Black Boxes for Spacecrafts 125
karvind writes "NewScientist is running story about NASA's plan to put small, heat-resistant black boxes that will transmit data back to Earth when future space probes break up during re-entry to the Earth's atmosphere. NASA will work with Aerospace Corporation to develop black boxes called Reentry Breakup Recorders (REBRs) weighing just 1 kilogram and spanning less than 30 centimetres."
Re:Good luck finding it (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Good luck finding it (Score:3)
But if the transmitter is damaged you'll still have to go find it.
Re:Good luck finding it (Score:1)
"Why this must be a NeXT cube. I always wanted one!"
"When" they break up? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:"When" they break up? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:"When" they break up? (Score:1)
Whether we like it or not, lauching and landing spacecraft is a risky business. It's not possible to design a 100% safe craft. There will always be more or less risk involved, thus the correct word being when...
Re:"When" they break up? (Score:1)
Just make sure you don't put Windows on these (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just make sure you don't put Windows on these (Score:1)
But of course that would be because of a hardware fault only. The Linux kernel is stable. I just hope they don't need X windows on it or anything else for that matter.
There I was ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:There I was ... (Score:2)
Re:There I was ... (Score:2, Funny)
"Ah, here's the problem, Sir. A human wondered into our landing site. Good thing we have black boxes to know such."
Re:There I was ... (Score:1)
Phone Home (Score:5, Interesting)
There's got to be a beacon incorporated into the design because if that thing (30 cm.) lands in a very deep spot in the ocean it's going to be hard to find!
What good is a lost blackbox?Re:Phone Home (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Phone Home (Score:2, Informative)
Aeroplane speed and altitude data, as well as pilot conversations, are recorded in briefcase-sized black boxes that can be retrieved and studied in the wake of a crash.
I'll spell it out for you - this is how aircraft black boxes work.
Instead, flight data is continuously beamed to Earth using satellites - a stream that stops abruptly during a catastrophe like the break-up of the shuttle Columbia in February 2003.
This is the comm systems on the spacec
Re:Phone Home (Score:2)
That's a good point. It would still need to be strong and heat resistant.
Re:Phone Home (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Phone Home (Score:2)
Black Box? (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Black Box? (Score:2, Funny)
Half-dead cats
The plural of 'craft' (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The plural of 'craft' (Score:1)
Re:The plural of 'craft' (Score:1)
Re:The plural of 'craft' (Score:1)
And I'd say in both cases sleeping through English class was the more probable cause...
Slightly worrying for bees (Score:5, Funny)
Try getting back in your hive now, bitch!
Re:a suggestion toNASA... (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:a suggestion toNASA... (Score:2, Interesting)
Linux there too? (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't that a bit heavy/large? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Isn't that a bit heavy/large? (Score:3, Insightful)
And it's probably not an 'extra' kilo, it's one less kilo of payload.
Re:Isn't that a bit heavy/large? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't that a bit heavy/large? (Score:2, Funny)
$4500 (Score:2)
Re:$4500 (Score:1)
Re:$4500 (Score:1)
Re:$4500 (Score:3, Funny)
If Low-Gain Antenna fails.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Keep that in mind.
Its all well and good... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Its all well and good... (Score:2)
Same could be said for any vehicle (Score:2)
And even more likely to die from a car accident on his/her commute from the airport to the Kennedy Space Center than from a shuttle reentry.
Another thing to consider, black boxes are resistant to destruction because they are small (small surface area to be charred or impacted) and compact (little space inside the box for dislodged components to move about and further destroy themselves or other internal compone
Re:Same could be said for any vehicle (Score:2)
And even more likely to die from a car accident on his/her commute from the airport to the Kennedy Space Center than from a shuttle reentry.
Hmm.. I think space travel is relatively safe for the energy level involved.. but still, a
Re:Its all well and good... (Score:2)
Thorough breakup (and better de-orbiting) on re-entry is a much better alternative to multi-ton artificial meteorites.
p
create a negative ion field (Score:2)
Duh. (Score:2, Interesting)
"Aircrafts," eh? (Score:5, Funny)
I, for one, welcome... (Score:5, Insightful)
As sensors become smaller, lighter, and more networked, it makes sense to put recording devices on ANYTHING remotely mission critical, mainly because at a certain point it becomes negligent not to.
When I ride over the Queensboro Bridge in NYC, I stare up with apprehension at the thousands of rusting girders that hold that rattletrap together. The only thing forestalling a collapse is having actual dudes crawling over it all the time checking visually for cracks and obvious failures. The smart pebble technology previously mentioned on Slashdot - http://www.betterroads.com/articles/feb03b.htm - would make me feel more comfortable.
