Casual Astronomy, Spaceflight News and Lower California Weather

Canaveral Launch Success! (see comment 649)
Posted by: LowerCal, 10:19 PM GMT on August 15, 2011 +11
On the east side of the Sea of Cortez (Gulf of California) is a circular area of low clouds rotating counterclockwise. High clouds above it are moving clockwise. Deep convection is bursting near the center.

UPDATE: A satellite loop of the system described is in comment 1. Similar systems continue to appear. Below I've added self updating satellite images and surface maps of the area.

I'll add loops of similar systems that I see to the comments. Currently there are loops in comments 1 and 7.

Click on image for loop.


Click on image for loop.




Click on image for loop.







Locations of Visitors from the Past 24 Hours
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Grail Moonbound (Skyepony)
Last launch of a Delta II after 22 years. It was a Heavy so the sound rolled on a while. It is carrying twin satellites that are headed to survey The Moon. Beautiful launch NASA!
Grail Moonbound
Grail Moonbound on the last Delta II (Skyepony)
Last launch of a Delta II after 22 years. It was a Heavy so the sound rolled on a while. It is carrying twin satellites that are headed to survey The Moon. Beautiful launch NASA!
Grail Moonbound on the last Delta II
Precision (anvilhead)
A Super Scooper Fixed Wing Aircraft Makes A Water Drop Directly Behind A Home At The Wagon Fire.
Precision
Sunset Allure (anvilhead)
Sunset Allure
Development Of A Severe Thunderstorm (anvilhead)
I watched this storm develop for about an hour before it slowly bled off the mountains and turned severe in the Santa Clarita Valley. 60+ mph winds and dime sized hail. Wild weather day here !
Development Of A Severe Thunderstorm
Waxing Gibbous Moon (Ralfo)
Full Moon on 10,11,11
Waxing Gibbous Moon
Cagtripodi Sun Spots (Ralfo)
Mr. Cagtripodi discovered these sunspots on the Sun today from Italy as shown here earlier before on this site. This is a picture angled from Yonkers, N. Y. USA. All credit and thanks Must go to Mr. Cagtripodi for making us aware of the phenomena
Cagtripodi Sun Spots
Port St. John Fl. (joebed)
Atlas 5
Port St. John Fl.
Longs Peak beneath the lunar eclipse (PCG)
The moon is nearing entirely in the Earth's shadow as Longs Peak sits below.
Longs Peak beneath the lunar eclipse
()
Moonset (mcgino)
Another near infrared image. The bright part of the mountain is bright because it is covered in snow still.
Moonset
Almost Gone (MikePic)
Almost Gone
From the NW (kippic)
The clouds moved in and covered the moon just after I took this shot. Everett, WA
From the NW
Full Lunar Eclipse (catilac)
I had to bundle up this morning as temps were in the teens..
Full Lunar Eclipse
éclipse lunaire (anvilhead)
Over the Santa Clarita Valley
éclipse lunaire
Winter Solstice – The Shortest day of the Year (Ralfo)
Every Year on the Winter Solstice for many years now I have taken the Sunrise. It is always in the same spot behind that Evergreen Tree. This year there are some clouds but you can still see the Sun Blazing through. Today is the shortage amount daylight. The Good News! We will start picking up daylight from now on! Happy Holidays, Make it The Best Ever! P.S. In the Northern Hemisphere the Winter Solstice starts: Dec. 22, 12:30 A.M. EDT (05:30 UT*), Sun enters sign of Capricorn; winter begins.
Winter Solstice – The Shortest day of the Year
Quadrantid meteor (LaddObservatory)
A very bright meteor from the Quadrantids at 3:00:08 am EST captured by the wide field sky camera on the roof of Ladd Observatory.
Quadrantid meteor
Delta 4 Rocket Launch (Skyepony)
Delta 4 rocket launching the Air Force's Wideband Global SATCOM 4 military communications satellite.
Delta 4 Rocket Launch
Because the night belongs to lovers. (Altred)
Because the night belongs to lovers.
Natures night lite. (johngomes)
Not the best due to all the local light pollution but still better than a black sky. It was approximately 5 below with a slight wind while waiting for the lights to appear.
Natures night lite.
Green and clean. (Altred)
Green and clean.
Final Shuttle Launch (Skyepony)
I did this in Charcoal. It is ~6"X8". It should be the first in a series of three.
Final Shuttle Launch
Discovery Launch STS-120 (Skyepony)
I did this in pen & ink it is STS-120 Discovery, launched on October 23, 2007. It's ~6
Discovery Launch STS-120
Tonights Moon (Ralfo)
Full Moon Tomorrow. 2/7/12.
Tonights Moon
STS-1 (Skyepony)
I did this in pencil.
STS-1
Atlas V (Skyepony)
Atlas 5 rocket launching the Navy's MUOS 1 mobile communications satellite.
Atlas V
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Reader Comments
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Viewing: 201 - 251

Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14Blog Index

201. Patrap 7:25 PM GMT on October 04, 2011    
Sputnik 1 was launched this date October 4th, 1957



Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
202. LowerCal 10:17 PM GMT on October 04, 2011    
Pat Thanks for the looks at the future and the past.

Click image to enlarge.
See how NASA's new mega rocket, the Space Launch System, measures up for deep space missions in this SPACE.com infographic.
Source: SPACE.com: All about our solar system, outer space and exploration
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
203. LowerCal 10:36 PM GMT on October 04, 2011    
I fixed Space.com's link for the enlarged graphic in the previous comment. :^/
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
204. SBKaren 12:50 AM GMT on October 05, 2011    
I sent an email out to our staff about the naming contest, just in case anyone is interested. Thanks for the link! You just never know!
Member Since: February 21, 2005 Posts: 192 Comments: 14233
205. LowerCal 4:59 AM GMT on October 05, 2011    
Karen True that. Thanks for getting the word out. I should probably repeat it here.

Naming contest adds to Moon mission's outreach to kids
NASA is calling upon schoolchildren around the U.S. to help name the twin Moon-bound GRAIL spacecraft that will unravel mysteries of the lunar interior.

"A NASA mission to the moon is one of the reasons why I am a scientist today," said GRAIL Principal Investigator Maria Zuber from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "My hope is that GRAIL motivates young people today towards careers in science, math and technology. Getting involved with naming our two GRAIL spacecraft could inspire their interest not only in space exploration but in the sciences, and that's a good thing."
....
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
206. SBKaren 8:25 PM GMT on October 05, 2011    
LC - I also sent an email to one of my parent volunteers who has 3 kids - all really into science. I thought you'd appreciate her response:

That's very cool. Yes, my kids are into space as well as science. I'll have to show them this. What a neat idea to get kids involved! Btw, their interest in space kind of comes with the territory given that their dad is an aeronautical and aerospace engineer who helped design the guidance and navigational control systems of the International Space Station. FYI, my brother-in-law had much to do with designing and writing the software for the computer operating system that's aboard the twin Mars Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity. He takes great pride in the fact that they far outlasted their intended lifespans on Mars. :)
Member Since: February 21, 2005 Posts: 192 Comments: 14233
207. LowerCal 8:55 PM GMT on October 06, 2011    
Karen What a great response! Thanks for passing along the info on the naming contest of the twin Moon orbiters. I guess you just can't assume anyone already knows about it.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
208. Patrap 10:55 PM GMT on October 06, 2011    
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
209. LowerCal 12:13 AM GMT on October 08, 2011    
Pat Thanks for that interesting story. Hubble, the gift that keeps on giving.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
210. LowerCal 12:18 AM GMT on October 08, 2011    
For Americans wondering, "What has NASA ever done for me?"

NASA Spinoff Homepage

Since 1976, NASA's Spinoff publication has featured over 1,750 NASA-derived technologies that improve your life.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
211. Ylee 9:03 AM GMT on October 08, 2011    
LC, I thought you'd like this webcam of the refurbishing of Endeavour for display.

Member Since: February 3, 2011 Posts: 67 Comments: 11540
212. LowerCal 8:27 PM GMT on October 08, 2011    
213. GardenGrrl 5:39 PM GMT on October 10, 2011    
Here's me being political again, but WHY NASA!, it is one of the few productive and useful "pork" programs.
(Seeing as they have decided to label it as such.)

