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Big plans from the Persians:
http://www.reuters.com/article/world...13323720080821 (cut to scene of Ahmadinejad whipping the launchpad that the failed satellite booster ascended from.) Two words: Spartan Spacemen. Get going, Greece. Return with that heatshield, or on it. :-) Pat |
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On Aug 22, 4:34*pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
Big plans from the Persians:http://www.reuters.com/article/world...13323720080821 (cut to scene of Ahmadinejad whipping the launchpad that the failed satellite booster ascended from.) Two words: Spartan Spacemen. Get going, Greece. Return with that heatshield, or on it. :-) Pat How can they stand it when there were already Pigs in Space? |
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"Pat Flannery" wrote in message
dakotatelephone... Big plans from the Persians: http://www.reuters.com/article/world...13323720080821 (cut to scene of Ahmadinejad whipping the launchpad that the failed satellite booster ascended from.) Two words: Spartan Spacemen. Get going, Greece. Return with that heatshield, or on it. :-) Pat Has April Fool's Day come around already? What a load of bull. |
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"Alan Erskine" wrote in news:GmGrk.30503
: "Pat Flannery" wrote in message dakotatelephone... Big plans from the Persians: http://www.reuters.com/article/world...13323720080821 (cut to scene of Ahmadinejad whipping the launchpad that the failed satellite booster ascended from.) Two words: Spartan Spacemen. Get going, Greece. Return with that heatshield, or on it. :-) Pat Has April Fool's Day come around already? What a load of bull. Given the incoherency of Iranian news reporting on almost any subject, I'd have to agree. The only possibility of an Iranian astronaut is as a passenger in a Russian Soyuz. --Damon |
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![]() Alan Erskine wrote: Has April Fool's Day come around already? What a load of bull. Beware infidel, for in Iran the bulls have wings: http://persianempire.info/angro2.jpg Pat |
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![]() Damon Hill wrote: Given the incoherency of Iranian news reporting on almost any subject, I'd have to agree. The only possibility of an Iranian astronaut is as a passenger in a Russian Soyuz. If this is actually the base of their satellite booster, it's smaller than a Jupiter C: http://a.abcnews.com/images/Internat..._080818_mn.jpg "A Saturday Aug. 16, 2008 photo taken at an undisclosed location in Iran which the Fars News Agency claim shows Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, second right, looking at an Iranian satellite launching vehicle. Iran has test launched a rocket it plans to use to carry a research satellite into orbit, state television reported Sunday. Saturday's test of the two-stage rocket, called the Safir-e Omid, or Ambassador of Peace, was successful, state TV said, broadcasting images of the nighttime launch. The rocket released equipment that beamed flight data back to ground control, said Reza Taghipoor, the head of Iran's Space Agency, in a live television interview." Pat |
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Damon Hill wrote:
"Alan Erskine" wrote in news:GmGrk.30503 : "Pat Flannery" wrote in message thdakotatelephone... Big plans from the Persians: http://www.reuters.com/article/world...13323720080821 (cut to scene of Ahmadinejad whipping the launchpad that the failed satellite booster ascended from.) Two words: Spartan Spacemen. Get going, Greece. Return with that heatshield, or on it. :-) Pat Has April Fool's Day come around already? What a load of bull. Given the incoherency of Iranian news reporting on almost any subject, I'd have to agree. The only possibility of an Iranian astronaut is as a passenger in a Russian Soyuz. Why would they not be able to launch an astronaut in ten years. They don't have the technology now, but I see no reason why they wouldn't be able to develop the technology in a decade. It is not as if they were an uneducated population, they have many bright engineers. Alain Fournier |
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Alain Fournier wrote in
: Damon Hill wrote: Given the incoherency of Iranian news reporting on almost any subject, I'd have to agree. The only possibility of an Iranian astronaut is as a passenger in a Russian Soyuz. Why would they not be able to launch an astronaut in ten years. They don't have the technology now, but I see no reason why they wouldn't be able to develop the technology in a decade. It is not as if they were an uneducated population, they have many bright engineers. I don't see the remotest possibility of Iran being capable of manned spaceflight in this half of the century on their own resources. Even this rather small and relatively primitive launch vehicle is mostly based on foreign technology, to say nothing of creating any sort of manned spacecraft. I doubt Iran would want to divert the funds and resources to such a questionable project. But I don't doubt that they badly want a capable ICBM force--probably the real goal. The rest is just propoganda to impress their immediate neighbors. --Damon |
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Damon Hill wrote:
Alain Fournier wrote in : Damon Hill wrote: Given the incoherency of Iranian news reporting on almost any subject, I'd have to agree. The only possibility of an Iranian astronaut is as a passenger in a Russian Soyuz. Why would they not be able to launch an astronaut in ten years. They don't have the technology now, but I see no reason why they wouldn't be able to develop the technology in a decade. It is not as if they were an uneducated population, they have many bright engineers. I don't see the remotest possibility of Iran being capable of manned spaceflight in this half of the century on their own resources. Even this rather small and relatively primitive launch vehicle is mostly based on foreign technology, to say nothing of creating any sort of manned spacecraft. I doubt Iran would want to divert the funds and resources to such a questionable project. It isn't such an enormous task that it would drain the resources of the country. They are not very far from being capable of launching a satellite. All they need to do is solve the problems with their current launcher, scale it up a little, and build a capsule to get their astronauts back. That capsule can be very crude, they aren't going to the moon or anything they just said they would get an astronaut in orbit. If they just go twice around they don't need much life support. All they need is a small retro rocket to initiate de-orbit and a heat shield. They can have their astronaut open the hatch at 3 km, come down on parachutes and let the capsule crash. They have much more engineers available than SpaceX to do so. If they want to do it they can. As far as I know it is just the president of Iran that has said he wanted to put an astronaut in orbit, he is not a dictator with total power, I don't know if other relevant politicians in Iran support him on this. Also, over a period of ten years many things can happen, some other country might decide to drop bombs on them. But if they do really want to go to space, and nothing catastrophic happens to them, I see no reason why they couldn't. Alain Fournier |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
....Could the Iranians be Duping the US? | jonathan | Policy | 39 | April 30th 06 04:57 PM |