Astronauts Begin Final Spacewalk To Repair Hubble 94
An anonymous reader writes "Astronauts John Grunsfield and Andrew Feustel began the fifth and final spacewalk of their Hubble Space Telescope repair mission this morning at 8:20AM. During their spacewalk the two will install the second battery group replacement in an equipment bay above the Wide Field Camera 2 and next to the compartment where the first battery set was installed on the second spacewalk. Each of the battery module weighs 460 pounds and contains three batteries. The batteries provide electrical power to support Hubble's operations during the night when there's no sun to power the solar arrays."
The batteries weigh what? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Or you could say "the batteries have a mass of <whatever> kilograms"
Because no one would have a clue WTF the Imperial unit of mass is.
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Um, it's the pound [wikipedia.org]. Doesn't everyone know that? 2.2 lbs to the kilo.
While weight certainly means the force created between two masses due to gravity, it is almost always used interchangeably with mass in practice.
-Peter
Re:The batteries weigh what? (Score:5, Informative)
Um, it's the pound. Doesn't everyone know that? 2.2 lbs to the kilo.
While weight certainly means the force created between two masses due to gravity, it is almost always used interchangeably with mass in practice.
Still messed up. Trying to compare a metric unit of mass to a imperial unit of weight using a conversion factor that only works at roughly sea level on earth.
Metric unit of weight - Newton N
Metric unit of mass - Gram g
Imperial unit of weight - Pound lb (you know, like Pound Sterling being a pound of silver?)
Imperial unit of mass - Slugs
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Did you click the link? No one uses slugs. Pounds are commonly used to express mass as well as force (weight).
Since there is a mass version of the pound, and it is defined in terms of kilos the conversions actually work perfectly in any (or no) gravitational field. (Though the conversion factor is exactly 2.20462262, not 2.2.)
Seriously, click the link.
Don't get me wrong in all of this. I advocate the metric system. But I don't understand the seemingly willful misunderstanding of the modern imperial sys
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modern imperial system
That, sir, is an oxymoron. Like "Military Intelligence" or "Deafening silence" or "clean coal"
The "mass pound" and "weight pound" may be equal at sea level in a certain location or whatever, but probably not equal at any other gravitational potential, which must make for some confusing equations and explanations. Therefore, Why the willful misunderstanding? Because its icky to have the same name for inertial mass and gravitational weight/force.
Thank you Peter for the info. Always a pleasure to converse
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There's no question that it's a kludge.
There's no "may" about it. For the Math to work they can only be equal at exactly 1G. The thing is, we never really use the "weight pound" in practice. I mean, if someone asks you what you weigh do you ask for a reference altitude (or gravitational force)? Absurd.
Put it this weigh (yuk-yuk), if you want to buy a
The U.S. Customary system of units must die! (Score:2)
modern imperial system
That, sir, is an oxymoron.
I put forth a compelling argument for the United States to join the world with the International System of Units [gibibit.com]. Forward this to your friends who still think that ounces (fluid ounce or international avoirdupois ounce? British or U.S. fluid ounce? Apothecary ounce?), pints, and inches are the way to go.
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How many stones [wolframalpha.com] is that?
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Stone is the plural of the unit of weight, stone.
Fourteen. But you knew that.
-Peter
Re:The batteries weigh what? (Score:5, Informative)
Pound-mass or slug, your choice.
Re:The batteries weigh what? (Score:5, Informative)
F=GMmr^-2
=G * Mass of earth * mass of box * (Earth's radius + Hubble orbit height)^-2
=(6.67x10^-11 * 5.9742x10^24 * 208.7) * ((6378 + 559)x10^3)^-2
=1729.20 N
Re:The batteries weigh what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Only true if the HST + shuttle were stationary and balanced on a very tall table rather than being in orbit. As they are actually in free fall, effective gravity is zero and hence the weight is zero too.
(Yes I do understand that gravity is acting on the HST + shuttle to keep it in orbit but there is no force required to support them which is the definition of weight)
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Then what keeps it in orbit? If effective gravity were zero it would fly away in a straight line.
If someone drops a 760 kg machine on your head that machine would weigh absolutely nothing, until it hits your head?
Every time these weight vs. mass discussions a
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They're weightless in an orbiting reference frame, they have weight in an inertial, Earth-fixed reference frame. You don't claim that a person in free-fall off of a building in weightless. In the Vomit Comet-type aircraft, you experience 'weightlessness' because the lack of windows effectively puts you in a free-falling reference frame. However, its all really the same thing and I think most of us here are able to recognize what is meant.
