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Space Shuttle Discovery Launch Live Thread 2:38 EDT (Successful launch -- Discovery in Space)
07/04/06
| Kevin Davis
Posted on 07/04/2006 5:39:41 AM PDT by KevinDavis
Third time the charm?
TOPICS: Breaking News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: godspeeddiscovery; nasa; shuttlediscovery; space; spaceshuttle
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To: raygun
Most of the astronauts who landed on the Moon said it smelled like burnt gunpowder, cordite. Schmitt actually says that they should know what they're talking about since most them were military men.
This NASA article gives some excellent background on the lunar material and what it smelled like (and why it doesn't smell that way now). I think that what they were smelling was all of the materials in lunar dust "burning." The astronauts were literally smelling the lunar dust burning when first exposed to oxygen. All of that volatile material is now gone, burned off, so the smell is gone.
They smelled active chemical processes attacking their samples before they could get them back to the lab. Makes for an interesting view of the value of the samples they returned. Schmitt insists that we need to study the lunar materil "in situ" for that reason.
I'm with him.
701
posted on
07/04/2006 1:16:10 PM PDT
by
Phsstpok
(Often wrong, but never in doubt)
To: CedarDave
702
posted on
07/04/2006 1:16:26 PM PDT
by
raygun
To: KevinDavis
Aldrin is a bit of a hothead but he's pretty much right. He was bashing conspiracy theorists as being useless people who contribute nothing to society.
703
posted on
07/04/2006 1:17:37 PM PDT
by
cripplecreek
(I'm trying to think but nothing happens)
To: Phsstpok
Huh. I did NOT know THAT.
704
posted on
07/04/2006 1:18:23 PM PDT
by
raygun
To: cripplecreek; All
Well when you got a bunch of num nutts running around claiming that you never landed on the moon, I would too be a hothead..
705
posted on
07/04/2006 1:18:53 PM PDT
by
KevinDavis
(http://www.cafepress.com/spacefuture)
To: raygun
That reply didn't make a lot of sense to me. Air doesn't accelerate anything, it's gravity that accelerates objects. However, air can decelerate objects and it may be that the lack of air means deceleration (due to friction, air resistance) is not as important as the object decelerates more slowly in thin air (i.e. retains its forward momentum longer).
706
posted on
07/04/2006 1:22:09 PM PDT
by
CedarDave
(When a soldier dies, a protester gloats, a family cries, an Iraqi votes)
To: All
Wow. The moon smells like burnt gun powder. So tonight when you blowing off fireworks, just casually remark: "God, I love the smell of the moon in the morning."
707
posted on
07/04/2006 1:23:18 PM PDT
by
raygun
To: CedarDave
Acceleration is a vector with a scalar magnitude. When the air is sufficiently dense, the air decellerates whatever debris is shed. When the air is thinner, decellerations is insufficient whereby Delta-V is minimal with respect to acceleration of the launch vehicle.
708
posted on
07/04/2006 1:26:03 PM PDT
by
raygun
To: KevinDavis
Thanks for the links Kevin. I just watched it with tears in my eyes and a pounding heart and.... on the Fourth of July...God Bless Them All
709
posted on
07/04/2006 1:32:35 PM PDT
by
Brit1
( Not by Strength by Guile.)
To: raygun
in other words the denser the air the more a small object would fly around, the thiner the air an object will just fall stright?
710
posted on
07/04/2006 1:36:18 PM PDT
by
markman46
(engage brain before using keyboard!!!)
To: markman46
Torrents of the launch:
http://www.mininova.org/tor/358014 http://www.mininova.org/tor/358027
711
posted on
07/04/2006 1:42:19 PM PDT
by
ChadGore
(VISUALIZE 62,041,268 Bush fans. We Vote.)
To: Renegade
We need ANOTHER Independence Day from MEXICO!! This is about the Shuttle Launch - why don't you button it!
712
posted on
07/04/2006 1:43:04 PM PDT
by
maine-iac7
(LINCOLN: "...but you can't fool all of the people all of the time>")
To: ChadGore
http://www.mininova.org/tor/358014
http://www.mininova.org/tor/358027
713
posted on
07/04/2006 1:43:17 PM PDT
by
ChadGore
(VISUALIZE 62,041,268 Bush fans. We Vote.)
To: markman46
No, its like if you toss a bowling ball out your window while driving down the freeway into the windshield of the vehicle next to you while both of you are doing 100 MPH. Contrast that with if you in your car tooling along at 30 MPH and you did that to a car passing you at 100 MPH.
So when the launch vehicle gets much passed the 60 second mark, the debris will not decelerate sufficiently whereby Delta-v (between foam and launch vehicle) will be sufficiently small and the kinetic energy differential won't cause catastrophic failure of tiles.
Make sense?
714
posted on
07/04/2006 1:44:53 PM PDT
by
raygun
To: linda_22003
I watched that movie about a hundred times.If anybody comes into my house and starts to 'dump on the USA 'I make them watch it.....it always works.
My favourite line....'and that Gentlemen is how we do that'
715
posted on
07/04/2006 1:46:09 PM PDT
by
Brit1
( Not by Strength by Guile.)
To: markman46; raygun
I think the key is delta-v, as raygun said. A large delta-v, which will occur in dense air, could cause a loose object to damage the shuttle. A smaller delta-v would be less harmful.
716
posted on
07/04/2006 1:47:25 PM PDT
by
CedarDave
(When a soldier dies, a protester gloats, a family cries, an Iraqi votes)
To: Spruce
The water tower flushes the launch pad during liftoff for acoustic purposes. If not neutralized, the sonic vibrations would destroy the shuttle. Talking with my son this morning - works on security/safety - Booster Rockets. We were discussing what I was seeing on TV and I thought he told me that the water tower sprays and fills water under the rockets to absorb power to keep the PAD from fracturing? Could be I didn't hear him right, he was explaining a lot of stuff...like the reason for the black band around the top of the left external fuel rocket, for ex
717
posted on
07/04/2006 1:50:12 PM PDT
by
maine-iac7
(LINCOLN: "...but you can't fool all of the people all of the time>")
To: Central Scrutiniser
I've got a good ISS pass tonight...max alt at 21:38:42
I don't suppose the shuttle will be near the ISS that soon, will it?
718
posted on
07/04/2006 1:55:21 PM PDT
by
kanawa
(God bless America)
To: CedarDave
Aerodynamic drag = 1/2 * A * rho * V ^ 2 (where rho is density of air). Drag is a force and so it causes accleration. When a force's vector is opposite that of an objects motion, the object will decelerate. So the debris that may detach will suddenly become equal to that 30 MPH bowling ball, while the shuttle is accelerating passed at 2000 MPH. It makes no difference if the debris is as big as a postage stamp, it has the energy equivalent (there a square in kinetic energy equations) of a bowling ball.
719
posted on
07/04/2006 1:56:21 PM PDT
by
raygun
To: maine-iac7
That may be partly the case, but I believe the water's purpose is for cooling.
720
posted on
07/04/2006 1:58:36 PM PDT
by
raygun
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