I feel the same way on airplanes- do I trust that a ground tech working for a lowest-bidder maintenance company has adequately checked the airframe? I sure would like real-time fatigue information being beamed to the pilot, so he can decide wether to fly or not based on risking his own skin.
The most amazing thing about our age of astounding engineering is still the amount of ignorance we maintain about our constructions (Bucky Fuller's famous, and unanswered question to an architect: How much does your building weigh?). Thus, safety margins, inspections, building codes, all serving as bandaids to a fundamental ignorance that bites back BIG when a failure does occurr (sure, the WTC can absorb the impact, but can it survive the potential energy bundled in a plane, including the BTUs in the fuel? Nope).
Privacy wonks will worry about networked sensors in their toilets watching them take a crap, but really, if anyone wants to see mine, they're more than welcome to it- I just don't want to hear about it (eeewwww).
Re:I, for one, welcome... (Score:2)
Well, the answer is obvious:
HAM!
Re:I, for one, welcome... (Score:1)
use non electric sensors (Score:2)
Sure the ship wont be 'white' but wierdo colors, so get off the high horse on 'visual cuteness' and make it work. There are plenty of none-electronic tricks you can do for feedbacks/status.
Suggestion that matters. (Score:1)
Why don't they make the whole damn space craft out of that heat resistant material.
Re:Suggestion that matters. (Score:2)
Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:2, Funny)
porp
You aint a machine... (Score:2)
Of course the box should be built to remain intact after e.g. falling through the athmosphere without external heatshielding, then impacting on the ocean with Mach-2. But the components inside must be built robust enough to survice an Mach-2 impact as well. And I don't think today's astronauts can really take that...
Re:Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:1)
I'm not sure how serious you meant this comment to be, but here goes:
The first problem is that electronics can be designed to survive much greater accelerations than can the human body. Remember: Only the small pieces of silicon containing the data need survive the impact for the data to be recoved, but a brief 65g-75g acceleration will scramble on
Re:Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:2)
It's called a 'capsule'. They built a bunch of them in the 60's, worked quite well. There were a few minor system failures on the capsules, example, a hatch blew on one, causing it to sink after impact. A
Re:Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:2)
Someone forgot to tell Komarov.
http://www.astronautix.com/graphics/q/qsoy1crs.jp g [astronautix.com]
A parachute failure in any of the manned capsules would have likely been fatal.
In all, four astronauts have died in capsules during or after rentry, but none because of the reentry itself. Komarov crashed without a parachute, the
Re:Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:2)
Re:Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:1)
Re:Put Astronauts in the Black Boxes (Score:1)
Grammar nit. (Score:2)
Re:Grammar nit. (Score:2)
Its not like it has defined rules and thats it, it has 200000 extensions, much like the 8086 set
I say do away with all wierdo extensions, and keep it simple and ruly, who cares if some words begin to sound strange, like cactuss. Just because some peoples brains are too rigid to accept unusuall looking words they had to add new rules.
Hell no! (Score:1)
What's next, powering it with dark energy??
I'm sure that will make the crew feel better (Score:2)
I thought, yeah, that's just what I need. A bed that comes apart in orbit and burns up on re-entry.
Not "Aerospace Corporation" (Score:2)
The Aerospace Corporation is a federally funded research and development center (FFRDC), located in lovely El Segundo, California. El Segundo is also home to Los Angeles' Hyperion sewage processing plant, a Chevron refinery, the Los Angeles Air Force Base, and numerous other aerospace-themed venues that hearken back to the good ol' days (The Proud Bird, The Wild Goose, etc.).
Call me insane (Score:1)
Ok the Black Box rolls off the tounge which is the leet part of lingo, but besides that.. Make it Neon or they deserve to loose it.
Head like a Space Box (Score:1)
aerospace corporation? (Score:1)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:2, Funny)
Know thine enemy (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:2)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:2)
Redundant: Needlessly wordy or repetitive in expression: a student paper filled with redundant phrases.
Oh well. I have -plenty- of karma to burn. Note to moderators: I metamoderate.
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:1)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:5, Interesting)
Besides, they are planning on attaching these to unmanned craft first. This will give them a great deal of information about how the materials used react to reentry. This helps make things safer for people on the ground as they really can design craft that disintegrate on reentry.
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:2)
Re:This sounds fatalist (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why just for recorders? (Score:4, Insightful)
I've seen wreckage of large aircraft. A lot of pieces were very recognizeable, or still in one piece. Engine turbines, weapons hard points. But obviously, you can't make the whole aircraft out of that. It would never get off the ground.
Re:Hmm (Score:1)
2001 Space Odyssey
Re:Hmm (Score:1)