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Re:The batteries weigh what? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:The batteries weigh what? (Score:4, Funny)
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African or European?
I don't know that! (AAAAARRGGHHHHHH!!!)
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According to my back-of-an-envelope calculations, I get their true weight to be 1729N.
F=GMmr^-2
=G * Mass of earth * mass of box * (Earth's radius + Hubble orbit height)^-2
=(6.67x10^-11 * 5.9742x10^24 * 208.7) * ((6378 + 559)x10^3)^-2
=1729.20 N
Ah, but I see you failed to calculate the mass of your envelope...
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And in space the weight of the batteries isn't 460 pounds either.
reminds me of ... (Score:2)
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Seems like it would have been a perfectly valid statement if they added ".... on Earth." to the end of the sentence.
Would you prefer they only talk about the mass of objects in space? (something that wouldn't make sense to the majority of their readers)
Whereas, "460 pounds" makes sense to everyone (well, everyone using the imperial system) even if it's technically incorrect.
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Well, technically the batteries weigh the same while on Earth as they do while orbiting it, they're just falling at the same rate as the shuttle, astronauts and Hubble, so they appear weightless. Are you "weightless" while skydiving?
Re:Proof... (Score:5, Informative)
Technically the batteries have the same mass while on Earth as they do while orbiting it. The weight in orbit is zero. (which is the point the above are making)
See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_versus_weight [wikipedia.org]
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Okay, but you're talking about the lack of the sensation of weight [wikipedia.org].
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You're resisting gravity by moving tangentially at the same rate as you are falling toward the center of the body you're orbiting. So your weight would be the amount of force necessary to maintain your tangential velocity.
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So, in orbit your weight depends on the density of matter around you, and would be zero in a perfect vacuum?
That doesn't sound right.
Also, defining a force perpendicular to gravity as resisting gravity makes little sense.
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Well, technically the batteries weigh the same while on Earth as they do while orbiting it, they're just falling at the same rate as the shuttle, astronauts and Hubble, so they appear weightless. Are you "weightless" while skydiving?
Not exactly. Weight=Mass*Gravity, therefore as gravity decreases weight decreases (assuming the mass of the batteries didn't change).
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Are you "weightless" while skydiving?
Only briefly. Once you hit terminal velocity, there is no longer any sensation of falling (no acceleration). For the vast majority of your dive, you "weigh" the same as you do on the ground. Instead of being held up by the floor or a piece of furniture, you are held up by a (relative to you) fast-moving updraft.
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Fixed that.....
Re:Proof... (Score:4, Insightful)
1. "Science" Journalist studied journalism in journalism school. He writes ok; but his only science credentials involve being able to "rewrite in his own words" NASA press releases.
2. Science Journalist is a perfectly decent dude, and submitted a story with a mass in kilograms value. He was then smacked down by an editor for violating "standards" that require using imperial measures in the US. Since, as everybody knows, a kilogram is 2.2lbs universally, a simple multiplication brought the copy into compliance with correct standards.
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3. Science Journalist knows that any reasonably intelligent person will understand the implied "... on the surface of the Earth" appended to the phrase "weighs X pounds," and really doesn't care about that tiny minority of readers whose chief joy in life is showing off how clever they are by telling everyone, in a breathless OMG-I'm-the-first-person-to-notice-this-EVAR tone, that mass and weight are not the same thing.
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Option 4: They know that pounds are a unit of mass, in addition to weight [wikipedia.org], and are thus actually smarter than the pedants on slashdot.
HA HA JUST KIDDING HOW COULD THAT BE?!
Watch it live (Score:5, Informative)
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I've spent most of this week studying for finals, and this has been great just to leave up in the background instead of music. It's unfortunate from an entertainment stance that this is the final spacewalk, however I do realize just how dangerous that it is to be out there.
Re:Watch it live (on Linux too) (Score:4, Insightful)
If it redirects you to the "no player found" page (as it did for me), try:
mplayer -playlist 'http://playlist.yahoo.com/makeplaylist.dll?id=1369080&segment=149773'
(The original link is http://www.nasa.gov/55644main_NASATV_Windows.asx [nasa.gov], but MPlayer doesn't seem to be able to handle multiple levels of playlists.)
