65dBnoise, to space
@65dBnoise@mastodon.social avatar

, a very accomplished POTUS who passed two Civil Rights Acts with bipartisan support, the Voting Rights Act, created Medicare and Medicaid, made 's program a priority, and had numerous other accomplishments, failed to change his mind about the Vietnam war amidst anti-war protests. He never got a second term, leaving the presidency to Richard Nixon

Much less accomplished Biden (see Anita Hill/C.Thomas) said student protests haven't made him rethink his policy in .

Too bad.

tazgetroete, to random German
@tazgetroete@mastodon.social avatar

Während auf der Erde Bomben fallen, Lebenskosten steigen und Flammen durch die Zukunftsvision züngeln, plant Nasa eine feste Mondstation. Wie absurd. http://www.taz.de/!6003405/

eliasp,
@eliasp@mastodon.social avatar

@tazgetroete 1970, als das weitaus teurere -Programm auf seinem Höhepunkt war schrieb die Nonne Mary Jucunda an den damaligen -Direktor Dr. Ernst Stuhlinger einen Brief.
Sie wollte wissen, wie er es rechtfertigen könne, Milliarden für die auszugeben, während sie mit dem Allernötigsten hungernde Kinder versorgt.

Seine Antwort hat heute, wo die Raumfahrt für unseren Alltag und die Wissenschaft eine noch viel größere Rolle spielt, weiter Gültigkeit:
https://www.astromadness.com/2012/10/why-explore-space-letter-by-dr-ernst.html?m=1

jonpainterphoto, to Apollo
@jonpainterphoto@lawfedi.blue avatar

This is an incredible tour of the Apollo Lunar Sample Lab...

https://youtu.be/QxZ_iPldGtI?si=JbuIBAwsqvLUifii

AnnaAnthro, to random
@AnnaAnthro@mastodon.social avatar

- Accuracy of Predictions is based on Babylon’s Chaldean calculations of 18 yr cycles ‘The Saros’.

The Greeks also confirmed it.

British astronomer Halley confirmed it again in 1715.

We use a pair of silicon reflectors left on the moon by the 1969 team to date them precisely.

Thanks to eclipse research we know that the moon is moving away from Earth a few centimetres each year.

https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEhelp/ApolloLaser.html

setiinstitute, to SciComm
@setiinstitute@mastodon.social avatar

: Earth hangs above a large boulder examined by Apollo 17 astronauts Gene Cernan and Jack Schmidt in December 1972. A recent analysis of freshly opened samples from Apollo 17 found that the Moon is at least 4.46 billion years old, or roughly 40 million years older than revealed by other samples. Credit: NASA

InfoMgmtExec,

We all have gotten a lot older since ‘72.

+ 2.

Landings.

@setiinstitute

mkwadee, to Apollo
@mkwadee@mastodon.org.uk avatar

It’s sometimes amusing to listen to some of the air to ground transmission on the flights. A lot of the chatter is the talking about , actually , with no hint of adolescent smirking, like this gem on :
109:46:48 Conrad: And, Houston, whenever you’re ready, we’re ready to give you P00 and Data.
P00 was the quiescent state of the where it was ready to receive instructions and data either from the or .

AnarchoCatgirlism, to Astronomy

Don’t fuck with moon dust. No seriously, do not fuck with moon dust.

Absent any moisture or atmosphere, millennia of asteroid impacts have turned lunar regolith (soil) into a fine powder of razor sharp, glass-like particles. What’s more, the solar wind imparts an electric charge on the dust, causing it to cling to any and every surface it touches through static electricity. On earth, sand tends to get smoother over time as wind and water tumble the grains about, eroding their sharpness. Not so on the moon – lunar dust is sharp and deadly. This is Not A Good Time if you’re an explorer looking to visit our celestial neighbor.

During Apollo, the astronauts faced a plethora of unexpected issues caused by dust. It clung to spacesuits and darkened them enough that exposure to sunlight overheated the life support systems. Dust got in suit joints and on suit visors, damaging them. It ate away layers of boot lining. It covered cameras. Upon returning to the cabin, astronauts attempting to brush it off damaged their suit fabric and sent the dust airborne, where it remained suspended in the air due to low gravity.

