Make Your Own Sputnik 118
An anonymous reader writes "What better way of celebrating the 50th anniversary of Sputnik than by making one of your own. The BBC says that you can build your own Sputnik satellite from stuff lying around the house. The BBC quotes an electronics hobbyist: "Technology now is way ahead of what was available in 1957, and making your own fully functional Sputnik would now be very simple indeed. I wouldn't be surprised if you could build one in a container smaller than a matchbox, weighing about as much as a wristwatch. The components, including a transmitter, battery and the sensors you'd need would probably cost less than 50 pounds [about 100 US dollars]. It really shouldn't be a problem to build and program the whole thing in under a day." Unfortunately, the BBC article doesn't go into technical details." And of course, actually getting it up into orbit might take a little more work.
Oops... (Score:4, Funny)
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Choices (Score:5, Funny)
I say Helicopter. Cooler and Deadlier.
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Now you don't have to decide!
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Maybe I should be careful what I wish for, but come on, crimes need to be made funnier!
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Make a sputnicopter.
No problem (Score:5, Funny)
I know a guy that makes home-made helos' that has the first 7 feet covered - after that...two words: space elevator.
You can build a spaceship from the things you find (Score:4, Funny)
http://www.khaosworks.org/filk/spaceship.html [khaosworks.org]
Now next on my agenda was to find a rocket drive
Strong enough to launch the ship and still keep me alive
I found the right propellant when I scouted out the bars
Six kegs of Old Peculier that will shoot me to the shtars! *hic*
(chorus) Lockheed, Bell and Boeing, MDC and Grumman too
Pratt and Whitney, BAE, they'll keep it all from you
They make big bucks off NASA so they never want it known
That you can build a spaceship from the things you find at home!
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How about going Old School? (Score:5, Interesting)
I do have a line on a bunch of old vaccum tubes that have been in storage for years....
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Entirely feasible (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.arrl.org/tis/info/qrpprojs.html [arrl.org]
It did beep faster/slower as temperatures rose/fell, I think, which you could basically implement using normal temperature variations in off the shelf resistors and capacitors.
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Re:Entirely feasible (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.qsl.net/w5sjz/ntxballoonproject.htm [qsl.net]
http://www.jpaerospace.com/ [jpaerospace.com]
Plus hundreds of other links . . .
oblig. (Score:2, Funny)
Didn't we find out... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Didn't we find out... (Score:5, Insightful)
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OT: your sig (Score:2)
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Appropriately for an OT in a Sputnik story, there's a DRM-free music store called Bleep [bleep.com] too.
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The beauty of Sputnik was its simplicity. And the fact that it was in orbit.
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2) Release (preferably in an upward direction)
Sheesh. Jules Verne already knew that.
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2) Release (preferably in an upward direction)
Sheesh. Jules Verne already knew that.
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Besides imagining a beowulf cluster of those... (Score:4, Interesting)
Can I do it with, say, $10,000 and without getting caught?
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Yes, though you might want to make a few of those sputniks in case of "accidents" [gizmodo.com]
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Sure there is... if you have a Scaled Composites workshop in your backyard and a place to store the volatile chemicals... mind you, range safety become an issue... you'll have to check your neighborhood association charter to make sure you aren't violating any rules, for things like towers, radio antennas, satellite dishes, etc.
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See:
http://the-rocketman.com/CSXT/default.asp [the-rocketman.com]
http://www.ddeville.com/derek/CSXT.htm [ddeville.com]
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If you were to build an underground supercollider ring (which in principle is basically a huge railgun) from scrap parts, using free labour from friends and family, and you could build a payload that would withstand the 10,000 or so Gs during accelleration, then yes, you could do this, and for about $10,000.
If you don't want to get caught, I would recommend doing the launch during the day, so that the bright flash emitted as the payload hits the atmosp
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So my patented idea for a backyard launcher is a biggish hobbyist rocket with some stubby hypersonic Nordweiler wings. Put it on a helium balloon - let it go up some 30 miles. That loses most of the air resistance, and only costs a hundred pounds or so.
One problem with that is that "hobbyish rockets" use atmospheric oxygen as its oxidizer. If you go up 30 miles, you not only lose air resistance, you also lose the air (which includes oxygen). Try lighting that rocket 30 miles up -- you're going to have problems.
Yay! More litter! (Score:2, Insightful)
DISCLAIMER:
No, I have not thought this through.
But, it would be interesting to see -something- done about the problem before the garbage makes extra-terrestrial travel even more dangerous than it already is...
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Perhaps it could change the orbit of each piece of crap - into a decaying orbit?
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All orbits are decaying. Some bits might collide and a few bits of metal or flecks of paint might've reached higher orbits or even escape velocity. But most of it will be slowed by the faint friction from the rarified atmosphere to eventually burn up on reentry.
Basically, all that junk will eventually fall on its own. We just keep sending more junk up.
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Re:Yay! More litter! (Score:5, Funny)
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But, now that you mention it, it could be a precursor to a career in politics... Can I count on your vote?
- Avron
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Re: Magnets (Score:2)
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However, I did get to thinking about this...
What if we put a large vessel into space for the sole purpose of collecting all of the crap - complete with Canada arm and lots of o2 for course corrections. Eventually we get a large orbitting clump of material that we could potentially move somewhere else and re-use. I'm not saying that we could do this today, but one of the gripes that we constantly hear about i
Because Sergei Korolev is no big deal nowdays. (Score:4, Insightful)
Anybody with a public school education can outclass Werner Von Braun or Sergei Korolev with chewing gum and duct tape!
Please.
Re:Because Sergei Korolev is no big deal nowdays. (Score:5, Funny)
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"I Aim for the Stars" (but sometimes hit London).
