Challenger is saw live because I had made sure to get out of class to get to the library to watch the launch.The Challenger explosion is the one that hits me the hardest. I didn't see it happen -- I was on work study. My boss came in a exclaimed "the Shuttle's exploded". I went outside and saw the broken launch plume. I kept looking to see if there was any evidence that the orbiter had managed to separate from the main tank. By the time I went back inside, someone had dug up a TV set and we watched the news for the next hour or so, trying to make sense of it.
Also,
That's pretty neat.
That's pretty neat.
But the way they were hyping this made me think they were going to say they'd discovered extraterrestrial life or something.
I'm hoping to see it. If anyone wants to come out to Oregon in August for this, let me know!If you live between Oregon and South Carolina (@Dave), you might want to watch the first coast-to-coast total solar eclipse visible in the continental US in 99 years when it happens on August 21st.
http://www.eclipse2017.org/2017/path_through_the_US.htm
Booked my hotel room in Nashville last June, it's going at over twice the rate I booked at now. Just north of Nashville is the longest duration of total eclipse. This is one of my bucket list items.[DOUBLEPOST=1489800951,1489800884][/DOUBLEPOST]If you live between Oregon and South Carolina (@Dave), you might want to watch the first coast-to-coast total solar eclipse visible in the continental US in 99 years when it happens on August 21st.
http://www.eclipse2017.org/2017/path_through_the_US.htm
My daughter and her soon-to-be husband are going to the Portland area for their honeymoon/his birthday/eclipse.I'm hoping to see it. If anyone wants to come out to Oregon in August for this, let me know!
On one level, I hope this is the case, so that the "old guard" is routed, but OTOH competition is ALWAYS a good thing for having a technology race, and so the lack of a clear competitor would be bad long-term. But maybe that's Blue Origin's job, which would be OK.Getting the second stage back as well will mean that SpaceX will be able undercut the price of any space launch system in the world. Combined with a rapid turnaround time –Musk wants to get it to less than 24 hours – this will mean cheap and easy access to space for governments, corporations and private individuals around the world.
For Musk’s competitors like ULA in the United States and Arianespace in Europe, this could be the end of the line unless they can quickly produce a similar capability themselves. But Boeing, Lockheed and others in the combined ULA organization spent the last 15 years telling the world Musk would fail, instead of researching the technology themselves.
But each of the 'booms' look to be as large as a 767.
Looks like it came from the edge of the darker area (repair?) and acts much like a roof shingle in it's flight.Latest landing of a SpaceX rocket:
Notice at the 5-6 second mark how something gets blown off of the pad to the right of the rocket? I wonder what wasn't secured correctly on the pad itself. Well away from the rocket, so that couldn't have damaged it, but I wonder what's "on the pad" to go flying around like that, and if there's anything closer that could potentially do the same?
I agree about where it appears to come from, but as for the "roof shingle" we have to remember scale here. That pad is hundreds of feet across (or more... i couldn't easily find dimensions, but that could be google-fu failing me). That "shingle" is probably 10ftx10ft or larger.Looks like it came from the edge of the darker area (repair?) and acts much like a roof shingle in it's flight.
Hmm, maybe I should create a SA account.I zoomed in and took a few stills, then asked on Stack Exchange to see if they might be able to figure it out:
https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/21838/spacex-crs-11-landing-pad-debris-identification
Common English usage is "forums," but if they're going to try and substitute the archaic form, they should at least get it right!Apparently it's neither:
https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/69/which-is-the-plural-of-forum-fora-or-forums
It's leviOsa, not leviosAHmm, maybe I should create a SA account.
...'cuz the first thing I thought when I read the responses was "It's 'fora' not 'forata!'"
--Patrick
Ow! I bit my tongue!It's leviOsa, not leviosA
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@steinman, they did it from two separate pads, and two separate rockets. This wasn't a turnaround situation.SpaceX has successfully completed a 48 hour turnaround on its rocket. It put a satellite in orbit, landed, then 48 hours after landing launched 10 more satellites in different orbits in one launch.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/06/25/s...hes-and-recovers-second-falcon-9-in-48-hours/
This should radically change the cost of placing satellites, among other things, into orbit.