Space Junk Forced Astronauts Into ISS Escape Capsules 87
According to a story from CNN, "A piece of a debris from a Russian Cosmos satellite passed close enough to the International Space Station on Saturday that its crew was ordered into escape capsules as a precaution, NASA said.
The six crew members were told to take shelter late Friday in their Soyuz capsules after it was determined there was a small possibility the debris could hit the station, the U.S. space agency said in a statement." This isn't the first time it's happened, either. The escape capsules (actually, they're Soyuz spacecraft) must be nice to have on hand, but I'd hate to have to test their efficacy.
Has the ISS become sentient yet? (Score:2, Offtopic)
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On out of date IBM (yes IBM, not Lenovo) Think Pads? I think not.
(I think there may be a couple of Lenovos up there now, but still not the bulk)
Re:Has the ISS become sentient yet? (Score:4, Funny)
Macintosh saves the world.
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Grand slam!
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How Jurassic Park should have ending.
Hey this is Unix I know this.
Login: root
Password:
ummm Password?
Invalid Password.
Login: root
Password:
Crap well we need to find an other way as the system administrator has gotten eaten alive and we don't know the systems password. Lets see if we can find the emergency boot disk... 1/2 hour later. Hey we found it. Ok this is a Cray Super Computer. Lets try to find the Drive. Opening random panels o
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Macintosh saves the world.
...despite his mouse being abused as a microphone.
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I love IBM era Thinkpads (and *nix loves them, too, which makes them all the more useful to me). Such amazing machines in form and function. I'm an Apple fan now, through and through, but those are the only laptops on the PC side of the great divide that I'd ever consider using. The Lenovo stuff is pretty junky, but when IBM still had their mark on them they were sublime.
For their purpose, they'll probably still be useful for another 10 years. Space programs use a surprisingly little amount of CPU power.
Re:Has the ISS become sentient yet? (Score:5, Informative)
We actually have custom built Think Pads that are soldered to/the equivalent to IPC Level 3 cert, they aren't off the shelf even though they're quite similar to off the shelf ones - more like "extra carefully manufactured" versions. For training in the simulators they have IPC Level 2 cert laptops (basically off the shelf versions) with stickers on them that say they are only for training and not for orbital use.
What's really interesting is our custom built printers, they look a lot like off the shelf models but with a unique color variant and twist lock USB cables that are built to the same standard as the rest of the hermetically sealed round connectors on the station. Even though I haven't really messed with the printers too much (I'm usually ops side but recently cross trained over at the simulation facility) I'm sure there's something in there to make sure the ink droplets don't float off. I recently had to make a bunch of custom VGA cables that used the same connectors for the simulator.
Sit back, think of the basics of how most everything works in the computer industry, then replace nearly every cable with a round hermetically sealed twist lock version then you've got an idea of how the station operates. (thankfully not Ethernet cables)
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They have thinkpads? For maximum safety they should have just got behind one of them.
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Even though I haven't really messed with the printers too much (I'm usually ops side but recently cross trained over at the simulation facility) I'm sure there's something in there to make sure the ink droplets don't float off. I recently had to make a bunch of custom VGA cables that used the same connectors for the simulator.
I officially want to switch employers now. Sounds like an uber cool job, man!
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I don't know much about it. I do know they very rarely use the one in the simulator and I think the use the real one about as much, but I'm not really certain.
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Hey! I can answer a bit about this.
My last job was at Epson, and around 1998, we made a special Epson Stylus Color 800 inkjet printer for use on the Shuttle. It went up on STS-95, which was the same mission John Glenn went up in. It (or perhaps a clone of it) now sits in the Epson America HQ lobby.
Anyway, I can confirm that other than a special black plastic case, which included plastic "cages" for both feeding paper in and taking paper out (it kept the sheets from floating away), a special latch for the US
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The simpler the technology, the less it breaks.
In the Apollo program, they had slide rules. Which continue to work even if the cabin is depressurized.
And Voyager 1 and 2 are still alive, not despite their simplicity, but because of it.
If I were to design a space craft where my life or welfare depended on the operation of the computers, I sure as hell wouldn't choose anything on the shelves today. Not only would I want components that meets the 883 standard and can withstand radiation bursts, and a fab pro
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The simpler the technology, the less it breaks.
