Nice. But what about the reactor itself?aTmAg said:
This is the sort of thing they subject nuclear containers to:
I imagine power plants are pretty damn hard to attack. It would probably take a nuclear bomb, but then why not just use a nuclear bomb?
I not a nukeologist, but I imagine they are under so much thick ass concrete that it would make a REALLY bad target.TexAgs91 said:Nice. But what about the reactor itself?aTmAg said:
This is the sort of thing they subject nuclear containers to:
I imagine power plants are pretty damn hard to attack. It would probably take a nuclear bomb, but then why not just use a nuclear bomb?
aTmAg said:
I not a nukeologist
TexAgs91 said:Jock 07 said:how so?TexAgs91 said:Decay said:TexAgs91 said:Normally I'd say he's right. But in these times, nuclear power plants are also an easy target with potentially devastating fallout.PJYoung said:Also nuclear is vastly better for global warming than burning hydrocarbons for energy
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 6, 2022
Totally wrong.
Is not
That was more of a response to the "nuh uh" post with no details.
Seems like most people were able to deduce that I was talking about nuclear fallout from an attack.Jock 07 said:TexAgs91 said:Jock 07 said:how so?TexAgs91 said:Decay said:TexAgs91 said:Normally I'd say he's right. But in these times, nuclear power plants are also an easy target with potentially devastating fallout.PJYoung said:Also nuclear is vastly better for global warming than burning hydrocarbons for energy
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 6, 2022
Totally wrong.
Is not
That was more of a response to the "nuh uh" post with no details.
And that was more of a response to your original response with no details.
hth
Was wondering if anyone else heard that...bthotugigem05 said:
Today's landing took forever to update, thought we lost it for a bit!
Great go for launch call too.
Another 48 Starlinks just reached orbit https://t.co/BLb2x69lvQ
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 9, 2022
I watched it. watched it again. what am I missing?Maximus_Meridius said:Was wondering if anyone else heard that...bthotugigem05 said:
Today's landing took forever to update, thought we lost it for a bit!
Great go for launch call too.
SpaceX's launch director, just before today's Starlink mission took off, with a mischevious reference to the Russian space agency chief Rogozin's recent comments:
— Michael Sheetz (@thesheetztweetz) March 9, 2022
"Time to let the American broomstick fly and hear the sounds of freedom. LD is go for launch." pic.twitter.com/7WzAjKvrKt
You have to pinch yourself but this is real. Falcon 9 booster autonomously landing from space to earth @elonmusk pic.twitter.com/OLEIfizvO9
— Tesla Silicon Valley Club (@teslaownersSV) March 9, 2022
BREAKING: .@elonmusk and Grimes secretly welcome second child. I wonder what the name is 👀. Congratulations to both of you. https://t.co/oKvgoIKxoQ
— Tesla Silicon Valley Club (@teslaownersSV) March 10, 2022
Optimized, fully-reusable Starship is ~150t to same reference orbit as Saturn V. In expendable mode, Starship payload would be 250t to 300t.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 9, 2022
Gotta love American Broomsticks!will25u said:You have to pinch yourself but this is real. Falcon 9 booster autonomously landing from space to earth @elonmusk pic.twitter.com/OLEIfizvO9
— Tesla Silicon Valley Club (@teslaownersSV) March 9, 2022
This picture isn't complete without a second chart ranking these rockets by cost.nortex97 said:Optimized, fully-reusable Starship is ~150t to same reference orbit as Saturn V. In expendable mode, Starship payload would be 250t to 300t.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 9, 2022
Interesting data confirmation, if valid of course.
Quote:
Optimized, fully-reusable Starship is ~150t to same reference orbit as Saturn V.
Quote:
Approximately 11 weeks after the process began, SpaceX has finished stacking its newest Super Heavy booster prototype the first of its kind intended to host 33 new Raptor V2 engines.
Designed to launch Starship's massive, namesake upper stage part of the way to orbit, Super Heavy is in many ways simpler than Starship but just as complex and unprecedented in others. Ignoring SpaceX's unusual plans to have boosters land on huge mechanical arms installed on a skyscraper-sized tower, Super Heavy is 'merely' a large vertical-launch, vertical-landing liquid rocket booster the likes of which SpaceX already has extensive experience with through Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy. What mainly sets Super Heavy apart is its sheer scale.
Measuring around 69 meters (~225 ft) from tip to tail, Super Heavy just one of two Starship stages is almost as tall as an entire two-stage Falcon 9 or Falcon Heavy rocket. At nine meters (~30 ft) wide, a single Super Heavy booster effectively a giant steel tube should be able to store at least six or seven times as much propellant as Falcon 9 and about two to three times as much as Falcon Heavy. Engine count and peak thrust are similarly staggering.
SpaceX's newest Super Heavy prototype Booster 7 (B7) expands those engine-related capabilities even further. Instead of the 29 Raptor V1 engines installed on Super Heavy B4, Booster 7 is designed to support up to 33 Raptor V2 engines. While the V2 design significantly simplifies Raptor's design to make it easier to build, install, and operate, it also substantially boosts maximum thrust from around 185 tons (~410,000 lbf) to at least 230 tons (~510,000 lbf). In theory, if Super Heavy B7 is outfitted with a full 33 Raptor V2 engines capable of operating at that claimed thrust level, Booster 7 could theoretically produce at least 40% more thrust than Booster 4. B4, however, has yet to attempt a single static fire.
The fact that SpaceX hasn't put Booster 4 through a single full wet dress rehearsal (a launch simulation just shy of ignition) or static fire test after more than half a year at the orbital launch site has led many to assume that the prototype is likely headed for premature retirement. With Booster 7 now perhaps just a week or two away from test-readiness, SpaceX finally has a viable replacement capable of both carrying the flame forward and kicking off the qualification of the first prototype designed to use Raptor V2 engines.
I calculate that the ISS spends 70 % of its time over the ocean; 4.1% over China; 3.0% over Australia; 2.8% over Russia; 1.4% over Kazakhstan; 1.4% over Canada; 1.4% over Brazil; 1.2% over Mongolia; 1.2% over the USA; 0.75% over Argentina; 0.59% over India and 0.57% Indonesia
— Jonathan McDowell (@planet4589) March 8, 2022
Russia must be barred from the International Space Station from now on until we get serious meaningful apologies and lots of them.Jock 07 said:
Who didn't see this coming?
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10608023/amp/Video-posted-Russias-space-program-threatens-leave-astronaut-55-aboard-space-station.html