Space Station Suffers Power Glitch 53
TheSexican writes "As if the MRO's vision problems weren't enough, it seems that NASA has another problem on their hands as of late.
" The problem itself has been solved; one of the solar power array went off line, and had to be repaired, but is back up and working.
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Heh always wanted to do that... but seriously it's still news even if they already fixed it. Now if only it wasn't a hole in space you launch money into... Not that I don't value space exploration and research but exploration and research are the key words in my mind.
What's that thing for? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What's that thing for? (Score:4, Funny)
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Dammy
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I mean, no.
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Re:What's that thing for? (Score:5, Insightful)
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P.s. The article linked to here is the first I found and seems pretty biased, please find a better source for yourself.
Re:What's that thing for? (Score:5, Interesting)
But - even with the regular repairs, I would still think they're doing SOME research - even if that might not be quite is visible in the headlines as "read all about the latest power outage!"...
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And no, they're really not doing any new and useful research anymore, at least in my opinion. The science budget has basically been slashed to non-existence. (The original plans included some useful and interesting research, but that's gone up in balloon engineering budgets.)
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In your opinion, yes. In other just as well educated opinions, no. The thing is that getting to space is difficult. You know that. I worked on the MGS and saw it lost for 1 little glitch. You are also on an automated mission. But robotics have had a LOT more experience than has man in space. As it is, it is far easier to build robotic systems that will succeed, than it is to build a system that will not fail under
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Really, why? And why now? You state this like it is an agreed upon conclusion and I don't see why that should be.
And if you believe (as you apparently do) that ISS is doing new, useful science, then by all means, point out what's worth the over $100 billion cost (the last projected cost I've seen).
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As to the Science, just the ability to live in space it worth it. The 100B is nothing in the long term (and that is over some odd 20 years). As I pointed out, I think that the pri
Re:What's that thing for? (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe you needed to pay more attention in history class.
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As I pointed out, I think that the private enterprise will take over the exploration and move us to other worlds soon enough.
Great! So why are you asking NASA to fund it instead? Private enterprise is less likely to be a pile of political pork like ISS has turned out, so I think letting them make the next move would be fantastic idea.
Simple - to get things going.
If governments hadn't made a start on space programs (including Mir / ISS), I don't think that anyone would have taken up the challenge on the Ansari X-prize -- if it would even have come to pass.
India is now trying to get a space program "on the cheap" - compared to the kinds of budgets that were necessary for NASA initially (even if you factor in inflation over the past 40-50 years - their programs will be CHEAP).
But, if noone had done "the initial testing" (the "proof of con
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As it is, his history was distorted. It was Europe's obsession with War is what caused Spain's problems, not exploration ( a lesson that seems to not
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NASA's primary focus has never really been robotics. The manned spaceflight initiatives have (either directly or indirectly) always taken up more of the budget than robotics. Cassini has another five years on it, after that I have plenty of options. I'm not worried about my funding in either the short or long term, I'm merely concerned about NASA's future and
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"But we need to get off this rock."
Really, why?
Call it risk management...
Look what Katrina did to New Orleans - and think about what, say, global warming could do to us -- or the next meteor striking Earth (though, we don't see any at this moment which look likely to hit us in the next few hundred years, that does not mean that something along those lines MIGHT still happen)?
Or - with us all being so interconnected through travelling, a new virus can spread around the globe in relatively little time - just remember when SARS broke out (which luckily wa
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And I've already covered resources. Unless we get a cheap way to get material up to orbit and down again, anything produced on other worlds will be more expensive than growing it, mining it, or building it here. At least until we find things we ca
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a) I didn't write anything about full scale terraforming (not even small scale)... We'd obviously have to live with whatever we find, and try and make sheltered regions of it habitable and self-sustainable.
b) I'm not trying to suggest to move everybody off this planet to another - my reference to risk management strategy was to sprawl out over multiple places, if possible. Fixing this planet is necessary if we are to stay here - but it's not a risk management issue to do
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b) I never suggested you were trying to say everyone should leave. But do be aware that a reasonable breeding population is at least a few thousand people if you want long-term genetic viability. (Last I saw an estimate for
It's not done yet (Score:5, Insightful)
They're building it. Make as many analogies to building an office building as you like - they're all applicable. The trouble is while you can build a research facility on Earth in two years, it turns out with limited funding doing that 90 miles above the earth is somewhat harder. A 5x or 10x multiple doesn't seem all that bad if you look at it that way.
The biggest problem we're likely to encounter in this business of space exploration is impatience from folks who think that if you can get from London to Tokyo in a day, 3 months to Mars is just unreasonable.
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Re:It's not done yet (Score:4, Interesting)
Hey, it took them five tries to get the Babylon project working!
Seriously, though, you have a good point. Is it possible for a society to become so successful that its members lose the ability to do hard things?
I always figured Iraq would be a mess for seven years because that's how long it took to get things straightened out in Germany and Japan after WWII. But now the politicos are calling for a "Run Away!" strategy after four, and have been for two. I'm not a hawk, per se, but live isn't TiVo'ed.
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Occupation of Japan and Germany preserved the power structure, did not facilitate ethnic and sectarian conflict as well as unrestricted religious extremism, and was well tolerated by the occupied populations. Japan's emperor, who had massive de facto authority over his people, supported the American occupants. Germany was immediately ripped and drawn into the immense
Re:It's not done yet (Score:4, Informative)
I'm not sure which events you're thinking of, but I'm thinking of the widespread starvation and the Warewolf insurgency in Germany in 1945 and 1946, the dismantling of German heavy industry which continued into the 50's, the Marshall Plan which ran through '51, and the reconstruction loans and military occupation which followed that through '55 - when Germany was finally stood up on its own and allowed to join NATO.
OK, so we were in there 11 years, not 7 (not counting our bases which are still there today).
In Japan we didn't really do as much to help them until we needed them in 1950 to fight the war in Korea, using Japan as a base of operations, and thereby stimulating the Japanese economy, bringing about the rise of Toyota, for instance.
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The same could be said about space expoloration as well. (i.e. "When space exploration was new it was inspiring.") When you've go a lot of firsts happening ("first in space", "first in orbit", "first on the moon"), it's a lot more exciting than saying "STS-1234567 will expand on what we did in STS-1234560". It's a lot harder to
Re:What's that thing for? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:What's that thing for? (Score:4, Informative)
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Not really. Keeping the ISS running requires two and a half people. The original plan called for a crew of nine, which would mean plenty of science being done as well. If the crew is only two people, guess what?
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I'd say yes
Hey Bob.... (Score:1)
Don't touch that! (Score:3, Funny)
isolated? not likely. (Score:5, Funny)
"I'm afraid I can't let you do that, Dave."
They went ahead and (Score:2)
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Good thing they managed to fix it (Score:1, Funny)
I don't really see why anyone is surprised... (Score:3, Insightful)
Why, even if we look at a best case supposition for the future, the mostly-utopian Star Trek, do you see Scotty, LaForge, or O'Brien cooling their heels all the time? Of course not. They're always replacing this or fixing that or realigning this or repolarizing that and heaven help us if they have to remodulate something. And if they have to do this all the time, it's a wonder NASA has as few problems as they do.
Just remember, a busy engineer is a happy engineer.
LATE Payment Notice (Score:1)