Blogging a Ride on the 'Vomit Comet' 117
An anonymous reader writes "Four Duke engineering students have launched a weblog
to document their preparations and impending ride on NASA's 'vomit comet.' The students will study the effects of microgravity on the shapes of cells and the positions of their organelles, such as the nucleus. The schedule is subject to change, but the students expect to take their 12,000 foot plunges Monday in NASA's KC-135A. They plan to provide photos and video."
WOW! (Score:4, Funny)
[simpsons]
Best...name...ever.
[/simpsons]
Re:WOW! (Score:2, Funny)
(Cue throbbing spherical blob o' puke floating in front of camera...)
I, for one, welcome our new gelatinous diced carrot overlords!
(Sorry, it had to be done!)
Re:WOW! (Score:2, Funny)
Some people are being fangoriously devoured by a gelatinous monster. Hillary's legs are being digested.
(Beg pardon. Must stop!)
Re:WOW! (Score:1)
I'm just too funny for the moderators. Yes, that's it!
Re:WOW! (Score:2)
Only in a well-ventilated area, and only after I saw him wash his hands very thoroughly.
Re:WOW! (Score:2)
Certainly it is a pun on the "Red Rocket" (the "official" nickname for our old streetcars), but also accurately describes both a) the speed at which the drivers go, and b) the activities of most of the passengers at 4am.
Someone should blog *that*.
Re:WOW! (Score:2)
rj
they fly very high.... (Score:2)
And thats how it got the name, 'vomit comet'.
Re:they fly very high.... (Score:1)
That's the principle. I'm not sure if they go up and over, or whether they just start at the top and go downwards, but they fly in a parabolic arc, following the path an object would take if you simply threw it in the direction and speed of the plane at the start of the arc.
That way, you are simply falling freely, having been launched into the air, and the plane is moving in such a way that its walls remain around you throughout your fall.
Sorry, that wasn't very clear... Maybe someone else can explain it
Re:they fly very high.... (Score:2)
In other words, the plane is also in free fall
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:they fly very high.... (Score:2)
Re:they fly very high.... (Score:2)
Re:they fly very high.... (Score:2)
Someone mod this one as informative. The specially modified plane has some impressive features that'd make even the most hard-core of modders cry. Some of the notables include:
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
Some thrust and steering is needed because of air resistence, so essentially you want the plane to trace the trajectory (path and velocity) of a ball thrown up in a vacuum.
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:2)
Its the same as the feeling you get when you're on one of those really fast elevators often seen in gov'ment buildings. Going up, you begin to feel less gravity as the car arrives at your floor.
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
They fly it up to a proper altitude,
then initiate a controlled stall that drops the plane pretty vertical for 30 seconds to a minute if I remember correctly. They don't reduce gravity, they just cancel it out by moving everything downwards real fast.
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:5, Informative)
The ISS is at an altitude of about 370km. With Earth having a diameter of 6000km and using Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation, the gravity on the space station should be 88% of what it is on earth's suface. (6000/6370)^2.
The reason it is a zero gravity environment is because it is orbiting the Earth. That means it is effectively in freefall, always falling towards the Earth, but it has enough sideways motion that it keeps falling around the planet.
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:2)
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
I like to think of it as that yes, the ISS is falling towards the Earth, its just that the Earth keeps moving out of the way.
Douglas Adams (Score:2)
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
Because the aircraft is so big, it takes a while for the nose to go from nose up climb to a nose down decent (not straight down, but a steep angle...45 deg to be exact). During this "pushover", (aka parabolic maneuvers) the pilots monitor their G meter to m
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
The magnetic field reduces the strength of any gravity passing thro
Re:How do they reduce gravity? (Score:1)
Re:NASA is a big fat waste of tax money (Score:1)
Besides, this isn't a space flight.
Its a KC-135. The flight itself will cost fuel and regular aircraft maintenance. Nothing more expensive then any commercial airliner.
Re:NASA is a big fat waste of tax money (Score:1)
(Based on ~10 participants). (from a space.com [space.com] article)
There is also a themepark considering setting up its own version for a few thousand per person.
Initially, I thought the same as you about this, but NASA have had this program up and running, making kids throw up for a few years, it can't cost that much, and from what I've been reading its given the kids fantastic memories.
Re:NASA is a big fat waste of tax money (Score:2)
a blog for a 30 second long event ? (Score:4, Informative)
s = ut + 1/2 a * t * t;
with a vertical velocity of 0 from the dive
that makes it
t* t = 819.something
makes it less than 30 seconds of no gravity ??
And add the final deceleration when g-forces really pull you down ?
