ISS Gyro Fixed Via Spacewalk 143
Teahouse writes "After a failed attempt last week, the ISS Astronauts finally got to fix the external gyroscope circut breaker in the station. Tests are being run today, but it looks like the ISS is back to having attitude stability with redundancy. This is particularly significant with the Shuttle being grounded for an extended period because the ISS would have had to use thruster fuel to keep the Station's solar panels pointed in the right direction without the gyroscopes, and no guarantee when more fuel would be arriving."
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:5, Funny)
Yup... that'sh gonna do wondersh for shtability...
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:1)
Doesn't that leave 99.865% of the population out in the cold and dead sober?
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:1)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:2)
Don't mess with them thar 4 digit users, son, or you'll be in a whole heap o' trouble. ;-)
Joke (Score:2)
Liar! In space, noone can hear you missing the joke.
Virg
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Attitude stability? (Score:2)
In any event, it was a stupid joke and one that was made about 2 dozen times attached to the story about SpaceShipOne's problems with attitude control. Yes, an aeronautic term an
Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:5, Insightful)
We're going to Mars! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We're going to Mars! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We're going to Mars! (Score:2)
Re:We're going to Mars! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:We're going to Mars! (Score:3, Insightful)
This is the same reason we don't leave Iraq in order to save hostages and the same reason we don't spend ten billion trillion dollars installing tons of high-tech armor on every humvee. Government is about assessing c
What the shuttle is worth (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What the shuttle is worth (Score:2)
Thanks.
Re:What the shuttle is worth (Score:2)
If you consider the above post about the cost in lives of each shuttle launch, then
Mod Parent UP: +1, Damn Straight! (Score:1)
Those words don't mean what you think they mean. (Score:2)
You've got to understand that when Bush says something like that, he doesn't really mean "completely." If you take the words "complete astronaut safety" literally, it's obviously a ridiculous concept. We're talking about going to Mars for heaven's sake! I can't drive to work in "complete" safety. How the heck are we going to propel several people several dozen miles per second to land for the first time in history on a planet
You're preaching to the choir. (Score:2)
Regarding Bush, however, I agree... completely.
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:5, Interesting)
character_assassin, you may be right, but personally I think the Bush administration is scared poopless of the Chinese. It's the most populous nation on earth. It can do basic, medium and even some high-tech manufacturing for a fraction of the price to do so in the US. And here's the kicker -- last year foreign investment in China exceeded foreign investment in the US. THAT IS HUGE.
If that doesn't hit you like a slap in the face, think about it this way... When people or companies make it rich around the world, what do they do? They invest their money. And for decades they have put that investment into US companies, knowing their investment was safe. Last year, more people chose to safely tuck their money away in China than in America. I think China/US relations will continue to become a major issue on the world scene, and I think China has only begun its 21st-century ascendency.
Maybe I'm wrong, but I believe the US is in an overt economic and political struggle with the People's Republic.
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:1, Offtopic)
We ain't seen nothing yet. Multinational corporations (with no allegiance to the U.S.) outsourcing to cheap-China to sell back to the once-rich U.S. is only the beginning [blogspot.com].
The bigger threat is from the fruits of increasing robotic automation being hoarded by the same multinational few who own the means of human-less production and fuck over everyone else who is now an unemployed "useless eater" [blogspot.com]
Please explain one thing (Score:2, Insightful)
Having a job is not important. Survival and living a happy life is. If you have enough money to survive and live a happy life, you don't need a job. If you can survive and live a happy life without money, then you don't need money.
Do you think a person's life is defined by the work he or she does? Does work equal life?
Let the robots do the boring jobs. Let humans come up with things the robots can't do.
China is a 'threat' to greedy domination, yes (Score:1)
Re:China is a 'threat' to greedy domination, yes (Score:2)
Well, it wouldn't solve all problems, but it would be the biggest and most disruptive equalizer we've ever seen.
Besides just making possible the cheap reconfiguration of a pile of molecules in your garbage into any desired object (including food & shelter & diamond), democratized molecular manufacturing [foresight.org] "printers" would mean the end of conflict [mccarthy.cx] based on trade of once-scarce resources. "Resources" could now be recycled at the mol
Re:China is a 'threat' to greedy domination, yes (Score:2)
Err, no... molecular manufacturing "printers" would mean the introduction of artificial scarcity by means of insane lawmaking - DMCA, anyone?
