thomasconnor, to Astro
@thomasconnor@mstdn.social avatar

One of my silliest hills that I will die on:

STS-31, the mission that deployed the Space Telescope, launched in 1990: April 24.

However, the astronauts didn't deploy the observatory until April 25.

My view -- which is not held by the good folks at STScI -- is that Hubble's birthday is thus the 25th; I liken it to April 24th is when Hubble's parents drove to the hospital / went into labor, but the 25th is when it was born.

diegopappalardo, to space
@diegopappalardo@toot.community avatar

Catching up on Twin Peaks (90s) which wasn't on my radar until now. For some reason. And I'm fascinated by Michael J. Anderson, the man from another place, in the Red Room.
Did you know he worked as a computer technician, as part of the ground support system for NASA's Space Shuttle? Check it out: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_J._Anderson

Glad I stepped out of my Trump/Ukraine/theworldisgoingdownthedrain routine for this genuine "Wow" moment!

derickr, to BBC
@derickr@phpc.social avatar

The has just finished airing an excellent documentary on the incident, "The Space Shuttle that fell to Earth".

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001tts5/the-space-shuttle-that-fell-to-earth-series-1-episode-1

mihobu, to Columbia
@mihobu@social.lol avatar
akrennmair, to space
@akrennmair@mastodon.beer avatar

If you haven‘t watched The Space Shuttle That Fell to Earth, please do so. It is a document of institutional failure in an organisation that struggled with poor internal communication and a flawed engineering and safety culture, despite the 1986 Challenger disaster. I found it truly shocking.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episodes/m001tts2/the-space-shuttle-that-fell-to-earth

itnewsbot, to science
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

How Different are SpaceX Thermal Tiles From the Space Shuttle’s? - When SpaceX first showed off the thermal tiles on its Starship spacecraft that sho... - https://hackaday.com/2024/02/14/how-different-are-spacex-thermal-tiles-from-the-space-shuttles/ #spaceshuttle #thermaltile #starship #science #space

peter, to retrocomputing
@peter@area51.social avatar

The Ridiculous Journey Of The First Email From Space

Some interesting items in here, not just the first email, but the old school laptops, the Mac "portable", how the modem used got converted to digital, sent back to earth then back to analog before another modem on an email server.

Also seeing an Astronaut floating away with a massive printout following him - yes they had printers on the shuttle!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mBurvPxNRI

itnewsbot, to PromptEngineering
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar
spaceflight, to space
@spaceflight@spacey.space avatar
spaceflight,
@spaceflight@spacey.space avatar
itnewsbot, to SpaceX
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

Rocket Report: SpaceX at the service of a rival; Endeavour goes vertical - Enlarge / Space shuttle Endeavour, seen here in protective wrapping, wa... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=2000721

ScienceDesk, to space
@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social avatar

"NASA’s retired space shuttle Endeavour was carefully hoisted late Monday and attached to a huge external fuel tank and its two solid rocket boosters at a Los Angeles museum where it will be uniquely displayed as if it is about to blast off."

AP reports: https://flip.it/aQ0_xr

#NASA #Space #Endeavour #SpaceShuttle #LA #Museum

peter, to space
@peter@area51.social avatar

Something you don't see every day... a Space Shuttle being stacked!

This is live right now and it's the shuttle Endeavour being stacked for the final time at the California Science Center.

Once done they will then finish building the museum around her

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EbilYL-sqe0

AnneTheWriter1, to space

#OnThisDay in 1986...

I was at college, walking up the stairs to my dormroom when I heard about it. I spent the rest of the day glued to my little TV in our room.

As I watched the video that was being replayed over and over, one moment struck me: The twin trails of smoke from the booster rockets looked like the wide-spread arms of a giant in the sky.

It was immediately obvious that there would be no survivors. I cried, and prayed that they never had a chance to know what happened, and feeling awful for all the school kids watching the teacher take off, on TVs at schools around the world.

The cause was later determined to be a simple, small, faulty O-ring. It would be months later before any human remains were recovered, found at the bottom of the ocean.

The #SpaceProgram would never be the same again.