Oh well, spiraling down circling the drain.

On a brighter side, we got rain. The trees really needed it before they go into autumn mode.

Hooray for Rain!
Member Since: March 25, 2007 Posts: 220 Comments: 7361
214. LowerCal 12:27 AM GMT on October 11, 2011    
Why? I guess NASA makes a good hostage. :^/

Good old rain, :^) I hope the trees get some more before it gets chilly.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
215. sp34n119w 3:47 AM GMT on October 14, 2011    
Hi!

The 2011 Great World Wide Star Count is here! Join us by making your obsevations between October 14th and 28th. Please be sure to download the Activity Guide to participate.

Northern hemispherers (hemispherians? hemispherics?) are doing Cygnus again this year. Hurray! I know where Cygnus is :)
Member Since: January 27, 2007 Posts: 78 Comments: 4071
216. LowerCal 10:16 PM GMT on October 22, 2011    
sp Thanks for the heads up! :^)

There is still a week left to make your observations folks.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
217. LowerCal 10:17 PM GMT on October 22, 2011    
It's deja vu all over again!

Spaceflight Now | Breaking News | Falling German satellite greater threat than UARS
....
The ROSAT X-ray astronomy observatory is smaller and less massive than NASA's Upper Atmospheric Research Satellite, or UARS, which fell back to Earth on Sept. 24. But officials predict it will spread three times more debris and pose a greater threat to people than UARS.

That's because ROSAT is made of heat-resistant components, especially its primary mirror, which officials say will probably be the largest single fragment that will reach Earth.

....engineers expect the bulk of ROSAT to survive re-entry, littering its impact point with up to 30 pieces of debris.
....
Up to 3,750 pounds of the satellite could reach Earth's surface. NASA said they expected 1,200 pounds of UARS to survive re-entry.
....

Here are the information and graphics for the latest reentry prediction. The predicted window now spans 20 hours centered on 7:12am 4:12am EDT 23 OCT 2011.


Where over the world is the 2.6 ton ROSAT?

Reload to update image.

Image credit: Heavens-Above


Where on the world will it land (and when)?

Predicted Reentry Time: 23 OCT 2011 @ 11:12 UTC ± 10 hours

For clarity, ground track plot is limited to ± 6 hours

Legend
Yellow Icon - location of object at predicted reentry time
Orange Line - area of visibility at the predicted reentry time for a ground observer
Blue Line - ground track uncertainty prior to predicted reentry time (ticks at 5-minute intervals)
Yellow Line - ground track uncertainty after predicted reentry time (ticks at 5-minute intervals)
White Line - day/night divider at predicted reentry time (Sun location shown by White Icon)
Note: Possible reentry locations lie anywhere along the blue and yellow ground track.

Prediction, image and legend credit: Center for Orbital and Reentry Debris Studies

MODIFY: Corrected my UTC to EDT time zone conversion.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
218. Patrap 11:29 PM GMT on October 22, 2011    
...Im ready,,

Ruff!!

Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
219. LowerCal 4:28 PM GMT on October 23, 2011    
No reports yet of debris from falling satellite - Boston.com
.... the satellite entered between 0145 and 0215 GMT Sunday (9:45 p.m. and 10:15 p.m. Saturday EDT) and would have taken only 10 or 15 minutes to hit the ground.
....
Calculations based on data made available to scientists by the U.S. military indicate that it must have crashed somewhere between the Indian Ocean off the coast of Myanmar, further inland in Myanmar or as far inland as China, he said.

McDowell, an astrophysicist who tracks man-made space objects and who worked on one of ROSAT's instruments, said two Chinese cities with millions of inhabitants each, Chongqing and Chengdu, were in the satellite's projected path during the time window in which it must have crashed.

"But if it had come down over a populated area there probably would be reports by now," he told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.
....