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This Saturday my buddies and I are sitting there drinking beers and watching the Oregon Ducks and my buddy starts showing us some of her text messages... To best describe her messages they are like listening to a 6 or 7 seven year old reading a book where they constantl
to whomever put the tag "trebuchetforthewin" (Score:1)
Validated! (Score:2)
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You might be interested to know that there has been research in the past [damninteresting.com] (abandoned now AFAIK) into ballistic orbital insertion of satellites. Maybe they should've used a trebuchet....
Getting into Orbit... (Score:4, Interesting)
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Pee Wee (Score:3, Funny)
Looks like Pee Wee finally found a new gig, after that sex scandle and all...
What the hell would you need a fan for? (Score:2, Insightful)
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There is also a balloon for pressure/leak sensing so looks like the intent is for the unit to be sealed.
I would just use a hacked cell phone (cost much less than $100USD) that calls me once an hour or so to give me the temperature etc.
This is ridiculous (Score:3, Insightful)
~Phil
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Most Thermostats are either a bi-coil that moves a mercury switch, or a digital RTD, both which would not survive the conditions in space. The balloon would be nice if the latex didn't change elasticity with temperature...and how are you going to read the pressure differences. And of course off the shelf batteries would boil in the heat of the sun, and freeze on the cold side of the craft.
Sorry but this article is a stupid attempt to show how the cutting e
I may actually give this a try... (Score:2)
The development kit only costs $20. The microcontrollers themselves are only about $1-$2 each, in quantity. Probably wouldn't be "home-brew" enough for the folks at the BBC, though.
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Well, it beats a cup of dirt.
next article (Score:3, Funny)
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You did what to the Dixie Chicks?
Orbit (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, it is probably a crime in most jurisdictions.
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Bert
Who lives in a country where people don't have guns and the police doesn't have rockets
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Reduce the weight of the payload... (Score:1)
Now there's an image to ponder... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd be careful about saying that. While nerds may be in a minority everywhere they are found, in aggregate they are still a numerous and clever breed prone to accepting challenges like that. DJGPP came about because Stallman said it wasn't possible to run gcc under DOS. The thought of hundreds of thousands of sputniks in low earth orbit is scarey.
very nice! (Score:5, Funny)
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I want to do this... (Score:5, Interesting)
Indeed... (Score:3, Informative)
Some MIT hackers did just that. It's beeping instead of transmitting, but ya know =)
http://hacks.mit.edu/Hacks/by_year/2007/sputnik/ [mit.edu]
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Getting it in orbit may not be so hard (Score:2, Informative)
sputnik? no. Launcher? hell yeah. (Score:3, Funny)
but I'd rather make my own DIY "rocket that launched it". Now thats got all the ingredients that makes any self respecting geeks eyes light up!!
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rofl! I wish I could mod you up, but alas I have already posted.....
On getting it into space... (Score:3, Interesting)
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The very first non-government satellite was AMSAT's own OSCAR-1.
The very first secondary payload was OSCAR-1. When other people thought they might be able to hitch a ride in to orbit the way AMSAT did, the Authorities suggested they look at how AMSAT did it.
The free rides in to orbit aren't as plentiful as they once were, but are based on one of two things: either stuff little satellites in to areas of the launch vehicle where "real" satellites won't fit, or take advantage of launch vehicles having exce
Always the details that stops you. (Score:1)
Exchange Rate? (Score:2)
*Dodge*
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Orbit-it-yourself (Score:2)
Electronics vs. Radiation in space (Score:5, Informative)
Oh, that old meme.
Trivia: What is the probability that off-the-shelf microelectronics (like wireless routers) will work in space? Answer: Roughly zero.
Why? Look at the information starting at page 23 on this document: Spacecraft Charging and Hazards to Electronics in Space [nyud.net]:
The radiation sources discussed are hazardous to electronics since energetic particles can deposit energy inside microelectronic circuitry and disrupt their proper operation. Energy deposition in electronics is measured in rads(M) where M is a specific material being considered (1 rad = 100 ergs/gm). Energy deposition can be in the form of ionization or atomic displacements, which can permanently damage electronics, or it can be in the form of single events, which can cause transient or permanent damages depending on the severity of the event.
NASA doesn't ship Xeon processors into space, not because of budget cuts, but because they don't work reliably (if at all) in space.
Well, duh. (Score:2)
It's not like you'd just be duct-taping the componbents together and shooting it into space - that'd be silly.
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That's why you build your Sputnik's outer casing out of two stainless steel pet bowls soldered together. A millimeter or so of steel will knock the incoming radiation way down, and will incidentally shield the insides from electromagnetic fields and solar wind.
Eh? Read the rest of the paper:
Shielding is usually used to reduce the ionization dose. Aluminum shields can effectively attenuate electrons and low-energy protons. However, high-energy protons (> 30 MeV) cannot be shielded.
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I helped write software, for certifying a palm pilot for space use. FYI, it passed, but the DOD killed the project (or so I was told, who knows) near the end (was for the MIR). The biggest deal is that a hit was un-predictable, if I recall it was like a 20% chance of a hit within 3 months, for the size of the palm pilot. The big deal was a hit often turned a component into a conductor (or even a super conductor), so we had to add tight over current pro
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I helped write software, for certifying a palm pilot for space use.
Cool!
FYI, it passed, but the DOD killed the project (or so I was told, who knows) near the end (was for the MIR). The biggest deal is that a hit was un-predictable, if I recall it was like a 20% chance of a hit within 3 months, for the size of the palm pilot.
I thought it happened more often than that, but I guess, like you say, it's not so much that there are lots of failures than that those failures tend to be catastrophic.
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Did it seriously take almost five hours after this story was posted for someone to make a Soviet Russia joke? Come on, slashdotters! Get on the ball!