-person lifeboat for the crews if a fire, serious
illness or other disaster occurs, soon ends its production run under the
current international agreement, and a cash-strapped Russia wants
compensation for building more of the spacecraft after 2006.
But warning against payment to Moscow are U.S. anti-proliferation laws
and the initial spirit of the interagency project – under which NASA,
Roskosmos and the space agencies of the 14 other nations involved divide up
the tasks and no money changes hands.
The 1998 interagency agreement called for Russia to supply 11 Soyuz,
each to serve for six months, starting with the first crew launch on Oct.
31, 2000. The 11th Soyuz expires in April 2006.
"We’re planning to have both purchasing and barter agreements that
will cover 2006 to 2010," said Alexei Krasnov, head of Roskosmos’
manned-mission programs.
NASA Deputy Administrator Fred Gregory said that "the United States
and Russia have been negotiating" the Soyuz issue and other matters.
etc….
Scram Success
So you’ve all probably read that the latest Mach10 flight was
successful. The statements from NASA’s O’Keefe seem to indicate that
this technology will be used to advance commercial flight, as well as
cheaper access to space.
So in light of these post-Nov16 statements from NASA, will there be a
future for scram?
Some of you have said it’s easier to get into space with a rocket, but
some of the news coverage I was reading said scram could at least be
used for a lower-stage booster.
Could scram be suitable for heavy payloads in particular?
Re: Something bugging me…
- — -
> http://amesnews.arc.nasa.gov/index.html About a third of the way down the
> middle of the page, it says "NASA Exploration (Mars) Center". I thought
the
> ‘goal’ was Moon then Mars.
> —
> Alan Erskine
> We can get people to the Moon in five years,
> not the fifteen GWB proposes.
> Give NASA a real challenge
> Alanterski…@bigpond.com
Archives
- February 2012
- January 2012
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
- November 2009
-
Recent Posts
- Breaking News : VSE is Dick Cheney's Space Program.
- Please help us to recover the Ark of The Covenant
- I found this to be helpful
- WAKE UP AMERICA – DEFEND YOUR INHERITANCE TODAY!
- …Paris Released from Jail !
- Biggest Practical Size For A Space Telescope?
- Get REAL America
- Genesis II is aloft!
- Ground-based picture of STS+ISS
- NASA investigates into the real causes of Ozone depletion



