Remembering Skylab 30
linuxwrangler writes "It was 30 years ago today that NASA launched Skylab, the first US space station. An article at New York Times remembers Skylab. It was hardly a flawless launch with a meteroid shield getting ripped loose causing one of the solar arrays to partially deploy and then be blown into space by the exhaust from a retro-rocket but the speed and effectiveness of the astronauts' repairs showed human's ability to operate in space and helped pave the way for today's projects. Skylab reentered on July 11, 1979 leaving a debris field across parts of Western Australia and the Indian Ocean."
30 Years. (Score:1)
Either somebody can't read, or they can't do math.
Re:30 Years. (Score:2, Funny)
So it's official then. I can't read.
Re:20 Years? (Score:1)
remembering Skylab joke from Omni magazine... (Score:2)
Time travel too!!! (Score:3, Funny)
So among all the other feats it managed to reenter the atmosphere 4 years before it launched.... Amazing!!
Perhaps it should say it reentered in 1989.
Re:Time travel too!!! (Score:1)
Oops, make that 30 years. (Score:4, Informative)
Now that I've made my "off by one" error for the day I can safely proceed with real work.
Re:Oops, make that 30 years. (Score:2, Interesting)
have fun at work linuxwrangler - if only mistake quotas worked that way
Re:Oops, make that 30 years. (Score:1)
Someone needs coffee... (Score:3, Interesting)
How was Skylab launched 20 years ago, and reentered 25 years ago?
Ah, I see that the magical slashdot gnomes just changed '20' to '30' on the front page.
Re:Someone needs coffee... (Score:1)
Simple. They put it in an orbit that was the opposite of the Earth's rotation, so that it was going backwards in time until it finally crashed ~4 years before it launched.
Either that or they shot it at the sun really fast and it slingshotted around back into the past. Take your pick.
Today's post brought to you be pseudo-science, stupid theories, and the number 3
I remember the crash. (Score:5, Interesting)
The next day there were news reports on big chunks that had landed all over the place. Nobody was hurt if I remember correctly, but it was funny to see one picture of a typical Aussie wheatbelt'er, standing next to a big ball of shredded super hight tech O2 tank in the middle of his paddock.
That really was the beginning of my personal "Space Love Era", heh heh
Re:I remember the crash. (Score:1, Interesting)
Last of an Era (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Last of an Era (Score:1)
To build the F-1 today, we would have to re-engineer it completely from scratch
Re:Last of an Era (Score:1)
I know this is a bit off-topic and may seem somewhat inflamatory, but I really feel I need to respond to this.
Implying that the moon landings were a hoax is foolish at best, but more so very insulting to the thousands of people involved in the project and the dozens of astronauts that risked (and in some cases lost) their lives for it. I'm not going to say any more about this except to recommend that you read Philip Plait's Bad Astronomy [badastronomy.com] web site, more specifically the section on Moon Landing Hoax theorie [badastronomy.com]
Wow. (Score:1)