#ChallengerDisaster #SpaceShuttle #Space #SpaceShuttleChallenger #ThisDayInHistory #NASA #NASAshuttle #OnThisDay80s #OTD

https://youtu.be/hgA4HUfpyF4?si=IAILrm7ll2IjxqTQ

vingtroiseize, to amiga
@vingtroiseize@mastodon.world avatar

In Memory of the Space Shuttle Astronauts who left us 38 years ago.

itnewsbot, to space
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

What happens when an astronaut in orbit says he’s not coming back? - Enlarge / The STS-51-B mission begins with the liftoff of the Challenge... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=1994083

heronfoxphoto, to photography

The Kennedy Space Center Visitors Complex built the Atlantis , they built life-size replicas of the Space Shuttle External Tank and Solid Boosters directly in front of the building which held Atlantis.

This was taken from below the .

Get a print of this image or another at https://heronfox.pixels.com/featured/1-below-the-et-and-srbs-heron-and-fox.html

, , , , ,

AnimatedShortOfTheDay, to Netherlands
@AnimatedShortOfTheDay@socel.net avatar
appassionato, to books
@appassionato@mastodon.social avatar

The Untold Stories of the Space Shuttle Program: Unfulfilled Dreams and Missions That Never Flew

This is a story never before told about the missions and technologies that NASA had begun to plan but never fully realized. The book is a companion to the author’s previous two works on the Space Shuttle.

@bookstodon


itnewsbot, to history
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

That Time NASA Built a Tiny Tank to Pop Shuttle Tires - The Space Shuttle has often been called the most complex pieces of machinery ever ... - https://hackaday.com/2023/11/17/that-time-nasa-built-a-tiny-tank-to-pop-shuttle-tires/

Ansi, to history
@Ansi@mastodon.cloud avatar
TheSpaceshipper, to scifi
@TheSpaceshipper@socel.net avatar

Lifeforce (1985): HMS Churchill space shuttle, filming miniature

image/png
image/png
image/png

TheSpaceshipper, to scifi
@TheSpaceshipper@socel.net avatar

Armageddon (1998): Independence, X-71 Military Shuttle, model

image/jpeg

spaceflight, to random
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar

The troposphere contains 75–80 per cent of the mass of the . The height varies between 17km at the equator and 7.0km at the poles https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere#Earth

Picture : :ccby: :cc_sa: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Earth%27s_atmosphere.svg

image/png

spaceflight, (edited )
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar

errors 🐞 from from a vote-counting machine that added thousands of non-existent votes to a candidate's tally, to a commercial ✈️ that suddenly dropped hundreds of feet mid-flight ⤵️, injuring dozens of passengers. A pacemaker's ❤️ built-in computer data got corrupted mid-flight. A group of researchers investigated more than 2,000 bit errors logged by a 🛰️ over roughly two years in . A huge number of the errors were clustered in an area called the South Atlantic Anomaly. According to , 👨‍🚀 on the used to notice that their 💻 sometimes crashed when the space shuttle passed through the https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20221011-how-space-weather-causes-computer-errors

spaceflight, to BBC
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar

Investigation https://youtu.be/2eTRaJGDe-8

'You know, there is nothing we can do about to the TPS. If it has been damaged it’s probably better not to know. I think the crew would rather not know. Don’t you think it would be better for them to have a happy successful flight and die unexpectedly during entry than to stay on , knowing that there was nothing to be done, until the air ran out ?'”
https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20150130-what-caused-the-columbia-disaster

spaceflight,
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar

had designed the hatch 🚪 to open outward. It was a relatively simple procedure, requiring little physical force, as the hatch opened into the vacuum of . Overmyer was clearly concerned. So he put on the hatch as a stop-gap. The next day, Wang did receive permission to work on the experiment, and he eventually got it working. https://arstechnica.com/space/2024/01/solving-a-nasa-mystery-why-did-space-shuttle-commanders-lock-the-hatch/3/

spaceflight, to Hololive
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar

Management () : 🗑️ systems must be created to collect and debris, prioritizing those large objects that present the highest to .
Through fora like the , the community should reach on the definitions of , , and related terms https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/in-depth-research-reports/issue-brief/space-traffic-management-time-for-action

Office for Affairs https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Office_for_Outer_Space_Affairs

Picture : impact on window https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Space_debris_impact_on_Space_Shuttle_window.jpg

spaceflight,
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar
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