Inhaling moon dust causes mucus membranes to swell; every Apollo astronaut who stepped foot on the moon reported symptoms of “Lunar Hay Fever.” Sneezing, congestion, and a “smell of burnt gunpowder” took days to subside. Later Apollo missions even sent a special dust brush with the team to help clean each other and equipment. We don’t know exactly how dangerous the stuff is, but lunar regolith simulants suggest it might destroy lung and brain cells with long-term exposure. 1

In fact the dust is so nasty that it destroyed the vacuum seals of sample return containers. We no longer have any accurate samples of lunar dust, “Every sample brought back from the moon has been contaminated by Earth’s air and humidity […] The chemical and electrostatic properties of the soil no longer match what future astronauts will encounter on the moon.” 2

Whats worse, the solar-charged dust gets thrown up off the moon’s surface via electrostatic forces. The moon doesn’t technically have an atmosphere, but it does have a thin cloud of sharp dust itching to cling to anything it can find.

And it probably isn’t just the moon. “A 2005 NASA study listed 20 risks that required further study before humans should commit to a human Mars expedition, and ranked "dust" as the number one challenge.” 3

The coolest solution I’ve heard about in next-gen spacesuit design is a mesh of woven wires layered into the suit. When activated, the wire mesh would form an anti-static electric field that repels dust. Quite literally a force field. 4

pauldrye, to Apollo
@pauldrye@spacey.space avatar

Some pre-LOR Apollo art from July-August 1962 Ryan Reporter. Artist unknown. The decision to use that mission mode was only announced in the first of those two months, so they wouldn't have known to change it (or there wasn't enough time to fix what was a conjectural image anyway).

pauldrye, to space
@pauldrye@spacey.space avatar
pauldrye, to Apollo
@pauldrye@spacey.space avatar

Via Mike Acs on Flickr, an image of what I believe was the proposed Saturn MLV-11.5 configuration -- basically a Saturn IB with four five-segment solid boosters strapped to it.

The idea was to hit a middle spot for payload between the IB's 18.6 tonnes and the Saturn V's 118 -- around 40 tonnes.

I've cropped out the frame, cleaned up some scuffs, colour-corrected it, and down-sized. You can see the original at: https://www.flickr.com/photos/apollo4ever/53316046537

BonnettsBooks, (edited ) to Apollo
@BonnettsBooks@mastodonbooks.net avatar

2/29/24 — Open 6-9p. Mask recommended. No open containers, please.

Here's another that, if someone doesn't buy it soon, I may just take home. Not an audiobook but, a collection of audio from historic events on 2 CDs, compiled with a book of background info. Primarily concerned with US events.



@bookstodon

MegaMichelle, to DOOM
@MegaMichelle@a2mi.social avatar

Idea:

  • Get DOOM running on the Apollo Guidance Computer.
  • Be the first person to get one billion likes on the internet.

artfulsodger, to Apollo
@artfulsodger@fosstodon.org avatar

I’m trying out the app and it looks and works awesome! It, somehow, reminds me of the Reddit app in terms of the appearance, polish, and the customisability! Great job, @dimillian! ❤️

scy, to space
@scy@chaos.social avatar

TIL: The "beeps" in 's missions are called tones, named after the company that produced the equipment.

There is an "intro" and an "outro" tone. They were generated when CapCom (the person in the control center tasked with talking to the astronauts) pushed the transmit button. Since there were several transmitters on earth, connected to Houston via telephone, this was an in-band signal causing them to activate, transmit, then deactivate again.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quindar_tones

IAmDannyBoling, to ArtificialIntelligence
@IAmDannyBoling@mstdn.social avatar

Talk about "low tech"!!

The that runs some -C wall chargers has more than twice the RAM, and is 563x faster than the that ran the guidance system in 11.

To those "my cellphone has more computing power than Apollo 11" guys...