Pat You think of everthing! LOL
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
220. auburn (Mod) 5:03 PM GMT on October 23, 2011    
hope it crashed off the coast..but it would have been nice if it could have been recovered..
Member Since: August 27, 2006 Posts: 539 Comments: 46938
221. LowerCal 10:37 PM GMT on October 24, 2011    
aubie Yeah and I'm guessing you'll want this one back for sure. ;^)


Image source: http://space.auburn.edu/

AubieSat-1
AubieSat-1 will be launched on October 28, 2011 by NASA on a Delta-II rocket out of Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
....
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
222. LakeWorthFinn 3:20 AM GMT on October 25, 2011    
Aubie, you've been a good boy to get a green space box named after you!
Member Since: October 6, 2005 Posts: 67 Comments: 7043
223. LowerCal 4:47 PM GMT on October 29, 2011    
ULA (United launch Alliance) successfully launched the next generation of polar orbiting civilian weather/climate satellite early yesterday morning from Vandenberg AFB in California.

Spaceflight Now | Delta Launch Report | NPP: The next-generation weather watcher from space

Spaceflight Now | Delta Launch Report | Scientists counting on NPP amid programmatic turmoil
Originally conceived as a testbed satellite to prove the advanced designs for future U.S. government spacecraft, the NPP mission blasting off Friday has been thrust to an entirely new level of importance for meteorologists now facing a gap in data from space.
....
Spaceflight Now | Delta Launch Report | Venerable Delta 2 rocket launch flawless again

Six small student built university research cubesats were also successfully deployed: AubieSat 1, a pair of DICE satellites, Explorer 1 (Prime) Unit 2, M-Cubed and RAX 2.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
224. LowerCal 1:24 AM GMT on October 30, 2011    
Russia poised to resume space station flights | Reuters
A Russian cargo ship is poised for liftoff on Sunday to the International Space Station following a launch accident in August that cut staffing levels aboard the orbital outpost.
....
If Sunday's launch is successful, a new crew would fly to the outpost on November 13. Their arrival on November 15 leaves just six days before the current crew is scheduled to depart. Their replacements would launch between December 21 and 26.
....
If Sunday's launch fails, the station likely would be left untended after the current crew returns next month. The station has been permanently staffed since the first live-aboard crew arrived on November 2, 2000.
....

More on this story at
Spaceflight Now | Breaking News | Soyuz launch crucial to keeping space station staffed.


Live launch coverage on NASA TV via cable, satellite or the web begins at 6AM EDT, 1000 GMT. The launch is scheduled for 6:11am EDT, 1011 GMT.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
225. Patrap 2:02 AM GMT on October 30, 2011    
...I bet some of them wunderground folks would "Fly" if we had the Budget and a Vehicle in the flow.


..Im bored as all get out.


Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
226. Patrap 2:07 AM GMT on October 30, 2011    
..America,, find the Spirit and let's do great things again.

Our Grandchildren are watching.





High Flight

Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds, — and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of — wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there,
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air. . . .

Up, up the long, delirious burning blue
I've topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace
Where never lark, or ever eagle flew —
And, while with silent, lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.

— John Gillespie Magee, Jr



Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
227. Patrap 2:21 AM GMT on October 30, 2011    
Neil Armstrong says US space program ‘embarrassing’
Agence France-Presse
8:22 am | Friday, September 23rd, 2011





WASHINGTON—Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon, told lawmakers Thursday that the end of the space shuttle era has left the American human spaceflight program in an “embarrassing” state.
“We will have no American access to, and return from, low Earth orbit and the International Space Station for an unpredictable length of time in the future,” Armstrong told the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology.

“For a country that has invested so much for so long to achieve a leadership position in space exploration and exploitation, this condition is viewed by many as lamentably embarrassing and unacceptable.”
Armstrong was part of a four-member panel of space experts who told lawmakers that NASA needs a stronger vision for the future and should focus on returning humans to the Moon and to the International Space Station.

“A lead, however earnestly and expensively won, once lost, is nearly impossible to regain,” said the US astronaut, now 81, who was commander of Apollo 11 and walked on the Moon in 1969.
President Barack Obama canceled the Constellation program that would have returned humans to the Moon and called on NASA to instead focus on new, deep-space capabilities to carry people to an asteroid by 2025 and Mars by 2030.

