We sing Hallelujah! The Lamb has overcome!
bmks270 said:TexAgs91 said:Sounds like it. They were pretty weak, but they did grow. Obviously it would have to be indoors and heavily filtered sunlight or artificial light.AgBQ-00 said:
That's pretty awesome. So that means that food can be grown on surface in a controlled environment greenhouse if we wanted to build settlements up there.
Maybe we can get plants to evolve to not need an atmosphere and just grow on the surface of the moon just with sunlight and soil. I suspect the nutritional value of the soil to be low and need for CO2 may big too big of leap, but a planted moon would be cool!
Thanks. Been waiting for this.nortex97 said:
Tim has a new tour down at BC with Elon up today.
Back-to-back Falcon 9 launches of Starlink within 24 hours, completing SpaceX's 19th and 20th launches of the year pic.twitter.com/6C3vntNSzN
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) May 14, 2022
"I was very happy when the traditional, big aerospace company Boeing bid. Because I think that was a tough call. And I think if they look back on it, they wouldn't do it again."
— Eric Berger (@SciGuySpace) May 16, 2022
How dare Obama look for a new way of doing things and possibly prevent congress critters from funneling limitless quantities of tax payer funds to the military/space industrial complex cronies.Quote:
"Boeing was a dream," Bolden said. "I call them a champion in being willing to accept the risk for a program whose business case didn't close back then. And I'll be blunt. I don't know whether the business case closes today."
Bolden's thoughts were echoed by the space agency's deputy administrator at the time, Lori Garver. Speaking last week at the Ars Frontier conference in Washington, DC, Garver said Congress was "furious" when the Obama administration sought funding for commercial crew back in 2010.
"Boeing entering the commercial crew program meant that you got a lot more support from Congress because they tend to have a very robust lobbying program," Garver said. "I was very happy when the traditional, big aerospace company Boeing bid. Because I think that was a tough call. And I think if they look back on it, they wouldn't do it again."
That might buy about 6 SLS launches or perhaps 50 starship missions.Decay said:
Politics ruin everything. We just spent 40 Billion on aid to the Ukraine and it sleptwalk through Congress. How many SLS AND Starships could that buy.
Maybe, gotta figure in 10 percent for the 'big guy' and then all of the folks on the House/Senate appropriations/oversight committees with some finger in the nasa budget. Boeing's recent decision to move closer to DC/lobbyists with their executive team was no small coincidence of geography.lb3 said:That might buy about 6 SLS launches or perhaps 50 starship missions.Decay said:
Politics ruin everything. We just spent 40 Billion on aid to the Ukraine and it sleptwalk through Congress. How many SLS AND Starships could that buy.
And just to be clear we're still at ZERO of either. But space is "too expensive" according to basically every politicianlb3 said:That might buy about 6 SLS launches or perhaps 50 starship missions.Decay said:
Politics ruin everything. We just spent 40 Billion on aid to the Ukraine and it sleptwalk through Congress. How many SLS AND Starships could that buy.
I'm working OFT-2, mostly as an observer since there is no crew. I like many of the guys on Boeing's team and am pulling for them. They could really use a win right now.bthotugigem05 said:
Either way, here's to a successful Starliner flight on Thursday.
Kenneth_2003 said:
So OFT2 goes off without a hitch and the vehicle performs flawlessly.
What does it fly on next? There's what, 20 AtlasVs in ULA inventory? How many of those are slated for Starliner?
NASA wants/needs two rides to space. Starliners design is better suited for station reboost than Dragon (if Dragon could even do it).
Quote:
edit: I'm at the point where I don't even think SLS is a boondoggle. It's probably one of the most efficient government-run operations we have.
Ag83 said:Quote:
edit: I'm at the point where I don't even think SLS is a boondoggle. It's probably one of the most efficient government-run operations we have.
lb3 said:I'm working OFT-2, mostly as an observer since there is no crew. I like many of the guys on Boeing's team and am pulling for them. They could really use a win right now.bthotugigem05 said:
Either way, here's to a successful Starliner flight on Thursday.
Even if none are better, that in no way suggests SLS isn't and hasn't been a boondoggle.Decay said:Ag83 said:Quote:
edit: I'm at the point where I don't even think SLS is a boondoggle. It's probably one of the most efficient government-run operations we have.
What federal program is better? Education? Social security? DHS? They're all money pits with rapidly disintegrating ROI. I wish our departments could all reach the peak efficiency of only spending a few billion to accomplish nothing. That would put us trillions of dollars ahead of where we are.
You're completely correct, of course. It's just... the magnitudes of waste are staggering to realize.Ag83 said:Even if none are better, that in no way suggests SLS isn't and hasn't been a boondoggle.Decay said:Ag83 said:Quote:
edit: I'm at the point where I don't even think SLS is a boondoggle. It's probably one of the most efficient government-run operations we have.
What federal program is better? Education? Social security? DHS? They're all money pits with rapidly disintegrating ROI. I wish our departments could all reach the peak efficiency of only spending a few billion to accomplish nothing. That would put us trillions of dollars ahead of where we are.
A NASA spacecraft on Mars is losing power as dust from the red planet collects on its solar panels. Officials expect the InSight lander to cease its science work in July, almost four years after it arrived at Mars. https://t.co/Lu0OABlPtL
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 18, 2022
Falcon 9 launches 53 Starlink satellites to orbit pic.twitter.com/k80YtDCGYu
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) May 18, 2022
Rapier108 said:A NASA spacecraft on Mars is losing power as dust from the red planet collects on its solar panels. Officials expect the InSight lander to cease its science work in July, almost four years after it arrived at Mars. https://t.co/Lu0OABlPtL
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 18, 2022
I think it actually has one. Not sure if it failed, or the dust is just too much for it.bmks270 said:Rapier108 said:A NASA spacecraft on Mars is losing power as dust from the red planet collects on its solar panels. Officials expect the InSight lander to cease its science work in July, almost four years after it arrived at Mars. https://t.co/Lu0OABlPtL
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 18, 2022
They couldn't engineer a solar panel wiper?
Rapier108 said:I think it actually has one. Not sure if it failed, or the dust is just too much for it.bmks270 said:Rapier108 said:A NASA spacecraft on Mars is losing power as dust from the red planet collects on its solar panels. Officials expect the InSight lander to cease its science work in July, almost four years after it arrived at Mars. https://t.co/Lu0OABlPtL
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 18, 2022
They couldn't engineer a solar panel wiper?
Jock 07 said:Rapier108 said:I think it actually has one. Not sure if it failed, or the dust is just too much for it.bmks270 said:Rapier108 said:A NASA spacecraft on Mars is losing power as dust from the red planet collects on its solar panels. Officials expect the InSight lander to cease its science work in July, almost four years after it arrived at Mars. https://t.co/Lu0OABlPtL
— The Associated Press (@AP) May 18, 2022
They couldn't engineer a solar panel wiper?
ran out of washer fluid.
or was it blinker fluid?
The two big rovers use radioisotope thermoelectric generators so they'll have power for years.fka ftc said:
I believe the other rovers had some sort of way to help clear the dust, but one of the contriuting factors to their length of surface is that dust storms actually served to blow away some of the dust and increase the effectiveness of the solar areas.
I support the idea of small nuclear for spacecraft.