In the Apollo program, they had slide rules. Which continue to work even if the cabin is depressurized and the crew has not depressurized
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Astronauts only depressurize after taco night.
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The old socket 8 Pentium Pro has got to be the most hearty processor built in the past 15 years or so. Setup correctly those things didn't crash for anything. I actually had an ultra rare Socket 8 Pentium II that was meant to upgrade those systems. All the stability only the blazing fast 333 Mhz speed!
Actually I'm impressed with modern stability.
The best things to happen to computers in a long time is the reduction in chipset offerings. No longer do we have to decide between a dozen concurrent chip sets
analysis showed a slight possibility of hitting (Score:1)
"The debris was predicted to pass about 23 kilometers (14.2 miles) from the space station, NASA said."
Sooo, 14 miles and CDR Riker yells "red alert!"
Re:analysis showed a slight possibility of hitting (Score:5, Insightful)
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i mean it's big. Really big. So big you could... never mind.
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"The debris was predicted to pass about 23 kilometers (14.2 miles) from the space station, NASA said."
Sooo, 14 miles and CDR Riker yells "red alert!"
Ah, in the vast chasm that is outer space, 14.2 miles is officially known as "splitting-hair" close.
Re:analysis showed a slight possibility of hitting (Score:5, Insightful)
"The debris was predicted to pass about 23 kilometers (14.2 miles) from the space station, NASA said."
Sooo, 14 miles and CDR Riker yells "red alert!"
The key word is "predicted". When something will pass within 14 miles of your location, give or take 20 miles...
Awesome (Score:1)
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Even so, if you'd pay attention, you'd notice outside the Soyuz there's a Space Indian looking at the debris and shedding a single tear. Littering has got stop.
Test the efficacy? (Score:5, Informative)
You are kidding right? They ARE going to test their efficacy, that's how they get back down.
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Thank you! I was going to post it if noone else had. Soyuz are the only way to get up to ISS and back down right now.
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Are we swapping them out between missions though? If the Soyuz has been sitting up there since construction began (at least for one of the emergency capsules) I might be a bit wary of it myself - unlike something thoroughly vetted a month or so ago at most its been up in space for a significant period of time at this point.
Re:Test the efficacy? (Score:4, Informative)
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Man, I need to make some friends who aren't bank robbers.
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Heh, I meant "as escape vehicles per se," to leave a wounded ISS. That would be ... stressful.
timothy
silly commentary indeed... (Score:4, Insightful)
The escape capsules (actually, they're Soyuz spacecraft) must be nice to have on hand, but I'd hate to have to test their efficacy.
You mean you don't want to come home at the end of the mission?
Re:silly commentary indeed... (Score:5, Informative)
Indeed. You'd think a slashdot editor would be up on his ISS knowledge! :) The escape capsules are definitely tested and found efficacious every few months or so when the crew is rotated. In fact they cannot stay at the space station for more than 6 months or so. That was the whole reason they were thinking of abandoning the station back when Soyuz was grounded last year. That and the fact they didn't want to land the soyuz escape capsules in the dead of winter.
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Indeed, one of the bigger facepalm moments of /..
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Maybe they like it up there.
-- Your signature is not the place to complain about the quality of moderation on /.
Klingon-built (Score:1)
Good thing it's not Klingon-built.
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I always had a problem with that analogy, because of course the Federation no longer used money in any form. Is the US still the US when its a non-monetary, communist-like state?
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I think that was one of the more optimistic aspects of the Trekverse, that people would be inspired to continue to work in order to be part of a great undertaking or for other intrinsic motivations. (I nearly said "greater enterprise" there but my shame module kicked in at the last minute.)
Not everybody might, but in all the population of the galaxy, you figure that even if fifteen percent of the population is interested in making discoveries, improving things, perpetuating making things by hand for the
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The Economic Fantasy of “Star Trek” http://www.thefreemanonline.org/featured/the-economic-fantasy-of-quotstar-trekquot/ [thefreemanonline.org]
“He believed that by the 23rd century, mankind would have evolved past the need for money.”
The problem with Roddenberry is that he never understood what money is, a unit of measure and a medium of exchange. Humans can't get rid of mone
And what if .... (Score:4, Interesting)
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This makes no sense, either it's hit or it isn't. That's a 50% chance.