The retirement in July of the three-decade-old space shuttle program brought an end to the US capability to send humans to space until private industry can come up with a new commercial space capsule to the ISS, maybe by 2015.
In the meantime, Russia’s Soyuz capsules are the only taxis for the world’s astronauts heading to low-Earth orbit, and a ticket to the ISS costs global space agencies between 50 and 60 million dollars each.
“Get the shuttle out of the garage down there at Kennedy (Space Center), crank up the motors and put it back in service,” said Eugene Cernan, who commanded the Apollo 17 flight and was the last man to walk on the Moon in 1972.

“You want a launch vehicle today that will service the ISS? We’ve got it sitting down there. So before we put it in a museum, let’s make use of it. It’s in the prime of its life, how could we just put it away?”
Cernan hailed the vision of John F. Kennedy, “a bold and courageous president who started us on a journey to the stars,” and said thousands of Americans have been inspired by the space race with the Soviet Union.
“Today, we are on a path of decay. We are seeing the book close on five decades of accomplishment as the leader in human space exploration,” Cernan said.
Cernan said Constellation has been replaced by a “mission to nowhere” and called on NASA to make plans to return to the Moon.

“As unimaginable as it seems, we have now come full circle and ceded our leadership role in space back to the same country — albeit by a different name — that spurred our challenge five decades ago.”
He added: “I take no solace in the failure of the last Soyuz booster.”
Due to technical problem with a Soyuz rocket in August, a Russian cargo ship failed to reach orbit and crashed back to Earth, prompting Russia to temporarily ground a part of its Soyuz program to do emergency checks.
Armstrong and others on the panel appeared to favor the unveiling earlier this month of a massive new launcher capable of powering manned space flights well beyond low-Earth orbit, the Space Launch System, which NASA called the most powerful rocket since the Saturn V rocket put US astronauts on the moon.

Maria Zuber, principal investigator on NASA’s unmanned GRAIL (Gravity Recovery and Interior Laboratory) mission that launched earlier this month to orbit the Moon, said lunar study is valuable, but noted that her students are inspired by the notion of exploring Mars.
“The goal of human exploration of Mars is also the consensus opinion of the next generation who will carry out this challenge,” she said.
“Unfortunately Congress is cutting back NASA’s advanced technology work and it is not clear how the agency will be able to unfold new advanced missions without a more concentrated effort to develop new technologies.

Michael Griffin, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, raised concerns about a new space race and called China, which wants to put a robot on the Moon in 2013 and build its own space station for 2015, “a near-peer competitor.”
“When the Chinese can reach the Moon and we cannot, I do not see why any other nation would regard us as a world leader,” he said.
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
228. LowerCal 6:44 PM GMT on October 30, 2011    
Pat Thanks for all that good food for thought regarding the current state (i.e. lack) of Made-in-USA human spaceflight.

IMO there are no lack of *potential* paths for the resurgence of Made-in-USA human spaceflight... if their funding isn't cut.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
229. LowerCal 6:47 PM GMT on October 30, 2011    
230. GardenGrrl 8:08 PM GMT on October 31, 2011    
Hi, I missed the meteor shower, nothing visible by my house. Did see a magnificent sunset with sliver moon the other night.

Roxie Hollywood, always the shining star (or ham),
posed very nicely for Halloween pics.



oh, btw, I think the Lindt 85% is a bit stiff/waxy unless it's at exactly 75 degrees.

Scharfen Bergers has a very smooth high cocao dark but it may be a bit sweet for your taste.

Happy Star Gazing!
Member Since: March 25, 2007 Posts: 220 Comments: 7361
231. LowerCal 8:37 PM GMT on November 01, 2011    
GG I don't think you missed all that much. The moon will continue stealing the shows until April of next year.