Oh, sorry. You said "democratized"... Well in this case, I guess, putting an end to that "Democracy" thing would be rather high on the corporate agenda. Conflict based on trade of scarce resources is the holy, all curing capitalism, after all... So yo
corruption=poor organisation (Score:1)
Chinese economic growth (Score:3, Insightful)
You're confusing 'risk' and 'return'. People haven't put their investments into US companies because they knew their investment was safe, they did it because they felt they could get a high rate of return on their money. If they wanted a safe investment, they would buy US treasury securities, currently the safest investm
Re:Chinese economic growth (Score:2)
Finally, someone realizes that China is adavancing economically not because of something that they've figured out, but because of something that the rest of the world dropped hundreds of years ago. The secret to the Chinese economy is not brilliant leaders or new techniques, but simply abominable human rights abuses. Once we're done clearing out the
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem was that the ISS was concieved and built with a dependency on technology, two decades old, with a somewhat troubling penchant for failure.
As for the "moon base", unless Google is going to chip in and fund it, I doubt America will go through with it. The US space program has lost a lot of the "I did it first" impetus it had when it was competing with the Soviet Union, and that could be a good thing. The NASA of today should focus on the practical, useful aspects of space, instead of being used as a political tool by whatever president is in office. I would rather have my tax dollars spent on putting communications/navigation satellites into orbit than have it spent on a moon base with little practical value to me or America.
Yes, but what is 'practical'? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why not Google? (Score:2)
Mal-2
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:5, Interesting)
The ISS is not dying of neglect. Far from it. If your computer loses a secondary hard drive to old age and you replace it with a new one, is your computer dying of neglect? No. If a car's tire goes flat and you put on a new one, are you neglecting it? No.
That said, the ISS is the biggest white elephant program going on in space travel at the moment relative to everything else. Actually, they're all pretty undefendable except Hubble. (And, of course, except any other additions to the list that I'm sure people more familiar with NASA will spank me with in the replies) Nothing makes money, and the science-to-spending ratio is obscene compared to most programs. If we had to transfer funding away from these projects specifically for... oh, let's say, education, cancer research, or domestic security (this is HYPOTHETICAL! No flame here, I know what our war budgets and football stadium budgets are, I'd NEVER advocate cutting NASA before those things)... then most people would never argue the loss of the projects. They wouldn't like it, but they wouldn't think twice either.
Besides, the entire point of these risky, socially purposeless, complicated, budget-eating manned space missions is basically to do more things big and showy to pat ourselves on the back as a species. In that sense, Mars would be a greater success than the ISS. We've never been to another planet, but we've already done the orbital-sardine-can trick.
Pretty soon, robotics and remotely-operated mechanical systems will eliminate the need for a human presence on many science missions, so the cost of science should decline rapidly. This will be excellent. As for the manned missions... well, if we get into the space tourism game or we privatize some elements of the various programs, things may improve. For now, we do what we can, and we're in a tough spot. We've always recovered from disaster and tragedy in space travel, and we shall do so again.
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:4, Insightful)
Besides, the entire point of these risky, socially purposeless, complicated, budget-eating manned space missions is basically to do more things big and showy to pat ourselves on the back as a species
Just keep in mind that our planet is doomed to be sucked into the sun one day. Sure we have a fair while to get off this planet, but the sooner we start the better right?
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:5, Informative)
Never mind the collossal risk posed by an asteroid strike. Sure, the chances of a species-killer are pretty low, but the downsides are enourmous. Better to start on contingency plans as soon as we can.
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:3, Insightful)
As for asteroids. What good is a manned space program going to do? I would imagine solutions involving long-range detection and nuclear explosions. Possibly a big frikin' "laser"... but do you really thing it'll be like the film "Armageddon"?
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:3)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2)
How about the collossal risk and far greater likelihood of a large nuclear war? Extinction or merely a complete collapse of global civilization can be man-made. I never understood why people worry about the infinitesmal chances of a large asteroid strike, but ignore lesser events that are sufficiently catas
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:1)
Yeah, let's give them all names
Cassini/Huygens probes: a horse with a tick
ISS: a white elephant
Spirit/Opportunity: beetles
...