As one who (perhaps from Kubrick's 2001) had a sense of EVA actions being slow, deliberate things, it's neat to see that the work's going practically as smoothly as if it was being done in a lab.
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Not above the WFC2 (Score:5, Informative)
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Oh WFPC2, I will miss your tell-tale chevron superimposed over the sky like a Batsignal. Also, I will miss your useful filter set, so unlike that on WFC3 which treats nebular astronomy as if it were a mere curiosity. Galactic astronomers are such telescope hogs.
If I were still in the biz I would curse thee, WFC3! But, given all of the bad luck HST has had over its lifetime that would just be piling on.
Astronaut helmet cams (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me just say, thanks NASA for the astronaut helmet cams! That footage lets me live out my astronaut fantasies without all the space-induced nausea and military training.
Re:Astronaut helmet cams (Score:5, Funny)
That's the only thing holding you back?
First tweets from space (Score:5, Informative)
http://twitter.com/Astro_Mike [twitter.com]
one of the astronauts is live blogging on twitter from the shuttle
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Hmm, apparently being an astronaut is hard work, but it's also a great experience, and the views can't be beat!
Why even bother writing from space when he could have simply written those generic updates ahead of time? (Perhaps because that approach didn't work out so well [astroengine.com] for the Chinese.)
batting .900 for the mission so far (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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I love NASA TV (Score:4, Interesting)
Every once in a while I hear them count off. I think they are counting seconds they apply a tool, but I haven't been paying close attention.
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They're counting turns on bolts or number of guide-lines still visible as they slot something in.
Or sometimes the amount of O2 they have in their tanks.
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How do I watch NASA TV????
Using firfox on winxp here at work and it keeps redirecting me to a help page.
http://www.nasa.gov/help/multimedia/odplayer.html [nasa.gov]
Apparently it thinks I need to install more plug ins... but I never even get a chance to see the webpage with the video.
Have a stream address I can plug into VLC?
Re:I love NASA TV (Score:4, Informative)
mms://209.73.189.79/bcpenc252181?StreamID=81684353&pl_auth=56e0ca2df8a3b81fa447c77c49dbf0f1&ht=120&pl_b=00CEBE2C2D18A488577820B4444A1179CB&CG_ID=1369080&Segment=149773
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Orbit? (Score:1)
Considering the Hubble's orbit is 96-97 minutes, When exactly would it be night for the hubble? Or do the batteries click on and off every other 45 minutes? That's one heck of a recharge/discharge cycle.
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Yes, when sizing out the power system for a spacecraft you figure out the eclipse period, as well as total power requirements. From there, you can size the solar cells to collect the power needed for a whole orbital period (probably double the power requirements, assuming a 50% eclipse period, which is likely in LEO), and then the battery size, based on the power required and expected eclipse time.
All LEO satellites, except those in sun-synchronous orbits that keep them situated above dusk/dawn all the tim
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Astronaut floating in shuttle "Ahhh they are pretty light up here."
"... but they are massive."
Which is actually pretty close to a real quote from an astronaut from ages back.
Those batteries are not going to be easy to move around, just because they are in freefall.
Really live? (Score:2)
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Fbomb is not prohibited on the Internet.
The Hubble has replaceable batteries (Score:3, Funny)
but the ipod and iphone can not?
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Welcome to modern capitalism in accordance to The Cult Of The Pod People (c)(tm).
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Space Walk (Score:2)
The last space walk is suppose to last 6 hours.
That is incredibly dangerous to be outside for that length of time in such primitive suits.
I wish them good luck however, and pray they return safely.
God speed!!
-Hackus
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I submit all space walks are dangerous, but given the history or death and injury during space walks (ZERO) I don't think you have any valid basis for attacking the suits.
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Wouldn't radiation be a concern?
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I would not call today's suits primitive. Especially compared to the suits used during the Mercury/Apollo era.
Is there still room for improvement? Always. Massive improvements? Maybe not. Barring improvements in fabrics / construction technology.
Why not go the source?? (Score:2)
Why would the OP link is story to some obscure third party blurb site when a direct link to WWW.NASA.GOV would make far more sense.
You could even watch live at the Nasa site:
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/index.html?param=public [nasa.gov]
Great Job! (Score:1)
Insignificant figures (Score:2)
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The really clever thing about this was, they never went to the moon six times, they tried not to go to the moon actually seven times, 'coz one time they failed in their attempt not to go the moon, but luckily the three astronauts survived their attempt at not going to the moon.