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Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service
the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom |
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Mark Folsom wrote:
Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Time to replace the current administration! |
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On a sunny day (Sat, 17 Jan 2004 07:07:01 GMT) it happened Sam Wormley
wrote in : Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Time to replace the current administration! Honest, I agree with Sam on this subject. |
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"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message
... On a sunny day (Sat, 17 Jan 2004 07:07:01 GMT) it happened Sam Wormley wrote in : Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Time to replace the current administration! Honest, I agree with Sam on this subject. Well it's been long since time, for a lot of reasons--but the sheep are unlikely to do it. Mark Folsom |
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In article ,
Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Sat, 17 Jan 2004 07:07:01 GMT) it happened Sam Wormley wrote in : Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Time to replace the current administration! Honest, I agree with Sam on this subject. Sigh! NASA has been under all kinds of administrations and still is screwing up. There's another thread going somewhere else where the comment is that one of the problems is that it's a civilian government org rather than military. [gasping emoticon replacing bell-bottomed jeans]. I've just read Tip O'Neill's auto-bio. It appears that the old-style political machines upgraded themselves from dealing with individual pork to production line pork without quality control. /BAH Subtract a hundred and four for e-mail. |
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![]() db wrote: NASA was once doing ok. It got progressivly worse as the US government became ever more right-wing since the late 60's/early 70's, while NASA's budget was cut again and again. Once it became clear that the late and unlamented Soviet Union was not going to be able to establish a Moon base, from which they could throw rocks at us, the manned program was defunded. What defense function is there in sending men to the Moon? Once NASA was defunded, the brighter bulbs that worked for NASA moved on to greener pastures. The left mediocrities, deadwood, and managerial parasites. The quality of NASA's work reflects this migration of technical talent away from NASA. If excellence is required, then excellence must be paid for. Bob Kolker |
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Mark Folsom wrote:
Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Do you really think NASA made that decision all by themselves? It is at the request of mr Bush, he wants NASA to focus on going to the moon and mars. db |
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![]() "db" wrote in message ... Mark Folsom wrote: Just read in the NYT that NASA will not fly the scheduled mission to service the Hubble telescope. The one thing they've done with the Shuttle that was worth doing, and now they've chickened out. What a bunch of turkeys!! Mark Folsom Do you really think NASA made that decision all by themselves? It is at the request of mr Bush, he wants NASA to focus on going to the moon and mars. db I recall reading that Hubble is approaching the end of it's service life, and that there are other projects in the wings. If that's the case, sounds like the decision is part of a standard risks/rewards analysis. Maybe someone who has more direct knowledge the could share? Considering NASA's concerns for shuttle reliability it would make sense that they would pick and choose what they signed up for. I don't think it was a simple decision. O' |
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![]() "OhBrother" wrote in message ... I recall reading that Hubble is approaching the end of it's service life, No. Not by a long shot. It has yet to even reach its fullest potential. It has not yet reached the prime of its life. All the components to accomplish that have already been built and are waiting in a clean room for delivery. They cost millions to produce, are the best of their kind ever made, and are not usable on any other telescope. Millions ****ed away. The Hubble Space Telescope is the most productive telescope in history and it was about to get 10 times more productive. O'Keefe has shown the blindest "vision" in history. and that there are other projects in the wings. 1. The year 2014 is not what I would call "in the wings". That is when Hubble's "successor" (the NGST) is supposed to launch. What sane person would throw away a car a decade before he or she plans on buying a new one to replace it? Besides, the NGST doesn't even replace Hubble. It will only do 1/4 of what Hubble can do. It is limited to the infrared. Hubble spans from the infrared to the ultraviolet. The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (which is one of the multi-million dollar new components already finished and bagged up ready to go) is predominantly an ultraviolet spectrograph and will not be duplicated in any planned spacecraft and cannot be used on the ground due to atmospheric absorbtion. Millions wasted. Who knows what great science would have come out of it.... The WFPC 3 was to be the next workhorse camera with a throughput 10 times greater than the WFPC 2. The best was, by far, yet to come. If that's the case, sounds like the decision is part of a standard risks/rewards analysis. It isn't. My understanding was that it was not a consensus decision. It was a unilateral decision on the part of NASA's Director based on his bean-counter interpretation of Bush's "vision". Kill first. Promises of pie-in-the-sky sometime far enough in the future so that they won't be in power anymore when the promises aren't kept. It a chicken **** LACK of vision and balls on the part of O'Keefe. He would have no problem whatsoever with finding astronauts willing to take the risk. Or civilian volunteers, for that matter. Considering NASA's concerns for shuttle reliability it would make sense that they would pick and choose what they signed up for. I don't think it was a simple decision. No. Instead it was a stupid, ugly, short-sighted decision. |
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