So did Apollo, yet still only lasted 5 years past Apollo11. What is their goal in getting to the moon? If you look up Artemis, their goal is a joke:bthotugigem05 said:
Artemis has contractors in each of the 50 states, it's the perfect poison pill to ensure continued funding, excepting for a RUD on the pad or something like that.
Quote:
With Artemis missions, NASA will land the first woman and first person of color on the Moon, using innovative technologies to explore more of the lunar surface than ever before. We will collaborate with commercial and international partners and establish the first long-term presence on the Moon. Then, we will use what we learn on and around the Moon to take the next giant leap: sending the first astronauts to Mars.
New investors @founderfund and In-Q-Tel also participated alongside existing investors @khoslaventures, @canaanpartners, @blingcapital, and @riseoftherest
— Hermeus (@hermeuscorp) March 10, 2022
The lessons learned from development, flight test, airworthiness, and operations of Darkhorse will inform how we develop our commercial passenger aircraft Halcyon pic.twitter.com/OZMn1HlcuW
— Hermeus (@hermeuscorp) March 10, 2022
Full statement here pic.twitter.com/P0cQ5fZVgQ
— Loren Grush (@lorengrush) May 24, 2022
Weigel: The second Vulcan flight, carrying the first @SierraSpaceCo cargo Dream Chaser to the ISS, is currently scheduled for February 2023.
— Michael Sheetz (@thesheetztweetz) May 17, 2022
"We'll be ready when they're ready."
I accelerated the delivery of the last RD180s last year and have all we need to fly out Atlas in a warehouse in Alabama. https://t.co/uN5rl6y5sR
— Tory Bruno (@torybruno) May 20, 2022
By popular demand, a clearer view. #VulcanRocket
— Tory Bruno (@torybruno) May 5, 2022
(that "small' tank next to it is a Delta IV...) pic.twitter.com/AMn3Doy0ft
Classified. But I can share that it involves a very large decoy nut https://t.co/VSSTWVxBFU
— Tory Bruno (@torybruno) May 8, 2022
I wasn't saying there wasn't an issue with the heat shield. Just that it wasn't something to worry about because if there were public rumors you could be sure that NASA was aware of the issue and working it (and that SpaceX was already planning to swap heat shields.) ;-)Ag_of_08 said:
Looks like sn24 may have had some issues on the test stand with TPS and internal structures over the last couple days?
I also didn't realize starliner had the docking ring issue near the station, nor that there seems to be some questions about final parachute certification?
The heatshield rumors about dragon seems to have been squashed( I knew it was false when ib3 said it was for obvious reasons), inthought the press might try to run with that to get Musk.
The lack of be-4s continues to be disturbing. Vulcan-centaur is a very important vehicle for national security payloads, and at this point I would almost be supportive of some govt funding towards ULA to investigate alternative engine proposals. I'm curious if any existing designs could be adapted to meth/lox operation (the actual engineering differences in operation are a bit above my physics and engineering knowledge) ? The AR-1 is on the table, but unless it can be adapted to run methane at a comparable performance, the redesign of the fuselage will kill the idea in principle, as well as replacement of GSE.
I've been banging the "I'm not convinced Starship's TPS will work" pot for a while now, and this latest batch of flying tiles has done zilch to make me feel better.Ag_of_08 said:
Looks like sn24 may have had some issues on the test stand with TPS and internal structures over the last couple days?
I also didn't realize starliner had the docking ring issue near the station, nor that there seems to be some questions about final parachute certification?
The heatshield rumors about dragon seems to have been squashed( I knew it was false when ib3 said it was for obvious reasons), inthought the press might try to run with that to get Musk.
The lack of be-4s continues to be disturbing. Vulcan-centaur is a very important vehicle for national security payloads, and at this point I would almost be supportive of some govt funding towards ULA to investigate alternative engine proposals. I'm curious if any existing designs could be adapted to meth/lox operation (the actual engineering differences in operation are a bit above my physics and engineering knowledge) ? The AR-1 is on the table, but unless it can be adapted to run methane at a comparable performance, the redesign of the fuselage will kill the idea in principle, as well as replacement of GSE.
NASA has selected two companies to provide its first new spacesuits in four decades, and it’s a pretty big deal. https://t.co/Duu17o6fpV
— Eric Berger (@SciGuySpace) June 1, 2022
So, not spacex. These are pretty complicated, not real disappointed SpaceX won't be committed to throwing more engineering resources at this.Quote:
The winners
Axiom Space is already building its own private space station, and its chief executive, Mike Suffredini, said Wednesday that the company's customers definitely want to do spacewalks. The contract award means that Axiom will be able to hire 300 additional employees to work on the spacesuit project, which now must also operate in the dusty environment on the surface of the Moon. Axiom's partners include KBR, Air-Lock, the David Clark Company, and Paragon Space Development Corporation.
