![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The Americans typically use space shuttles such as the Discovery, Endeavor,
Atlantis as their means of transportation into space. The Russians used space shuttles such as the Soyuz, Vostok and Buran. Since Russia and the United States have such a big lead on China in the race for space, what capabilities do space shuttles like the Discovery & Buran have that the Shenzhou does not? Are the Chinese planning to build an advanced space plan like the Discovery or perhaps the Locheed Martin X11? |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Chris Blair" wrote in message ... The Americans typically use space shuttles such as the Discovery, Endeavor, Atlantis as their means of transportation into space. The Russians used space shuttles such as the Soyuz, Vostok and Buran. Since Russia and the United States have such a big lead on China in the race for space, what capabilities do space shuttles like the Discovery & Buran have that the Shenzhou does not? Are the Chinese planning to build an advanced space plan like the Discovery or perhaps the Locheed Martin X11? Well, they're overly complex, they don't fail gracefully, and their mass fraction stinks. Soyuz/Shenzhou, OTOH, can survive a guidance failure and ballistic descent (assuming Shenzhou can due to its obvious Soyuz commonality). Anything with wings is way too complex for simple LEO ops. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Chris Blair" wrote in message ... The Americans typically use space shuttles such as the Discovery, Endeavor, Atlantis as their means of transportation into space. The Russians used space shuttles such as the Soyuz, Vostok and Buran. Since Russia and the United States have such a big lead on China in the race for space, what capabilities do space shuttles like the Discovery & Buran have that the Shenzhou does not? Are the Chinese planning to build an advanced space plan like the Discovery or perhaps the Locheed Martin X11? Get a clue. Buran doesn't exist, and 90% of the rest of your questions could be answered with some basic web searches. Do your own homework. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'll add something to that: a SHUTTLE has wings.
Vostok/Soyuz/Shenzhou are/were ****ing CAPSULES, you idiot. Get your basic semantics correct, at least! There have been TWO 'shuttles'. One is on life-support, the other is dead and buried... Get a clue. Buran doesn't exist, and 90% of the rest of your questions could be answered with some basic web searches. Do your own homework. -- remove KILLSPAMMERS to reply! Guy's Space Shuttle Payload Bay page: http://www.netspace.net.au/~pargoo/ |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Chris Blair" wrote in message ... The Americans typically use space shuttles such as the Discovery, Endeavor, Atlantis as their means of transportation into space. The Russians used space shuttles such as the Soyuz, Vostok and Buran Those are three separate classes of vehicles. Vostok was a much earlier capsule design that hasn't flown in over three decades. Buran was very much a copy of the US design, but only flew once, unmanned. Soyuz is the current workhorse capsule flown by the Russians. Note each one that flies is a NEW vehicle, not a reuseable one. . Since Russia and the United States have such a big lead on China in the race for space, what capabilities do space shuttles like the Discovery & Buran have that the Shenzhou does not? Are the Chinese planning to build an advanced space plan like the Discovery or perhaps the Locheed Martin X11? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Ned Pike" wrote in
: Well, they're overly complex, they don't fail gracefully, and their mass fraction stinks. Soyuz/Shenzhou, OTOH, can survive a guidance failure and ballistic descent (assuming Shenzhou can due to its obvious Soyuz commonality). I'm curious - since you are obviously an expert on entry guidance, what *does* happen to the US space shuttle if primary guidance fails? grin -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In message
"Greg D. Moore \(Strider\)" wrote: "Chris Blair" wrote in message ... The Americans typically use space shuttles such as the Discovery, Endeavor, Atlantis as their means of transportation into space. The Russians used space shuttles such as the Soyuz, Vostok and Buran Those are three separate classes of vehicles. Vostok was a much earlier capsule design that hasn't flown in over three decades. Not under the Vostok name maybe, but a Foton materials processing satellite went up a year and a day ago and the last Bion was only 7 years ago. Anthony -- | Weather prediction will never be accurate until we | | kill all the butterflies | |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jorge R. Frank" wrote:
"Ned Pike" wrote in : Well, they're overly complex, they don't fail gracefully, and their mass fraction stinks. Soyuz/Shenzhou, OTOH, can survive a guidance failure and ballistic descent (assuming Shenzhou can due to its obvious Soyuz commonality). I'm curious - since you are obviously an expert on entry guidance, what *does* happen to the US space shuttle if primary guidance fails? grin /me Wonders if Ned even sees the chasm yawning before him.... D. -- The STS-107 Columbia Loss FAQ can be found at the following URLs: Text-Only Version: http://www.io.com/~o_m/columbia_loss_faq.html Enhanced HTML Version: http://www.io.com/~o_m/columbia_loss_faq_x.html Corrections, comments, and additions should be e-mailed to , as well as posted to sci.space.history and sci.space.shuttle for discussion. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Derek Lyons" wrote in message
... "Jorge R. Frank" wrote: "Ned Pike" wrote in : /me Wonders if Ned even sees the chasm yawning before him.... Probably not, because I'm no space scientist. I was trying to refer to the recent ISS/Soyuz descent that went ballistic instead of lifted (for lack of a better word or two). I obviously spoke well out of my depth. Sue me. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Ned Pike" wrote in
: "Derek Lyons" wrote in message ... "Jorge R. Frank" wrote: "Ned Pike" wrote in : /me Wonders if Ned even sees the chasm yawning before him.... Probably not, because I'm no space scientist. I was trying to refer to the recent ISS/Soyuz descent that went ballistic instead of lifted (for lack of a better word or two). Right. The primary guidance system failed, so the spacecraft re-entered ballistically and landed safely, just with higher Gs and many km off course. The implication of your post, for any reasonable reader, is that the shuttle could not survive a similar failure. This is incorrect. The shuttle has a backup system called the BFS. If the primary system fails, the crew engages the backup and lands safely, on the same runway, and after pulling the same Gs. The moral of the story is, there's more than one way to engineer fault- tolerance into a system. Soyuz and shuttle use different methods but both are fault-tolerant. -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Clueless pundits (was High-flight rate Medium vs. New Heavy lift launchers) | Rand Simberg | Space Science Misc | 18 | February 14th 04 03:28 AM |
Chinese Space Program and Muslim World | James Oberg | Space Shuttle | 47 | October 22nd 03 08:17 PM |
Unofficial Space Shuttle Launch Guide | Steven S. Pietrobon | Space Shuttle | 0 | September 12th 03 01:37 AM |
Space Wedding | colors | Space Shuttle | 10 | August 12th 03 03:34 PM |
News: Space station`s future hinges on shuttle | Rusty B | Space Shuttle | 3 | August 8th 03 01:34 AM |