2011 Meteor Showers

2012 Meteor Showers

Roxy is just too cute to scare me. :^)

Thanks for all the chocoknowledge and tips. I'll keep you updated on my personal research. :^)

Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
232. LowerCal 8:50 PM GMT on November 01, 2011    


Spaceflight Now | Shenzhou Mission Report | Shenzhou spaceship begins historic orbital pursuit
An unmanned Shenzhou space capsule blasted off from China on Monday to begin a two-day chase of another spacecraft in orbit for a high-speed link-up to form an austere space laboratory for future astronaut visits.
....
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
233. LowerCal 8:59 PM GMT on November 01, 2011    
Spaceflight Now | Breaking News | Boeing to use shuttle facility for commercial capsule
....
Frank DiBello, president and CEO of Space Florida, a state-funded aerospace economic development agency, ....

"The future of the nation's future commercial space capabilities rests in the hands of many others who must come together in support of these critical capabilities," said DiBello. "Only the Congress can determine when we will stop the investment of our nation's tax dollars into the purchase of continued space transportation service from the Russians.

"It's a national imperative that we have a strong commercial space capability in our industry to stand along side our nation's civil space exploration program led by NASA. We can no longer afford to be at risk of a single point failure as we strive to utilize the world's greatest engineering achievement, the International Space Station, and we need commercial space transportation capabilities sooner, rather than later."

Lower funding and a subsequent delay in spacecraft availability "is unacceptable for us to have the best chance of gaining a return on investment from the ISS for the nation's citizen taxpayers, who paid almost $100 billion to build it," DiBello said. "Adequate and timely investment by congressional leadership is a requirement, and we think the administration's budget request for commercial crew should be fully supported."
....
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
234. Patrap 9:57 PM GMT on November 01, 2011    
...count me in

Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
235. LowerCal 4:22 PM GMT on November 02, 2011    
Spaceflight Now | Breaking News | Space station welcomes Russian cargo ship arrival
The International Space Station received a cargo freighter today when the Russian-made vessel loaded with three tons of supplies safely approached and docked on autopilot.
....

Pat We can always count on you. :^)
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
236. Patrap 4:23 PM GMT on November 02, 2011    
U betcha...
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
237. LowerCal 6:25 PM GMT on November 02, 2011    
The first two spacecraft of China's space station effort are docked and locked.

Spaceflight Now | Shenzhou Mission Report | Chinese docking system based on Russian design
.... the first automatic docking in Chinese space history, catapulting the country into another elite space club with Russia, the United States, Japan and the European Space Agency. The docking demo is a crucial step for China's ambition to build a 100-ton space complex in orbit by 2020.

China became the third nation to launch a person into orbit in 2003. Two more spaceflights have occurred since then, most recently a mission in 2008 which included China's first spacewalk.
....
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
238. LowerCal 1:08 AM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
240. RobDaHood 8:01 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Man, was just over at Skye's place and noticed your avatar. You're losing way too much weight!

Your tree ain't looking too good either...

Hope all is well.
Member Since: September 2, 2008 Posts: 80 Comments: 26391
241. RobDaHood 8:09 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Interesting read back.

54 years later and Aubie is the new Sputnik!

LOL

So they stuffed him in a green box and launched him huh?
How cool is that?

(and here I thought slinging cows from a trebuchet was fun!)
Member Since: September 2, 2008 Posts: 80 Comments: 26391
242. LowerCal 8:20 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Rob Thanks for the comment and your concern. I'd forgotten to switch my avatar back after Halloween and Los Dias de los Muertos. The tree isn't mine and neither is the car underneath it fortunately.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
243. LowerCal 8:24 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Rob LOL! I hope he's enjoying the ride.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
244. RobDaHood 8:26 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Quoting LowerCal:
Rob LOL! I hope he's enjoying the ride.


Hahaha!

Me too.

Really appreciate this blog. I used to be able to keep up with space news...don't know what happened.

Oh, well...almost 4:30 here. Gotta try to get things wrapped up for the day.

Take care.
Member Since: September 2, 2008 Posts: 80 Comments: 26391
245. LowerCal 9:00 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
Rob You too.

