^Not Morpheus, they are developing that at JSC. Morpheus had a testing failure a few months back and exploded actually. We are doing the Mighty Eagle here: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/lunarquest/robotic/12-085.htmlOne of the guys in my branch is the lead systems engineer for Mighty Eagle, he's actually an NCSU alum. I think he actually has an account on TWW but he's at most a lurker and I don't think he's been active in a few years.
4/11/2013 9:53:56 AM
ah i hadn't heard of that one... looks awesome. My understanding was that there aren't funds in the NASA budget to design/build a lunar lander, hence the lack of a lunar landing in the long term plan.
4/11/2013 10:06:45 AM
Technically these aren't "Lunar" landers. They are just "No atmosphere" landers that could be used in any space environment including the moon so maybe that is the loophole they are getting funded through our something.
4/11/2013 11:07:12 AM
There is also the difference between a small robotic lander and a large human lander.
4/11/2013 11:58:51 AM
4/11/2013 2:37:34 PM
^those are all very valid points. After i wrote my statement about it being a cop out I thought about it... although with this mission there are no plans to, but that mass could definitely be used at least as shielding material (radiation, micrometeor) for an outpost at L2. in the end i'm betting this goes the way of a lot of recent nasa problems... lack of funding leading to slips in schedule leading to cancellation.[Edited on April 11, 2013 at 3:12 PM. Reason : ]
4/11/2013 2:48:49 PM
Speaking of outposts at L2...I read a paper about using a liquid hydrogen fuel tank from the SLS and outfitting it Skylab style. Again, something that would be really fucking cool but will probably never see the light of day.http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/04/03/nasas-house-sized-deep-space-station-skylab-2_n_3004649.htmlhttp://science.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/04/04/17601955-nasa-could-make-skylab-ii-first-deep-space-home?lite[Edited on April 11, 2013 at 3:18 PM. Reason : ]
4/11/2013 2:59:23 PM
^ a paper? I think you read that from TWW.http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=527903And the idea wasn't from NASA or academics, it was from a bunch of space groupies.http://www.astronautix.com/craft/stsation.htmI'm not saying there's no merit to it. Clearly, by not trashing the stages you can increase the mass of an orbiting station much faster. This group also hoped to send up rockets carrying 100 people each. That sounds crazy, but if you just took the Saturn V LEO payload and divide by the mass per crew of modern rockets, you easily find that it might actually work. With such a large space station for them to visit, it might actually make sense. And this is all 1960s-esque technology. Granted, it would take the full resources of the Apollo program, but it would also feel like we were getting somewhere.That thread, btw, had my favorite quote from TWW of all time
4/11/2013 3:17:30 PM
i think we are talking about two different things. the thread you are linking to was from 2008, and was talking about using SHUTTLE tanks... this one specifically uses the hydrogen pressure vessel from an upper stage of the SLS, which is being designed currently. I can't find the original presentation I read (it's saved on my home computer) but I found a couple of news articles about the concept.
4/11/2013 3:21:11 PM
^ So is that idea unique from what Skylab was? In Skylab they didn't actually reuse a fuel tank, they just replaced the moon stuff with a workshop?
