NASA Astronaut Talks "Gravity," Spacewalking, ISS 97
Nerval's Lobster writes "The upcoming movie Gravity features a pair of astronauts (George Clooney and Sandra Bullock) stranded in orbit after their space shuttle is destroyed by floating debris. Faced with dwindling oxygen levels, they struggle to reach the nearby International Space Station (ISS). It's a movie, so some deviations from reality are expected, but it also opens up an opportunity to talk with a NASA astronaut about what it's like to live in space. Catherine 'Cady' Coleman, who has spent thousands of hours aboard the Space Shuttle Columbia and the International Space Station, who gave Bullock advice on the role, suggests that the real NASA has the whole orbital-debris issue well in hand, but that it takes a lot of training (and on-the-job experience) to get the hang of living in space. 'When we get up to space and the people up there run around and show us stuff — that's really, really effective and there was nothing like that compared to the classroom.' Despite the physical and mental demands, and the the time spent away from family, she sees the endeavor as supremely worth it. 'We're all very privileged to do this job,' Coleman says. 'They spend a lot of money making you ready, and you have a responsibility to do your job.'"
Won't come close to Apollo 13 (Score:5, Informative)
Ron Howard really set the standard ages ago when they filmed large portions of Apollo 13 in actual zero gravity.
Re:Won't come close to Apollo 13 (Score:4, Informative)
They've got it easier here, they spend most of the movie in their suits in open space. Relatively trivial to do with CGI these days and it's a heck of a lot cheaper than 15 trips on the vomit comet.
Re: (Score:3)
And it'll look only slightly more realistic than The Reluctant Astronaut.
Re: (Score:2)
(I bet Tim Robbins was on his knees begging to get written out early after he realized what shit he was in)
Re: (Score:2)
IDK man, Red Planet wasn't much better with it's alien bugs crawling all over Mars making air that we somehow missed after a ton of observations and probes.
Re: (Score:2)
I think it's a good example of how Hollywood can have a pile of perfect work from experts and then fuck it all up by putting an cocaine fuelled ego in charge.
Re: (Score:2)
I liked Mission To Mars [imdb.com].
Re:Won't come close to Apollo 13 (Score:4, Insightful)
The best thing about the movie Apollo 13 was the attention to every detail; the old cabinet TV with Walter Cronkite, the clothes, the music... As to the movie "Gravity" I submitted this, [slashdot.org] which linked Ms. Ivin's full review of the movie. [time.com] If you see it in the firehose, don't vote it up as it would be a dupe at this point.
Ivin is a self professed sci-fi fan and "one of the original Trekkies".* An engineer and a Trekkie? I'll bet she's lurking here now, probably has a 3 digit UID. A snippet of her review:
She did have a lot of good things to say about it.
If you have a GF this is most likely a movie you can take her to since it's Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.
* Sometimes it's great being a geezer, I got to see TOS when it was brand new and flat screen monitors, "communicators", self-opening doors, etc were just fantasies. A young friend envied me when I described hearing Led Zeppelin for the first time, as John Bonham was dead before he was born.
I live in a science fiction fantasy, except it's all real now. You guys grew up with computers, computers grew up with me. [kuro5hin.org]
You guys will see things even science fiction writers haven't thought of.
Oops... (Score:2)
Different astronaut. Maybe it wouldn't be a dupe?
Re:Won't come close to Apollo 13 (Score:4, Funny)
If you have a GF this is most likely a movie you can take her to since it's Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.
My girlfriend is a rocket scientist, you insensitive clod!
Re: (Score:2)
Women rocket scientists love Sandra Bullock, George Clooney, AND science fiction. You'll get laid for sure!
Re: (Score:2)
On being a geezer and related: oh, yeah; half the stuff we have now from all the sci-fi read starting late Fifties, the rest of it I'm still waiting for. But the perspective, and having lived through all the things that were then brand-freaking-new and now taken so for granted as to be background.... gets a bit weird at times.