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Re:And what if .... (Score:5, Funny)
The debris hits the Soyuz and not the main station?
If that happens, then the voice from Unreal Tournament comes on the station's PA and announces: "HEADSHOT!".
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"MULTIKILL"
Need the dragon (Score:4, Interesting)
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Seriously, one of the hidden issues on the ISS is that the crews are split
'
Good info. I don't believe this would stop the crew up there from investigating, trying to
find and investigating again some way to save the other half. I'm guessing, but if I were up
there, saving these friends of mine would be a priority. Up there, I suppose, my wishes
might be like dust.
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The thinking is if something catastrophic happened in the middle of the station that prevented the crew from moving over to the Soyuz, it would be enough to doom the whole station.
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Even with a craft docked to every module, they probably wouldn't stop having the crew shelter in docked vessel(s) capable of crew-return.
If you have the crew in arbitrary locations, then damage could isolate the crew from their lifeboats. If you require the crew to be adjacent to their lifeboat, damage to that module is still a large hazard, since you have to evacuate it post-failure. By sheltering in the lifeboats themselves, they become the only critical target - damage to anywhere aside from the Soyuz
Would Lockheed's Orion be any use? (Score:1)
"Features the development of a new crew exploration vehicle (CEV), the completion of the International Space Station (ISS), and an early retirement of the shuttle orbiter. Orbiter retirement would be made as soon as the ISS U.S. Core is completed (perhaps only 6 or 7 flights) and the smallest number of additional flights necessary to satisfy our international partners
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The dragon seats 7, has already done its test flights, in orbit of 1-2 years, and costs less than 100 million to BUILD AND LAUNCH.
Any reason why you want a compromised craft that will not be ready until private space is actually flying regular human flights for 2-5x the costs?
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Actually Congress IS funding manned flights that will cost a LOT more than 450 mil on SLS/Orion.
In fact NASA requested more funding for commercial crew recently and less for SLS/Orion and Congress did NOT like that.
http://commerce.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?p=Hearings&ContentRecord_id=a2593bd3-8859-4e7d-869d-7e670a654664&ContentType_id=14f995b9-dfa5-407a-9d35-56cc7152a7ed&Group_id=b06c39af-e033-4cba-9221-de668ca1978a [senate.gov]
Love to test efficacy (Score:2)
Give me a Soyuz capsule, or give me an eternity in this gravity well.
Soyuz capsules... (Score:1)
The "efficacy" of Soyuz vehicles, you say? Care to compare the number of astronauts killed on Space Shuttles vs. the number of cosmonauts killed on Soyuz?
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There are several different Soyuz variations which have different characteristics, we are in the fourth generation which has three separate designs (two in current service, one retired), however no Soyuz ever been in service has been able to support more than 3 crew (some models had a maximum of 2). Crew in the Soyuz caps
Andre Kuipers blog article about this event (Score:1)
Translated by Google: http://translate.google.com/translate?sl=nl&tl=en&js=n&prev=_t&hl=nl&ie=UTF-8&layout=2&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fblogs.esa.int%2Fandre-kuipers%2F2012%2F03%2F24%2Fevacueren-naar-mijn-sojoez-vanwege-ruimtepuin%2F%3Flang%3Dnl&act=url [google.com]
Silly post (Score:2)
"Crap on a cracker...!" (Score:1)
I'm glad they're okay, of course... but I can't help but think how interesting it'd be if, for one moment in my life, I get to yell, "LOOK OUT, RUSSIAN SATELLITE FRAGMENTS ARE HEADING STRAIGHT FOR US!!" Kinda like the drummer in Jackie Chan's 'Rumble In The Bronx' getting to panic and yell, "HOVERCRAFT!!" in order to clear the area before disaster struck.
Precious scrap metal in orbit; (Score:1)
You are testing one right now (Score:2)
The Earth our giant Soyuz capsule.
When something wrong eventually happens (Score:2)
Mankind will collectively decide to Soccer Mom the whole project and abandon manned spaceflight forever.
I was an astronaut... (Score:2)
Then I took a space arrow to the knee.
Thanks, Title! Thought it actually hit the ISS. (Score:1)