You're not even close, bub. Think smaller.

h/t to @mmu_man for sharing the link first.

https://forrestheller.com/Apollo-11-Computer-vs-USB-C-chargers.html
Apollo 11 Guidance Computer (AGC) vs USB-C Chargers

AstroHawk, to space
@AstroHawk@spacey.space avatar

is always in late January to mark 's 3 fatal spaceflight accidents, a few days apart.
Apollo 1 pad fire: Jan 27, 1968 - 57 years
Challenger launch: Jan 28, 1986 - 38 years
Columbia re-entry: Feb 1, 2003 - 21 years
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hho8VboDRbE

AstroHawk,
@AstroHawk@spacey.space avatar

57 years ago: Jan 27, 1967: pad fire, 3 dead. Article by @AstronomyMag from November covers the history. Lessons learned turned out to become factors in the later successful landings. https://www.astronomy.com/space-exploration/apollo-1-tragedy-the-fatal-fire-and-its-aftermath/

itnewsbot, to science
@itnewsbot@schleuss.online avatar

Hospitals owned by private equity are harming patients, reports find - Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Private equity firms are increa... - https://arstechnica.com/?p=1996901

heronfoxphoto, to Apollo

The #Apollo #spacecraft included 2 scimitar #VHF #antennas for short-range communication with Earth, the Lunar Module, and the lunar surface.
The Block II #CSM, pictured here, moved the #antenna to the Service #Module from the Command Module.

Get a print of this image or another at https://heronfox.pixels.com/featured/apollo-service-module-scimitar-antenna-heron-and-fox.html

#ApolloProgram, #ScimitarAntenna, #ServiceModule, #ApolloCSM, #Electronics, #Radio, #Photography

lancetay, to space
Luke, (edited ) to space
@Luke@typo.social avatar

Occasionally a video scrolls by that you end up watching and it alters your perception of the world and reality.

Edit: stretched video thumbnail? Gads.

https://youtu.be/MIYUrDah6PI

manyfaceted, to illustration
@manyfaceted@mstdn.social avatar

Finished! DIANA PIERCES THE AZURE SKY, 9x12”, ink and watercolor on illustration board. Inspired by a photo of Apollo 4, the first launch of the Saturn V rocket on Nov. 9, 1967 from Kennedy Space Center.

manyfaceted, to illustration
@manyfaceted@mstdn.social avatar

A few days’ progress on the Saturn V launch piece, finishing the tower and the rocket, the exhaust using Ferris Wheel Press PLAITED GOLD TRESS, and foreground pad structure in ATLAS IRON ORE.

flohw, to LEGO
@flohw@pouet.chapril.org avatar

Starting to rebuild my collection. Starting with the oldest one from 1995: 6254 Rocky Reef, 90 pieces.

I still love them and know them almost by heart! 🥰

flohw,
@flohw@pouet.chapril.org avatar
pomarede, to space
@pomarede@mastodon.social avatar
pomarede,
@pomarede@mastodon.social avatar

Nature Journal astronomy covers appreciation post

Lunar magnetic field (1972)

The feature article reports a study of the compression of the remanent lunar magnetic field by the solar wind, based on data taken at several Apollo landing sites.

https://www.nature.com/nature/volumes/236/issues/5347

#moon #lunar #solar #wind #solarwind #plasma #sun #earth #magneticfield #magnetosphere #apollo #astronomy #astrophysics #astrodon #physics #space #science #research #STEM #nature #journal #cover #jpl #nasa

spaceflight, to Futurology German
@spaceflight@techhub.social avatar

with a 🤖 . Nothing in this video is pre scripted - its pure . The pauses are the time lag for processing the speech input, the and processing the text back into . https://youtu.be/EWACmFLvpHE
One of those might serve you at the https://www.architecturaldigest.com/story/worlds-first-space-hotel-open-2027

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

📆 December 27, 2023 is partnering with companies like which is developing , a humanoid 🤖. "We're targeting having this system online 22 hours 🕐 a day. We're not trying to replace human crews 👩‍🚀, we're really just trying to take the dull, dirty and dangerous work off their plates to allow them to focus on those higher-level activities" https://www.reuters.com/science/humanoid-robots-space-next-frontier-2023-12-27/

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