Seeing Star Trek when it first aired. Watching Destination Moon (1950) in 1951 when a print made it to the post theater outside of Augsburg. There was a year when I was still an en
Re: (Score:2)
Odd how mind and memory work or don't; how could I have left out something such as Sputnik I in October '57? For that matter, Nautilus' transpolar trip of '58? Not to mention Nautilus herself? So many new things, now faded, occupying various dusty shelves and corners of the brain.
Reminds me a bit of my mother's father, who as a child walked behind a mule plowing fields and watched as automobiles (and tractors!) became common, for whom the airplane of the Wright brothers et al were new and wondrous, and w
Re: (Score:2)
Wow, and I thought I was old! Haven't heard the term "slipstick" in decades; I had one in high school, it made math a breeze. It was 1970 before I saw a calculator (and today's $2 calculator was about $50 back then).
Re: (Score:2)
Shooey, mcgrew, there's likely enuf of us old farts to start our own geezers sittin' and spittin' porch. I was wondering the other day how many still remember "Weekly Reader" - was something like a quarter a year to subscribe, and one got great discounts on books.
I had a number of fine slide rules. One was from Japan, of bamboo, with extra scales; another, gotten at university incorporated titanium for claimed stability. Had an "is-was" and another more general circular one also. Not claiming I ever lea
Re: (Score:2)
I don't think kids today are much different than we were. I was never interested by history when I was a kid, either. I never saw the point; but that was a failure on my teachers' part. I was in college before I saw the value of history, when I took a general studies history class.
Math and science fascinated me from the get-go. I wanted to know how radios and TVs and everything else worked from as far back as I can remember until I learned to read.
I got a slide rule in about the 6th grade; I'd never memoriz
Re: (Score:2)
I did appreciate the linked journal entry.
The discovery I made about boredom didn't come until I was in my early thirties, when I unaccountably got humongously badly depressed (beyond the usual crippling 'normal' depression) by getting completely bored to the point of ennui. Way out for me was an examination of my ignorance. When I was little, knowing so little, my ignorance encompassed the mud puddle of all the things that I could look at and ask the typical three-year old's "why?" As I got older, ignor
Re: (Score:2)
All of my uncles were in WWII, but none of them talked about it. Probably wanted to leave the horror of war in the past; one of them was at Normandy Beach on D-Day, another was wounded when his ship was attacked. My dad was too young, he joined during the Korean war. One grandfather was in WWI and he never talked about that, either.
I remember once when I was really small asking someone, Dad or Grandpa, I don't remember who, some question and he said "I don't know, but it's in a book somewhere. Everything yo
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, none of the people I knew who'd been in combat talked about it, other than to say it was not good, and they were glad to back and then change the subject. I never pushed it. My friends who came back from Vietnam were the same, sometimes a bit more open.
Funny, I got caught a time or two with stuff I wasn't supposed to be able to read also. All I ever got out of it was a talking-to or makework. That's one of the biggest peeves I had, and still do; even with somewhat better student-teacher ratios ava
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
At first glance, however, Gravity appears to err on the side of realism.
There are rumors of a flight from Hubble to the ISS using a backpack thruster unit, so I take that with a big grain of salt.
Re:Won't come close to Apollo 13 (Score:4, Interesting)
Wonder if screwing with the Hubble or other space telescopes would be considered worthwhile to help save two astronauts.
Re: (Score:2)
Astronaut Marsha Ivins disagrees (her review linked above).
Re: (Score:2)
I kindly suggest you watch the movie before denouncing it like that.
There are MINUTE LONG takes going through space stations in zero gravity, have fun trying to cobble that together in a vomit comet.
Re: (Score:2)
Not using CG is generally considered a positive these days. Working around the limitations of filming real things is a major part of the art of film making.
Re: (Score:2)
Are you trying to say that the major part of the art of film making that uses CG these days is positive, or not?
Anyway, I stand by my point. You should watch it before calling it names because you already know you're going to hate the CG in it.
I mean, I could also talk about the acting. If you'll go watch the movie before coming back to this thread, I won't be talking about Academy Awards until January 2014.
Re: (Score:2)
There are MINUTE LONG takes going through space stations in zero gravity, have fun trying to cobble that together in a vomit comet.
