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Space Science

Europe's Automated Cargo Shuttle Docks With Space Station 108

An anonymous reader writes "A successful docking of the Automated Transfer Vehicle dubbed 'Jules Verne' occurred earlier this week. The first of its kind, the crewless ship reached orbit and lightly touched up against the international space station on Thursday. By now astronauts on the ISS will have opened its doors and begun air circulation in preparation of offloading the nearly 7.5 tons of fuel, oxygen, food, clothing and equipment they need to survive. The EU Space Agency sees this as a historic journey for the program: 'The Jules Verne, named after the visionary French science fiction author, is the first of a new class of station supply ships called Automatic Transfer Vehicles. The craft was built by the nations of the European Space Agency as one of Europe's major contributions to the international station. "The docking of the A.T.V. is a new and spectacular step in the demonstration of European capabilities on the international scene of space exploration," said Jean-Jacques Dordain, director general of the European Space Agency.'"
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Europe's Automated Cargo Shuttle Docks With Space Station

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  • by Iamthecheese ( 1264298 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @12:28AM (#22977530)
    The science is done; between this and automatic capture and exploitation of asteroids is only a matter of scale and engineering.
  • by SmokeSerpent ( 106200 ) <benjamin AT psnw DOT com> on Sunday April 06, 2008 @12:46AM (#22977632) Homepage
    I guess they were pretty freakin confident that this thing wouldn't blow up or get lost. Ballsy much?
  • Re:Video? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by bitserf ( 756357 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:36AM (#22977828)
    I HATE MY LIFE
  • by eln ( 21727 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:47AM (#22977880)
    Chuck Norris is SO 2007.
  • Re:old tech? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 06, 2008 @02:40AM (#22978026)
    Doh,

    You certainly need to find out who's actually behind much of the success of U.S. space exploration,
    start with these

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wernher_von_Braun [wikipedia.org]
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helmut_Gr [wikipedia.org]öttrup

    Just to mention two and leaving out too many to list here. Make sure you understand why von Braun
    was so important to NASA and U.S space race with Russians, even though he had Nazi background.

    Many of the great engineers of 19th and 20th century came from Germany and from Europe in general
    as in many sciences you stand on the shoulders of your predeceding scientists. U.S and U.S.S.R. success
    in space exploration just proves that NASA scientists have been the lucky guy to be able to do that too.

    Europe has had long history and lots of great scientists along the centuries, but much of the capability to
    implement was lacking because it was first scattered most of the time small kingdoms, then smallish national
    countries with disagreeing politics.

    EU which has grown past decades is changing all that now. You will see a lot better capability to
    implement/deploy/execute (choose the words you prefer, please) the brainpower and capability there
    certainly have been available all the time.

    ac

    ps. I wish you get it that I don't have Nazi nor any nationalist group symphaties here.
  • by M1FCJ ( 586251 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @02:59AM (#22978092) Homepage
    If only...

    If NASA followed von Braun's strategy, by now we would have a permanent moon base already. Instead NASA went for a big-bang project, after initial success, scaled it down very quickly and abandoned everything for a flawed plan and left us with a shuttle which would truck stuff to nowhere. Now they have a place to go (ISS) but they are canceling the shuttle with no spacecraft to replace it. I wouldn't be this bitter at least they had something replacing it.

    Europeans (inc. Russia) will have to step up and replace NASA when they completely abandon ISS in a couple of years and ATV is a step in this. The Chinese and Indians might come aboard pretty soon as well. The world will not need USA for space exploration any more and NASA's current plans are doomed with the budget cuts and everything - all it needs is a pretty failure in one of the first flights and that's it, USA won't have access to human spaceflight anymore - they hardly succeed with their current fleet of vehicles.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 06, 2008 @07:31AM (#22978864)
    you are retarded.
  • Re:Thursday ? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @08:34AM (#22979106) Journal
    Keep in mind that it is up to the /. editors to pick what interests THEM. As such, there is a bit of a built-in bias about what appears here. 10 years ago, on slashdot, this would have been posted right away. But I have noticed that a number of space articles tend to be posted later and later. I suspect that this has little to do with EU, and a lot more to do with less interest in space by younger folks. Hopefully, with spacex, bigelow, and even virgin, we will see this passion about space rekindled again.

    If not, it will probably be re-kindled in about 6-7 years, when china puts a man on the moon, with the obvious intention of building a base there. Just as sputnik spurred America, I think that the realization that China has about 1.5 times the number of ppl working on their space program of what America had in total during the Apollo program will cause nations to re-think their priorities, and how to work together.
  • by Eunuchswear ( 210685 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @01:35PM (#22980960) Journal
    Progress is more or less Soyuz without a re-entry system. Those russkies believe in reusable systems - reusability of the design rather than idiotic reusability of the vehicle.

    details [amsat.org]
  • by Dun Malg ( 230075 ) on Sunday April 06, 2008 @04:38PM (#22982210) Homepage

    ...left us with a shuttle which would truck stuff to nowhere. Now they have a place to go (ISS) but they are canceling the shuttle with no spacecraft to replace it.
    The trouble with the STS is that its big selling point was as a shuttle to a future International Space Station. By the same token, the ISS' big selling point was that it could be built, manned, and supplied with the STS. They're both lackluster designs limited to a ridiculous LEO slot that's outlandishly costly to maintain. Really, they're BOTH white elephants.

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