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2)
What's that old anecdote? An American tycoon visited China to act as an advisor on a dam they were building. Seeing thousands of people toiling with shovels, he told the Chinese politicians that they should buy back-hoes and they could complete the dam in a fraction of the time and cost. "But," they said, "think of all the people we're employing." 'If it's employment you're looking for,' he said, 'take away their shovels and give them spoons.'
The moral of the story is, you don't undertake a fantastical
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:1)
NASA Spin-offs make the U.S. Billions Regardless (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:2)
What are you talking about? It had a planned life of 5 years, and they finally (purposefully) deorbited it at the ripe old age of 13 years. How is this neglect? You think they should have kept the old clunker going forever?
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Re:Another space station dying of neglect? (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Greek Astronauts? (Score:2, Funny)
Reminds me of Galaxy Quest.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Reminds me of Galaxy Quest.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Reminds me of Galaxy Quest.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ignorant observations about technology placement (Score:1)
Reasons for putting it outside (Score:5, Informative)
There's also the fact ... (Score:2)
that the Gyroscopes (and their circuit breakers) are part of a Self-Contained unit of the Space Station, the Z1 Integrated Truss Structure, which wasn't added to the station until it had been up there for almost 2 years.
Zarya was launced in November 1998.
Unity was attached by Shuttle Endeavour in December 1998.
Zvezda docked to the station on July 25th, 2000.
The Z1 Truss was installed by Shuttle Discovery in October 2000.
The Gyroscopes which are an integral part of the Z1 Truss weren't activated until a
Re:Reasons for putting it outside (Score:2)
Fixing a bad gyro... (Score:5, Funny)
Now *THIS* is a gyro [fromto.cc]!
(on second thought, this joke isn't very funny. posting anonymously anyway.)
Re:Fixing a bad gyro... (Score:4, Funny)
Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:5, Interesting)
However, until NASA has a better platform, they will probably continue to use the shuttle.
Perhaps if the open source movement were to desing and implement a shuttle replacement, we might have a working replacement faster than if NASA were told they have to come up with a cheaper faster replacement.
For those thinking of suggesting that Soyuz would work, might I remind you that every Soyuz capsule is a one time use vehicle. Even when everything goes right, it doesn't get re-used. It has no airlock, so either everyone gets suited up, or no-one does a space walk. It has no payload capability, so no sattelite recovery. It has no manipulator arm, so you can't rely upon it for doing sattelite maintenance as the shuttle crew has.
The shuttle may not be perfect. It was designed for a set of missions that have very little to do with what it is doing now. (The military provided some of the specs to support black projects, few of which have ever been attempted.)
The Civilian side of the project was to haul people and material to and from the space station that was being desinged by NASA, which was not the international space station. It was also decided to use it to deploy sattelites as well once the capacity of the payload bay was defined.
As a jeep, the shuttle has done an ok job. If you think we need a better design, I am all for it. Start working on that better desing, and give us status reports as you find the time.
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:3, Interesting)
And how the hell do you know? The whole point of black op's is ... wait for it ... they're black. Though I can see the point that it's hard to hide a shuttle launch, we won't know for 50 years if the shuttles have actually been used as they were designed.
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:2)
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:2)
Yes, launch and re-entry is hard to hide, but how hard would it be to run a black op, or launch a black payload when it's up there?
</devils advocate>
I don't personally "believe" that anything untoward has been done with the shuttle's, but I can't discount the possibility.
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:3, Interesting)
Given the amount of preparation required for a mission and the number of people involved, I don't think it would be possible to carry a secret payload or carry out a black operation during an otherwise normal mission without at least the existence of such a thing being known to the public. I'm not a big believer in conspiracies, and something
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:5, Interesting)
The Shuttle was the wrong paradigm. It's the Concorde of space. Columbia couldn't even make it to the ISS orbit, IIRC
Could the money being spent to keep Discovery, Endeavor and Atlantis going be better spent figuring out how to get US ISS components launched autonomously using existing lauch vehicles and purchasing additional Progress and Soyuz maintenence and crew transfer launches?