4/11/2013 3:34:08 PM
This plan is very similar to skylab... retrofitted (empty) fuel tank, stuffed with supplies. (not a "wet workshop" re-using a spent fuel tank.) [Edited on April 11, 2013 at 3:42 PM. Reason : ]
4/11/2013 3:36:58 PM
4/11/2013 3:52:33 PM
ah, found the Delta Vhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta-v_budgetEML1: 3.77EML2: 3.43EML4/5: 3.97LLO: 4.04escape: 3.22So even though EML2 is unstable, it's cheaper than the other points to get to. Although not as cheap as just escaping Earth's gravity.^ So I think i'm getting that image now. The arrows are trying to say that they'll illustrating the tank inside the habitat, for no apparent reason. The habitat is actually filled with air and other stuff. It doesn't start out with propellant in it.[Edited on April 11, 2013 at 4:08 PM. Reason : ]
4/11/2013 4:06:39 PM
a "wet workshop" is when you use the spent tank and re-purpose it to hold an atmosphere and crew while it is in orbit. This was floated as a way to build Skylab, but was deemed overly complicated to pull off. Skylab (the original, along with this proposal) uses a new tank that has never been filled with fuel as the pressure vessel for the habitat. This is then upgraded and stocked on the ground, and sent up as the payload of the rocket. So the main part of the station's structure IS the tank... just modified and stocked on the ground. The benefit is you don't have to re-engineer a completely new pressure vessel, test it, manufacture it, etc. You are using and "off the shelf" part. The picture above is showing how the pressure vessel is situated in the rocket stage. the "outer skin" is attached to the tank at liftoff and would presumably remain attached. I am at home now and have the PDF of the original presentation (but not of the paper its self)... If anyone is curious and wants to read it PM me your email and I can send you a copy (or is there a good place online i could upload it and share via link??)[Edited on April 11, 2013 at 6:32 PM. Reason : ]
4/11/2013 6:21:00 PM
http://www.scribd.com/?But no, I still don't understand. Are you saying the SLS Skylab 2 is a wet workshop plan or a dry workshop plan? Why does the above image have Skylab II Habitat located above the H2 tank? In the left image, there's a H2 Tank in the Upper Stage (I'm reading directly from the diagram), and above the upper stage is the habitat. If the H2 tank is surrounded by a shell that will be used for something... then why do they have a shell in addition to the habitat?Or is the left image not of the Skylab 2 idea? Are the images showing the transition from the ordinary SLS design to the Skylab 2 design?
4/11/2013 7:17:07 PM
skylab II would NOT be a wet workshop. it would be an extra, modified hydrogen tank originally designed to be part of an upper stage of the SLS rocket. The picture of the entire rocket is showing the skylab II (already converted from a fuel tank to space station) sitting on top of the rocket, ready to launch.The "outside" of the tank is the outer wall of the rocket (i don't know what the technical name is.)... look closer at the different stages... inside of each stage of the rocket are individual tanks for Hydrogen and Liquid oxygen. The individual tank for hydrogen would be converted into the pressurized section of the station.The outer wall would remain on the pressure vessel in part as a shield against micro meteoroid and orbital debris impacts[Edited on April 11, 2013 at 9:00 PM. Reason : ]
4/11/2013 8:40:42 PM
http://www.scribd.com/doc/135477555/Skylab-II-Presentation?secret_password=n6bil2acfwne3ukfy2d
4/11/2013 8:49:38 PM
^ok, so taken down because of http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=31601.0
4/12/2013 7:10:25 AM
Hey dudes! NASA Marshall Space Flight Center just announced SIX vacancies in the Engineering Directorate. These are ENTRY LEVEL positions and are only available to recent graduates (those who graduated with a BS or MS within the past 2 years). Specifically we are looking for people with degrees in Aerospace, Mechanical, Electrical, Computer, and Materials Engineering, but those with degrees in other types of engineering or applied science will also be considered. The job announcement is only open until April 17 so if you are graduating this May (or know someone who is that would be interested), you'll need to apply ASAP. Please PM me if you want more info or would like to apply.SIDENOTE: Would any premies mind bumping this topic for me: /message_topic.aspx?topic=592871 ? I'd like to post in there too.
4/13/2013 3:02:05 PM
(everyone can bump old threads now)
4/13/2013 3:16:02 PM
from playlisthttp://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLE8C83FF0367EEF8Cwe have new videohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8OUL9QYNpIHere are some of the updates mentioned in it. I had not seen these yet because I stopped checking some time ago.http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/multimedia/pia16818.htmlhttp://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/multimedia/pia16912.htmlhttp://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/multimedia/pia16911.html
4/13/2013 9:00:53 PM
4/14/2013 12:52:33 PM
unmanned test launch today from Virginia...http://www.space.com/17933-nasa-television-webcasts-live-space-tv.html5:00pm
4/17/2013 4:31:00 PM
scrubbed for the day.