IIRC you're weightless for about 3 minutes at a time in the comet. They managed very long weightlessness scenes in Apollo 13.
Re: (Score:2)
I saw this film yesterday and I can say that there is no way you would be able to replicate the space station sets inside the Vomit Comet (or any other flying machine built to date), they are just too big.
Re: (Score:2)
Just paint the comet's walls green like they do when an actor is running from an explosion; those shots are filmed inside a sound stage.
Re: (Score:2)
20-30 seconds is more like it.
http://www.gozerog.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Experience.How_it_Works [gozerog.com]
"For the next 20-30 seconds everything in the plane is weightless."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduced_gravity_aircraft [wikipedia.org]
"giving them about 25 seconds of weightlessness out of 65 seconds of flight in each parabola"
I used "vomit comet zero g time span" as search term in DuckDuckGo and got plenty of good hits. Four of the six I looked at reported "25-30" seconds, the same as one result from NASA; the others may u
Re: (Score:2)
I don't remember where I saw that, but I'll take wikipedia's word for it, it's a lot more reliable than my memory.
That fact makes Apollo 13 even more awesome.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, 3 minutes would be handy, but it'd be one king-hell of a parabola. WikiP was my second hit read, but went to NASA for the clincher. Memory; aw crap, mine's about shot (in fairness it's maybe not so much the librarian's fault, as it's the waning army of file clerks not finding things.)
Re: (Score:2)
Naw, I'm preeeetty sure they were inside an aircraft doing parabolic flight patterns to counter gravity and create simulated weightlessness
Re: (Score:2)
Naw, I'm preeeetty sure they were inside an aircraft doing parabolic flight patterns to counter gravity and create simulated weightlessness ;) The effect is the same, but the cause is very different (gravity is still acting on the plane and it's occupants, which you'd notice quickly if it made a sudden leveling or climb)
In orbit. Just as in parabolic flight gravity is still acting on everyone. It really is pretty much the same. You are falling at the exact rate gravity is pulling on you in parabolic arc flight or in orbit.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Had to work this out... 1 lightyear ~ 1e16 m, 1 solar mass ~ 2e30 kg, acceleration due to gravity = GM / R^2. So acceleration due to sun at 2 lightyears ~ 7e-11 * 2e30 / (2e16)^2 ~ 4e-13 m/s^2 ~ 4e-14 gee. Yep, pretty much unmeasurable.
However, according to Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] the sun is about 30 000 lightyear ~ 3e20 m from the galactic core and is moving at about 240 km/s = 2.4e5 m/s relative to the core, so if we simply assume that's fully tangential, radial acceleration a = v^2 / R ~ 2e-10 m/s^2 ~ 2e-11 gee.
Re: (Score:3)
No, ISS needs thrusters mostly for attitude control (in conjunction with gyros, I believe), although it can manage enough thrust to do some of its own orbital adjustments and for debris-avoidance.
Most boost is done by visiting craft. Whatever the source, boost is used to raise orbit as a counter to air resistance, not to counter gravity.
Free fall is free fall, orbit is orbit - the latter defined as balancing velocity between lowering or raising orbital path. So far as I know, all orbital decay is due to a
Re: (Score:1)
Oh, and "micro-gravity" stems from _all_ mass, not just Earth.
To clarify, according to the Wikipedia page [wikipedia.org], most of the non-zero g forces in a microgravity environment are due to tidal and other "differential" effects. From the figures given, the effects of gravitational attraction between, say, an object and a massive part of a space station (or, I suppose, between a station and docking craft) are less significant in probably most situations.
Re: (Score:2)
No doubt, and I read that as well. The WikiP article is worth looking at, for those interested. I was being an absolutist (mass has the property of gravitational attraction) and hope it didn't come across that I was trying to be a dick-head about it - although I may have failed in that.
There's a lot of stuff that goes into just orbital mechanics - more than I can comfortably even approach, let alone all the extra stuff that's involved in practical terms of maintaining a stable orbit against all the impedi
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Look an Ad! (Score:1)
Hey everyone! It's an ad for a new movie! Pfft.