*vomit*
throwing up and seeing it form a perfect sphere of liquid puke (cohesion in no gravity should be strong enough) is worth the trip.. especially if you blow it towards someone else
Re:a blog for a 30 second long event ? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:a blog for a 30 second long event ? (Score:1)
Some thrust and steering is still needed because of air resistence, so essentially you want the plane to trace the trajectory (path and velocity) of something thrown up in a vacuum.
Re:a blog for a 30 second long event ? (Score:2)
Start out at 40,000 feet, going up at 1000 ft/s. Follow a free-fall trajectory.
In 37s you are at 20,000 feet, falling at about 700 knots (vertically) - that is about as much as any large aircraft could possibly handle (you'd probably have to go full thrust to sustain this speed - in reality the wings would probably fall off).
Pull out at 2G of accel. In 18s you are at about 10,000 feet flying level.
So, 30s really is about as much as you're going to get. You'd probably do be
Re:a blog for a 30 second long event ? (Score:1)
Not quite OT... (Score:4, Informative)
Vommit Comet (Score:1)
Re:Vommit Comet (Score:1)
Organelles? (Score:3, Informative)
Sounds like a pastry or something. Better look it up ...
organelle n.
A differentiated structure within a cell, such as a mitochondrion, vacuole, or chloroplast, that performs a specific function.
Great, that sure clears things up! The submitter should have said mitochondrion, vacuole, or chloroplast in the first place though ...
Re:Organelles? (Score:1)
Research result (Score:4, Funny)
Flattened, fractal-shaped
Position of nucleus:
Roof, wall, the face of co-researcher 2
Test setup:
o Zero gravity
o Container with missing lid
Test verification result:
No verification was possible, container broken on impact with forehead of co-researcher 1 after container was accellerated by a furious co-researcher 2
Sorry... (Score:4, Funny)
Step 2:
Step 3: Vomit!
Kinda gross (Score:2)
Re:Kinda gross (Score:5, Funny)
It was similar shenanigans which saw Barry Humphries (AKA Dame Edna Everage) banned as a teenager for life from an Australian airline - a ban which remained throughout his stardom and ended only with the closure of the airline.
His notorious "sick bag" prank involved carrying a tin of condensed soup onto an aircraft, which he would then surreptitiously emptied into an air-sickness bag. At an appropriate juncture, he would walk up and down the aisle pretending to vomit very loudly and violently into the bag. Then, he would proceed to eat the contents to the horror of the passengers and crew, many of whom would start vomiting (for real) as a result. Best...Prank...Ever!
Re:Kinda gross (Score:2)
At the bottom of the parabola, they're getting about 2 Gs. It's like a super puke with an extra nasty splash.
-B
Re:Kinda gross (Score:1)
Re:Kinda gross (Score:1)
Fly weightless flights... profit! (Score:3, Interesting)
sky diving is cheaper (Score:1)
..brain on drugs? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:..brain on drugs? (Score:2)
I would agree, except that many of the best RGSFOP teams are from small Universities. Actually, in my extensive experience with the program, the worst teams are from the "best" schools. Take a look at this years teams for more info:
http://microgravityuniversity.j [nasa.gov]
Re:Flown it (Score:2)
Riding up front was cooler - floating against the harness while the Gulf is filling the cockpit windows.
We had one poor engineer who spent an entire flight in her seat - she got violently airsick during takeoff and never recovered.
Photographs of Experiments (Score:3, Informative)
http://zerog.jsc.nasa.gov/studentmain.html [nasa.gov]
OMFG! (Score:2)
Seriously people. Duke isn't all that special. Over a hundred teams from universities around the US do this every year. Hell, I did it. Guess I know how to make the cover of slashdot come next spring/summer.
Re:OMFG! (Score:1)
Guess I know how to make the cover of slashdot come next spring/summer.
Ahh, but you're forgetting about that iPod deal. Instant CredibilityTM
Re:What's the point (Score:1)
The thing that they are trying to test is a theory called tensegrity - the idea that changes in cell shape might be transmitted to the nucleus to alter gene expression. A
What's the Big Deal? (Score:1)
I want a flight. (Score:2)
Re:I want a flight. (Score:1)
Note from a Vomit Comet Veteran (Score:3, Interesting)
Penn & Billy (Score:2)
Other things by that name. (Score:1)
When I saw "blogging a ride on the vomit comet" I thought someone was blogging about all the strange people you meet on those buses (or ones like it). Hmmm.... that gives me an idea...
Other studies performed on the Vomit Comet (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This is all well and good, (Score:1)
Re:This is all well and good, (Score:2)