While @FAANews did not confirm to NSF if SpaceX already submitted the application for the launch license, it confirmed that the agency targets "before the end of October“ to wrap up the safety review.
— Adrian Beil (@BCCarCounters) September 18, 2023
The FAA also confirmed to NSF that a draft update to the biological… pic.twitter.com/JKfBQQBCQw
That's awesome. Love the slo-mo guysNASAg03 said:
Something positive since this thread has a case of the Mondays.
Confirmations of the FWS in a statement to @NASASpaceflight :
— Adrian Beil (@BCCarCounters) September 18, 2023
- The FWS is considering the operation of a water deluge system in Starbase and its environmental effects.
- The FWS has up to 135 days to submit the final biological opinion to the FAA (Started in August). pic.twitter.com/2ptYap0wvr
https://www.dhmo.org/truth/Dihydrogen-Monoxide.htmlPremium said:
Oh noes, water impact on the environment, must be devastating.
Ag_of_08 said:
Yeah cause rain doesn't happen in the marsh, and the don't flop to different salinity levels all the time.
FAILURE. Staged, but the second stage appeared to have an issue at ignition. Anomaly has been called. https://t.co/0PtPLY5ArX pic.twitter.com/iLmdzCgNyG
— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) September 19, 2023
YellowPot_97 said:Ag_of_08 said:
Yeah cause rain doesn't happen in the marsh, and the don't flop to different salinity levels all the time.
I'm sure they're checking for any potential chemical or pollutant runoff as well. There's nothing wrong with them looking and making sure everything is good.
Running the booster bidet from those 4 tanks of water for 5-8 seconds is not going to change the salinity of the ocean/marsh there.Kenneth_2003 said:
I don't think FWS is out of bounds too review if excessive amounts of fresh water will be running off the pad into the saltwater marsh. Especially if/ when they ramp up cadence.
That said look at it but let the low pace test launched proceed.
I think he means potential chemical deposited that may be commonly used around the launch site that could run off when it rains or deluge system is activated. Probably not a major issue.Ag_of_08 said:YellowPot_97 said:Ag_of_08 said:
Yeah cause rain doesn't happen in the marsh, and the don't flop to different salinity levels all the time.
I'm sure they're checking for any potential chemical or pollutant runoff as well. There's nothing wrong with them looking and making sure everything is good.
What chemical could be involved that would create run off?
Have you looked at the topography of the site? the reason they didn't build a flame diverter is the same reason there's no way to build a catch basin without enormous cost. The water table is too high.Quote:
drainage system or catch basin
I am very familiar with the site. They did not want to include a flame trench because in order for it to be effective, it would need to be at a depth that the Army Corps of Engineers need be involved. Also it would multiply the construction cost and that does not bode well for future starship pad installations.Aggie Jurist said:Have you looked at the topography of the site? the reason they didn't build a flame diverter is the same reason there's no way to build a catch basin without enormous cost. The water table is too high.Quote:
drainage system or catch basin
Ag_of_08 said:YellowPot_97 said:Ag_of_08 said:
Yeah cause rain doesn't happen in the marsh, and the don't flop to different salinity levels all the time.
I'm sure they're checking for any potential chemical or pollutant runoff as well. There's nothing wrong with them looking and making sure everything is good.
What chemical could be involved that would create run off?
The 'nasty chemicals' are usually the hypergolics used for thrusters, but spacex decided not to use those for starship hoping to make it all simply methane and oxygen.YellowPot_97 said:Ag_of_08 said:YellowPot_97 said:Ag_of_08 said:
Yeah cause rain doesn't happen in the marsh, and the don't flop to different salinity levels all the time.
I'm sure they're checking for any potential chemical or pollutant runoff as well. There's nothing wrong with them looking and making sure everything is good.
What chemical could be involved that would create run off?
I'm not sure, but we are talking about rocket science here. I assume there are some nasty chemicals involved with the manufacturing, launching, and operating the most powerful rocket in history. Again it doesn't hurt to make sure there are no unintended consequences of launching. No point in trashing the launch site just to get off the ground.
Rain over land is fresh water. Rain over seas/oceans is saltwater.Ag_of_08 said:
Yeah cause rain doesn't happen in the marsh, and the don't flop to different salinity levels all the time.
Hot staging ring removed from Booster 9. An interesting turn of events.https://t.co/e3xbqPnwZ5 pic.twitter.com/xXwyhzp9UG
— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) September 21, 2023
📢Breaking space news!
— ESA (@esa) September 21, 2023
🧬The NASA/ESA/CSA James #Webb Space Telescope has detected carbon dioxide on the surface of Jupiter's icy moon Europa.
🌊 Analysis indicates that this carbon likely originated in Europa’s subsurface ocean and was not delivered by other external sources. pic.twitter.com/PlYXj8pCqD
Quote:
Planet Earth is about to receive a special delivery the biggest sample yet from an asteroid.
A NASA spacecraft will fly by Earth on Sunday and drop off what is expected to be at least a cupful of rubble it grabbed from the asteroid Bennu, closing out a seven-year quest.
The sample capsule will parachute into the Utah desert as its mothership, the Osiris-Rex spacecraft, zooms off for an encounter with another asteroid.
Scientists anticipate getting about a half pound (250 grams) of pebbles and dust, much more than the teaspoon or so brought back by Japan from two other asteroids. No other country has fetched pieces of asteroids, preserved time capsules from the dawn of our solar system that can help explain how Earth and life came to be.
Sunday's landing concludes a 4 billion-mile (6.2-billion-kilometer) journey highlighted by the rendezvous with the carbon-rich Bennu, a unique pogo stick-style touchdown and sample grab, a jammed lid that sent some of the stash spilling into space, and now the return of NASA's first asteroid samples.
Depends on the time of "day"OnlyForNow said:
I'm not an astrophysicist but I woulda figured Jupiter would add hella gravity to a small moon.
Europa is fun because there are several objects exerting gravity on the moon in an ever changing system. The result is the icy surface gets pressured and cracked from the variable forces. 95 total moons around Jupiter, with the 4 gallilean moons being the most substantial. Jupiter and the 3 other gallilean moons are always pushing and pulling the surface in different directions, causing the fissures.OnlyForNow said:
I'm not an astrophysicist but I woulda figured Jupiter would add hella gravity to a small moon.
Like the tidal forces on earth. If you're standing on the equator and Jupiter is overhead, your weight on Europa will be less. If Jupiter is on the other side of Europa your weight would be more.OnlyForNow said:
Based on it's orbit, I guess? Elliptical - ?
Overviewing a number of the upgrades that will fly with the next flight of Starship.
— Chris Bergin - NSF (@NASASpaceflight) September 22, 2023
Overview by Ryan Weber (@rweb11742)https://t.co/aqr6Ub8U2k