SpaceX single-handedly keeping us ahead of the Chinese in spaceflight.
Yeah I think now SpaceX and TSLA operate financially independently... but never hurts for Musk to have solid ground in his two biggest investments. Plus I have no doubt he'll continue to invest in projects that advance his causes, which are just about the closest thing to a benevolent advocate humans have.will25u said:
Not SpaceX, but.... WOW.
Tesla revenues grow 81% from last year
Mars has the most raggedy-ass moons everBregxit said:
Perseverance rover on Mars captures Phobos transiting the sun...really cool!
I don't see any leather goddesses.Bregxit said:
Perseverance rover on Mars captures Phobos transiting the sun...really cool!
Why do you think they ever didn't operate financially independent?Decay said:Yeah I think now SpaceX and TSLA operate financially independently... but never hurts for Musk to have solid ground in his two biggest investments. Plus I have no doubt he'll continue to invest in projects that advance his causes, which are just about the closest thing to a benevolent advocate humans have.will25u said:
Not SpaceX, but.... WOW.
Tesla revenues grow 81% from last year
Build It said:Why do you think they ever didn't operate financially independent?Decay said:Yeah I think now SpaceX and TSLA operate financially independently... but never hurts for Musk to have solid ground in his two biggest investments. Plus I have no doubt he'll continue to invest in projects that advance his causes, which are just about the closest thing to a benevolent advocate humans have.will25u said:
Not SpaceX, but.... WOW.
Tesla revenues grow 81% from last year
Falcon 9’s first stage has landed on the Just Read the Instructions droneship, completing this booster’s 12th launch and landing pic.twitter.com/6PV1bFRgar
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 21, 2022
Quote:
After SpaceX sent Starlink terminals to Ukraine in February in an apparent effort to help Ukraine maintain its internet connection amid war with Russia, SpaceX founder Elon Musk claimed that Russia had jammed Starlink terminals in the country for hours at a time. After a software update, Starlink was operating normally, said Musk, who added on March 25 that the constellation had "resisted all hacking & jamming attempts" in Ukraine.
Assuming Musk famously something of a showboater in his public comments is providing an accurate picture, a private firm beating back Russian EW attempts with software updates is the kind of thing that makes Pentagon EW experts pay attention.
"From an EW technologist perspective, that is fantastic. That paradigm and how they did that is kind of eyewatering to me," said Dave Tremper, director of electronic warfare for the Pentagon's acquisition office. "The way that Starlink was able to upgrade when a threat showed up, we need to be able to have that ability. We have to be able to change our electromagnetic posture, to be able to change very dynamically what we're trying to do without losing capability along the way."
That is just another stark reminder of how bad the government is at being nimble. The modern battle field looks so different but we still have so many stuck in their ways people at the top that combine with a bureaucracy that make it impossible to react quickly.nortex97 said:
DoD: SpaceX (Starlink) quickly adapting and defeating Russian jamming attempts was 'eye watering.'Quote:
After SpaceX sent Starlink terminals to Ukraine in February in an apparent effort to help Ukraine maintain its internet connection amid war with Russia, SpaceX founder Elon Musk claimed that Russia had jammed Starlink terminals in the country for hours at a time. After a software update, Starlink was operating normally, said Musk, who added on March 25 that the constellation had "resisted all hacking & jamming attempts" in Ukraine.
Assuming Musk famously something of a showboater in his public comments is providing an accurate picture, a private firm beating back Russian EW attempts with software updates is the kind of thing that makes Pentagon EW experts pay attention.
"From an EW technologist perspective, that is fantastic. That paradigm and how they did that is kind of eyewatering to me," said Dave Tremper, director of electronic warfare for the Pentagon's acquisition office. "The way that Starlink was able to upgrade when a threat showed up, we need to be able to have that ability. We have to be able to change our electromagnetic posture, to be able to change very dynamically what we're trying to do without losing capability along the way."
The flying whirlpool:Quote:
. . .
Falcon 9 puts on a show over Hawaii. On Sunday morning local time, April 17, a Falcon 9 rocket lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California carrying the classified NROL-85 payload for the National Reconnaissance Office. Due to the classified nature of the launch, the SpaceX webcast ended shortly after liftoff. But observers in Hawaii got a spectacular view of the second stage a few hours after the launch.
Second stage does a barrel "nrol" ... The Subaru Telescope on top of Mauna Kea recorded what appeared to be a flying whirlpool in the pre-dawn hours on Saturday, Live Science reports. Really, the video is quite spectacular. This is clearly the second stage of the Falcon 9 reentering Earth's atmosphere, spinning, and venting the extra propellant in its fuel tanks. Such phenomena have been observed before, but this is one the best views I've seen. (submitted by Ken the Bin)
. . .
Weather is looking good off the coast of Florida for Dragon’s and the Ax-1 astronauts’ return to Earth, departing from the @space_station tonight at ~8:55 p.m. ET→ https://t.co/N3MHSxCS0k pic.twitter.com/mUvyNNwiqL
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 24, 2022
Raptor 2 rocket engines at Starbase, each producing over half a million pounds (230 tons) of force pic.twitter.com/9ixxXXceG3
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 26, 2022
Your OCD is in overdrive. Relax and enjoy the pretty picture. :-)nortex97 said:
Am I the only one concerned they aren't being lined up straight, and don't seem to have the same red dust caps on them?
will25u said:
TTTRaptor 2 rocket engines at Starbase, each producing over half a million pounds (230 tons) of force pic.twitter.com/9ixxXXceG3
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 26, 2022
bmks270 said:
They seem small given the thrust. The velocities must be insane. Are these pushing 300 bar yet?
bmks270 said:
They seem small given the thrust.
Ag_of_08 said:bmks270 said:
They seem small given the thrust. The velocities must be insane. Are these pushing 300 bar yet?
Over 300, think they sustained 330 on a 7 second burn.
And no nortex, you are not the only one who's OCD is twitching.... thanks for pointing that out!!!