I'm glad to hear the blog is appreciated. I'd like to keep up the blog more than I do lately but life has a way of interfering sometimes.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
246. sp34n119w 9:13 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
I may have seen Tiangong 1 this morning. Either that or a gps sat, LOL. I didn't note the exact time, but, Tiangong 1's reported track looks more like what I saw and it is much brighter - and what I saw was bright, and white, and fast.
Just sharing :)
Member Since: January 27, 2007 Posts: 78 Comments: 4071
247. LowerCal 10:11 PM GMT on November 03, 2011    
sp Well thanks for sharing. :^) I hadn't realized how bright it might be with the two modules docked. They should still be docked on the evening of the 12th for another high and bright flyover of our area.

People can find flyovers for other areas, dates and satellites at
Spaceweather.com Flybys (simpler)
OR
Heavens-Above (more info and more satellites).

Spaceflight Now | Shenzhou Mission Report | Successful docking catapults China into elite space club
....Shenzhou 8 will disconnect and retreat from Tiangong 1, then its re-entry module will parachute back to Earth around Nov. 17, concluding the mission.

Tiangong 1 will remain in space awaiting the launch of Shenzhou 9, which could carry human passengers for a manual docking test.

China says at least one of the next two Shenzhou flights, which are both slated to visit Tiangong 1, will be a crewed mission. Both could be manned if Shenzhou 8 is a complete success.

Tiangong 1 is designed for a two-year mission, then China will launch a larger Tiangong 2 module in 2013 for more advanced testing. A third Tiangong module could launch in 2015, paving the way for the assembly of a 100-ton space station by 2020.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
248. Patrap 2:47 PM GMT on November 04, 2011    
249. Patrap 12:21 AM GMT on November 05, 2011    
Asteroid 2005 YU55 To Narrowly Miss Earth (PHOTOS, VIDEO)





An asteroid a quarter-mile-wide will, astronomically speaking, narrowly miss Earth next week.

And while it is the closest an asteroid this size has come to the home planet since 1976, there's no need to call Bruce Willis ... yet.

"There is no chance that this object will collide with the Earth or moon," Don Yeomans, the manager of NASA's Near Earth Object Program office, told Reuters.

But that doesn't mean the asteroid -- named 2005 YU55 -- won't be a threat to earth in the future.

Lance Benner, a research scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in a video from NASA (available below) that scientists haven't been able to reliably compute the asteroid's path beyond a couple of hundred years from now.

At its closest point, the space rock will be about 201,700 miles (324,600 kilometers) away, which is 0.85 the distance between the moon and the Earth. NASA says that the asteroid will reach this point at 6:28 p.m. EST on Tuesday.

"In effect, it'll be moving straight at us from one direction, and then go whizzing by straight away from us in the other direction," Benner said.

An asteroid this size -- which, according to Scientific American is larger than an aircraft carrier -- would cause widespread damage if it were to hit Earth, however. The Associated Press spoke to Jay Melosh, a professor of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences at Purdue University, who said that the asteroid would create a four-mile wide crater 1,700 feet deep. It could cause 70-foot tsunami waves and shake the ground like a magnitude-7 earthquake.

Even though the asteroid will be inside the orbit of the moon, NASA said that the space rock's gravitational pull shouldn't have any "detectable effect" on Earth's tectonic plates or tides.

Yeomans told HuffPost that the flyby will give astronomers a great view of 2005 YU55 and is an opportunity to do research into the asteroid's composition. He said that it's a C-Type asteroid, which means it contains carbon-based minerals which could potentially be used in future space exploration.

"These objects are important for science ... they're potential resources for raw materials in space that we may wish to take advantage of some day," he said.

The New York Times reported last month on proposed fuel stations in space that one study says could put astronauts on an asteroid by 2024.
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968
250. LowerCal 7:47 PM GMT on November 06, 2011    
Pat Thank you for the updates of current interest.
Member Since: July 26, 2006 Posts: 58 Comments: 9026
251. Patrap 5:06 PM GMT on November 09, 2011    
Exploration Flight Test-1 Animation

This animation depicts the proposed test flight of the Orion spacecraft in 2014. During the test, which is called Exploration Flight Test-1 (EFT-1), Orion will launch from Cape Canaveral, Fla., perform two orbits, reaching an altitude higher than any achieved by a spacecraft intended for human use since 1973, and then will re-enter and land in the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of the United States.
Member Since: July 3, 2005 Posts: 377 Comments: 112968

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