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:1, Insightful)
Many of rocket boosters can be used to launch something into LEO. No problem there. But they are NOT designed to carry human inside the loading cargo on its tip of a rocket. One consideration, which is often ignored, is a supersonic vibration within the closed cavity. [The downside of it is your gut may explode under the supersonic vibration.]
In any manned rocket design, the vibration is suppressed and is safe for human to ride inside. But not so for many unmanne
Pak chooie (Score:2)
Well, the shuttle was successful in repairing the gyros on the ISS, so that it could be pushed away from the Terrible Secret of Space. That's got to count for something.
Russia = 1 time | Nasa = repeated use (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:2)
With good reason. Why weren't there 3+ people on that station so that even if something happened to the first two, another could help them? Because NASA wasn't operating the Shuttles. NASA wasn't operating the Shuttles because they didn't have a disaster recovery plan to handle the loss of a shuttle, hence the entire fleet has been g
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:3, Interesting)
So? Who cares about that? It's still a lot cheaper than the reusable alternative. Why crave for reusability just for reusability's sake?
The shuttle may not be perfect. It was designed for a set of missions that have very little to do with what it is doing now.
Its biggest flaw is that when they thought it up, they envisione
Re:Problems with the Shuttle-centric approach? (Score:2)
We need a simple huge rocket for launching space station parts, sattelite and whatever else.
It doesnt need to be reusable, just as cheap and high capacity as possible.
Basicly, something similar to the titans and others currently used to launch sattelites and stuff but:
A.even less complicated (the "big-dumb-booster" people talk about)
B.as cheap as possible
C.high-capacity (to carry big stuff like space station bits)
and D.able to be launched often (as in, fast turn-arou
Nice, but.... (Score:5, Funny)
how do gyros work?? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:how do gyros work?? (Score:2, Interesting)
LK
Re:how do gyros work?? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:how do gyros work?? (Score:2, Informative)
Gyro is short for gyroscope. Did you ever play with a top as a child? Hopefully, at least once. Conceptually, a gyro is like a top; it is spun up very fast (thousands of RPM, typically), gaining a lot of angular momentum (sorry). Part of the gyro is fixed in the housing in which it resides; the rest is free to move around, typically in two axes, just like a top leans to and fro a little as it moves across a surface. The housing is mounted to the spacecraft in an orientation that aligns the gyro in
Re:how do gyros work?? (Score:2)
Your post was so awful, I had to reply to it twice.
You sir are an idiot. [userfriendly.org]
LK
Wouldn't it be easier... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Wouldn't it be easier... (Score:4, Funny)
I'm not the type of person who usually points these types of things out, but after the first few sentences of atrocious grammar, the remainder of attrocious grammar is all packed into a run-on sentence, that, depending upon proper comma placement is incomplete.
Comma placement (Score:2)
i.e. "I'm not the type of person who usually points these types of things out, but after the first few sentences of atrocious grammar, the remainder of attrocious grammar is all packed into a run-on sentence that, depending upon proper comma placement, i
Why build a space station? (Score:2)
"Why build a space station? Since the beginning of the Space Age the stations that have flown have fallen short of the ideals of space advocates and science fiction writers, who foresaw orbiting hubs of transportation and commerce--the giant spinning station from 2001: A Space Odyssey, complete with Pan Am shuttles and a Hilton hotel, being perhaps the best-known example. Instead, the space stations that have been built have been, at best, modest conglomerations of modules and solar arrays, serving as cramp
"attitude stability with redundancy" (Score:5, Funny)
Wish my ex-gf had that =/
I don't really know, who made that... (Score:2)
What Idiot... (Score:4, Funny)
And just what idiot made it an external circuit breaker?
Re:What Idiot... (Score:2)
A couple of reasons.. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:A couple of reasons.. (Score:2)
Re:What Idiot... (Score:4, Interesting)
Not that I'm saying the ISS doesn't have design flaws, I'm sure it does. But, from software to spaceware, design is compromise, and shit happens.
Re:What Idiot...Lying Bastard (Score:2)
Probably the same guy who designed Louis Wu's ship the Lying Bastard. That ship, as I recall, crashed into the Ringworld.
Fear of Space (Score:2)
There's a good phrase (Score:2)
Re:boring ? (Score:3, Insightful)