4/17/2013 5:03:40 PM
now new images now because of this
4/18/2013 8:51:03 AM
Might I be of some assistance?
4/18/2013 12:16:52 PM
anyone care to explain frogger's gif?also, something in the news about 3 newly discovered planets being the closest to earth-like planets of those found thus far.
4/18/2013 3:51:09 PM
^ the gif a few posts up was showing the dots made by the laser.It burns rock with a laser, then points cameras at it and does science. The video update just above it covered what the science was.A "sol" is a Martian day. So those were images taken from a really long time period.
4/18/2013 5:02:33 PM
4/18/2013 5:03:18 PM
what? they had like powerpoint slides and all.
4/18/2013 5:06:15 PM
It would be absolutely amazing to be able to see what Mars looked like when it had a thicker atmosphere, and liquid water oceans/rivers... i can't fathom that it could have rivers, but still be brownish rock on the shores.And do we know exactly when it started to lose its atmosphere and (possibly) change orbit? Have there been any attempts to correlate Mars' huge impact crater with this process? And if a meteor impact did affect Mars' climate and maybe orbit, what would this have meant for Earth?
4/18/2013 7:04:03 PM
a leading thought is that since mars has a much weaker magnetic field and lower gravity, the solar wind eroded away it's atmosphere over time.
4/18/2013 9:10:48 PM
But how would the atmosphere have developed in the first place?
4/19/2013 12:25:12 AM
^ to begin with the sun was not as hotAnd second, it did get blown away. It's just that in the early solar system, the accretion of gas molecules from space was greater than the loss into space.
4/19/2013 8:37:32 AM
super long epic story about mars explorationhttp://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/04/22/130422fa_fact_bilger
4/19/2013 6:03:56 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antares_%28rocket%29
4/21/2013 7:59:18 PM
Falcon Heavy is scheduled to be tested later this year. http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-03/most-powerful-space-rocket[Edited on April 22, 2013 at 7:20 AM. Reason : ]
4/22/2013 7:19:06 AM
You say that so nonchalantly. Wouldn't that be like a giant deal?I take it they're not going to have the reusable grasshopper stages? Is that right?And it'll just be used to haul stuff up into orbit. But why? What kinds of projects would that be supporting? I guess the test this year won't deliver anything? But does the Falcon Heavy have any place in NASA's strategic planning?
4/22/2013 7:35:22 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energia_II#Energia_II_.28Uragan.29
4/22/2013 7:41:16 AM
4/22/2013 8:46:23 AM
http://www.spacex.com/press.php?page=20120529
4/22/2013 9:45:03 AM
i don't know a ton about satellite tech, but if there is a demand and the customer is willing to pay for it...oh, and
4/22/2013 9:46:37 AM
oh...So basically it would be about as large as their current satellites.
4/22/2013 10:30:45 AM
read up on some Falcon Heavy stuff... most speculation is that there will be a dummy payload (mass simulator) for the test launch. People want to see it put a Dragon around the moon, but i doubt they would go that route for their first launch.
4/22/2013 10:49:43 AM
If the Falcon Heavy could lift something that could go around the moon for $125 million that would be pretty boss.
4/22/2013 12:08:05 PM
http://arstechnica.com/science/2013/04/new-f-1b-rocket-engine-upgrades-apollo-era-deisgn-with-1-8m-lbs-of-thrust/article about upgrading the design of the F-1 rockets (used in the Saturn V) for possible use for the boosters on the SLS
4/23/2013 9:38:40 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/04/24/mars-rover-penis-nasa_n_3144656.html
4/24/2013 10:24:53 PM
4/25/2013 9:17:39 AM
fyi it wasn't really an on purpose penis. but hey, whatever brings attention to the space program right?
4/25/2013 9:41:01 AM
It's pretty good honestly. You would have a hard time drawing a better penis if you tried.It's also a panorama, so they painstakingly put it together from many pictures. Drawing phallus on other planets is hard work.
4/25/2013 10:15:01 AM