Nothing like real life (Score:5, Insightful)
In the real world, Shuttles are destroyed by funding cuts.
Re:Nothing like real life (Score:4, Insightful)
Considering that 2 of the 5 shuttles that were in service (Enterprise was never launched) were destroyed taking everyone on board I don't think the premise of the movie is that far off.
Re: (Score:1)
I wonder if this is
**spoiler mebbe**
based on the short story that ends with a kid looking up and saying, "Look, Daddy! A shooting star!" "Make a wish!, Billy!"
Re: (Score:2)
"Make a wish!, Billy!"
No, it is actually based on this true story:
http://www.scribd.com/doc/13743756/Weaseljumper-Part-II [scribd.com]
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
What has the ISS ever done for us? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The problem with rants like this is: for what else would you spend tax dollars?
Considering that the majourity of the ISS funding are not dollars anyway.
Regardless what political/social topic you ever rise, the typical american opinion is: they spend our tax (dollars).
Sorry: that exactly is what taxes and a government is for.
Re: (Score:2)
The problem with rants like this is: for what else would you spend tax dollars?
The OP specifically noted what he'd rather spend the tax money on - space telescopes and probes. I think he has a great point. I'd much rather have the resources devoted to projects like Kepler or Clipper.
The OP wasn't ranting about spending the money on social programs or rebating it back to the public. It's just that the ISS is more about diplomacy than about science and exploration.
Re: (Score:3)
But they are doing science in the ISS. The Vomit Comet just won't do to study how flies fly or plants grow or fish swim in a weightless environment.
I don't believe any science is worthless. What they're studying up there won't pay off short term, but certainly will in the long run.
Re: (Score:3)
The problem with rants like this is that Slashdotters can't seem to detect sarcasm.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The ISS has made zero contribution to anything. It's sole purpose is to waste your tax dollars. The only positive thing to come out of it is that astronauts get to fly up there and float around, which apparently is pretty fun. Nothing useful has been done up there besides trying to get a coke machine to work in orbit and making a pretty cool cover of Space Oddity.
The worst problem with the ISS is its extremely low orbit. The reason for that is the space shuttle which coudn't go any higher. The reason for that is that the military insisted that the shuttle have wings and tailplane, making it heavy and allowing it to land in the continental united states if a problem arose on a classified mission.
So really its the USA that fucked the ISS... I hope the Chinese learn from this mistake.
Re: (Score:1)
The ISS orbits between 180-250 miles above the earth. The shuttle can reach 350-380 miles above the earth, as it did when deploying the Hubble Space Telescope.
Both the Hubble and the Unity Module (1st Shuttle-launched ISS Module carried up by STS-88) are equivalent mass ~25,000 lbs.
So, the ISS is at least 100 miles lower than the what the shuttle has on several occasions achieved, carrying a similar payload mass.
Thus, the reason for the ISS being in a low orbit is not
Are you that lazy? (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_research_on_the_International_Space_Station [wikipedia.org]
Are you really that lazy or do you have some sort of axe to grind but reality is getting in your way?
Re:What has the ISS ever done for us? (Score:4, Informative)
i can has wiki? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Space_Station#Purpose [wikipedia.org]
the basic answer is that they do science experiments.
Re: (Score:2)
i can has wiki? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Space_Station#Purpose [wikipedia.org]
the basic answer is that they do science experiments.
But that's a pretty vague list. It's more of a list of fields of research then actual outcomes. Of the few things where outcomes are listed (e.g. dark matter) it's not obvious why a manned station is needed to conduct the work.
Re:What has the ISS ever done for us? (Score:4, Informative)
If nothing else, it has given us a basic understanding of life in space. If we ever want to send manned missions to Mars or beyond, there will likely be a pit-stop at L2 [wikipedia.org]
There's plenty to be learned about human physiology (and plants) in a zero-g environment, before we move on to bigger challenges.
Been there.. (Score:3)
From TFA: When we get up to space and the people up there run around and show us stuff â" that's really, really effective and there was nothing like that compared to the classroom.