"It's fantastic to have a partnership where you can benefit from the years of experience that NASA has, and all the work they've done to advance the design to where it is today," Suffredini said. "And then us as a commercial company can come in and work with them to build it in a way that's lowest cost so that we can both utilize the suit to meet our needs."
The other winner was Collins Aerospace, which will lead a team that includes ILC Dover and Oceaneering. These three companies have experience building spacesuits, with Collins designing the Apollo spacesuits used during the first Moon landings. While Collins does not have a private space station, it plans to offer its suits to other companies planning to build them in low Earth orbit, said Dan Burbank, senior technical fellow for the company.
The companies beat out a lot of other bidders for this opportunity. More than 40 firms were listed as "interested parties" when NASA first announced the private spacesuit program, formally known as the Exploration Extravehicular Activity Services, or xEVAS, contract. Blue Origin, Honeywell Aerospace, Leidos, Sierra Space, and SpaceX were among the other interested parties.
Not surprising that ILC and David/Clark got the nod given they each have 60 years experience building suits. I'm just surprised they didn't go with one legacy vendor and one new space vendor.bmks270 said:
300 people to develop a spacesuit?
I feel like if this were a college competition you would get 10+ concepts from teams of 20-30 students.
bmks270 said:
300 people to develop a spacesuit?
I feel like if this were a college competition you would get 10+ concepts from teams of 20-30 students.
Ship 24 cryogenic proof testing has begun.https://t.co/9tCZafcbaB pic.twitter.com/FXte9NYWQx
— Michael Baylor (@nextspaceflight) June 2, 2022
We learned a lot on Gemini 9 with Gene Cernan's space walk. You can see him talk about it some here at 30:09 through the end of the video, but I read much more about it in his autobiography. It's quite a story.OnlyForNow said:
I'm an idiot.
Explain how internal volume would change on an airtight container.
Actually balloons stretch. Spacesuits don't. So it's more like you have a balloon made of stiff fabric. It's not going to want to bend too easily, and if you do, you'll be kinking it and increasing pressure on the inside.OnlyForNow said:
Squeezing a ballon even from the inside wouldn't change its volumetric capacity, unless it's untied.
Change matters arrangement inside sure, but that's a lot different than changing the volume.
Are we talking about two different things or am I not really understanding what's going on.
Honest question.
I couldn't find the book unfortunately (that's really annoying), but I found thisOnlyForNow said:
Does it talk about how it was difficult, to renter the capsule? Like he was weak and couldn't move the suit, or there was like a pressure wave difference between the capsule and space meaning a lot of wind rushing out pushing him back physically. Hence why "air locks" are a thing I assume I reality and not just sci-fi.
Quote:
As soon as Stafford and Cernan depressurized the spacecraft and opened the hatch above Cernan's head, he immediately discovered how difficult it was to move. His pressure suit was hard as rock in the space vacuum and his lower half was almost immobilized by the metallic "pants." In his memoirs he described his spacesuit as having "all the flexibility of a rusty suit of armor." Tasked with evaluating the dynamics of moving around with the umbilical that carried his oxygen and communications, he was already becoming exhausted and sweaty the circulation of oxygen around the head and body was the only cooling mechanism in the Gemini suit. He then moved to the back of the spacecraft and tried to don the AMU. Fighting the suit and lacking proper handholds and footholds, Cernan found the task nearly impossible.
Finally, he made all the required connections, but he was sweating so profusely his visor fogged over. He could only use the tip of his nose to rub out a small zone of visibility. His heart began racing dangerously. Rather than letting him fly the AMU, Stafford ordered him to quit. Almost blind, Cernan slowly dragged himself back to the cockpit, where getting in and closing the hatch proved to be another nightmare. He was "in excruciating pain" as he bent the suit to sit down, assisted by Stafford. After a difficult struggle, they closed the hatch and repressurized after being out for two hours. When Cernan popped open his visor, he looked as red as a boiled lobster. Stafford took the water gun for drinking and rehydrating food packages and squirted him in the face, even though globules of water floated around the cockpit and could short out electronics. Before the flight, chief astronaut Deke Slayton had talked with Stafford about throwing overboard an incapacitated or dying Cernan in an emergency. Stafford later said he wouldn't have done it, but he would have had no choice.
OnlyForNow said:
I'm an idiot.
Explain how internal volume would change on an airtight container.
OnlyForNow said:
That has nothing to do with volume though.
And I'm splitting hairs but that's my point, the volume doesn't change. Being physically difficult to move has nothing to do with volume. The volume of a space suit is "X" Liters, it doesn't change if it is working correctly in space or on earth. Pressure on the suit can certainly make it impossible to move, but it doesn't increase or decrease its volume.
OnlyForNow said:
Does it talk about how it was difficult, to renter the capsule? Like he was weak and couldn't move the suit, or there was like a pressure wave difference between the capsule and space meaning a lot of wind rushing out pushing him back physically. Hence why "air locks" are a thing I assume I reality and not just sci-fi.