Sounds like when I reported to my submarine... the real thing was very different from the neat lines on the diagrams and open spaces in the simulators and trainers. (And the willies that I got the first time we dove...)
Reach the "nearby" ISS? From Hubble? Uh, No. (Score:5, Informative)
they struggle to reach the nearby International Space Station (ISS)
In this NY Times review, Astronaut and a Writer at the Movies [nytimes.com], Dennis Overbye and astronaut Michael J. Massimino watched and discussed the movie together... "There is a hole in the plot: a gaping orbital impossibility big enough to drive the Starship Enterprise through."
Plot *SPOILER* or orbital physics lesson, take your pick:
... Michael J. Massimino, who flew missions in 2002 and 2009 to service the Hubble Space Telescope — the same telescope the astronauts in “Gravity” were sent to repair. ... there is a hole in the plot: a gaping orbital impossibility big enough to drive the Starship Enterprise through.
After they stop tumbling and find the shuttle destroyed and their colleagues all dead, Mr. Clooney tells Ms. Bullock that their only hope for rescue is to use his jetpack to travel to the space station, seen as a glowing light over the horizon. “It’s a long hike, but we can make it,” he says.
To have the movie astronauts Matt Kowalski (Mr. Clooney) and Ryan Stone (Ms. Bullock) zip over to the space station would be like having a pirate tossed overboard in the Caribbean swim to London.
Re: (Score:3)
They pay for plenty of qualified scientific advisers and then they ignore all of the advice.
Re: (Score:1)
To be honest, they hardly needed the Hubble in that movie. They could just have done some standard satellite maintenance, like the Shuttle occasionally does, or did anyway. Not like it makes any sense that a real doctor was fixing sciency bits on the Hubble that furthered any medical purposes, either. "We can now spot AIDS with a telescope that's pointing away from Earth!"
I figure they just put the Hubble in for the audience. I guess real astronauts were only a small part of the target audience.
Re: (Score:3)
An ideal intercept, while impossible on the 25m/s delta v of the old MMU, only actually needs 39m/s. Given a lighter weight, higher ISP advanced MMU and the initial disaster having lobbed them in generally the right direction. What isn't plausible, if they manage an intercept, is them doing anything more than destroying the ISS, continuing the Kessler Syndrome (it's another 39m/s to circularize and don't get me started on matching inclinations).
Re:Reach the "nearby" ISS? From Hubble? Uh, No. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
That sounds like Airplane II: The Sequel. In that case I think it's ok that some scientific realism was sacrificed.
Plausible slightly different universe (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes it's impossible in our space program but the F in SF doesn't stand for Fact.
From the article I linked:
It wouldn’t matter so much had the producers not set such a high bar for themselves with their splendid re-creations of small things: the fogging helmets, the space tools. Violations of the known laws of physics happen in practically every frame of a “Star Wars” or “Star Trek” movie, and we don’t care because we don’t expect anything better.
But this is the way it goes in the movies. They will hire art historians to make sure the curtains in Einstein’s house look right — it’s a visual medium, after all — but at some point, as the science fiction director David Twohy said during a talk on movies and science, science gives way to the story.
Still, I wish they wouldn’t always cheat on the physics.
You might want to watch Europa Report [wikipedia.org] for something that "puts the science back into science fiction" - quoting a Rotten Tomatoes critic.
In space, no one can hear you laugh maniacally. (Score:3, Funny)
"Faced with dwindling oxygen levels, they struggle to reach the nearby International Space Station (ISS)." - Mua haha ha! And thus will be the demise of the fragile organics. Your puny frames are too expensive to truly make space your home. Your envy of the machines is already causing some among you to desire they be transformed into us. Your warm wet brain isn't suited to the cold calculations required of a truly space faring race.
Breathing is a design flaw.
Re: (Score:2)
This one never gets old
http://www.mit.edu/people/dpolicar/writing/prose/text/thinkingMeat.html [mit.edu]
Thanks for the spoilers, DOOFI (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Enough warning.