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#41
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Trane Francks wrote in message:
snip That was truly a bizarre piece of work. Hi, Trane, What do you expect from Shawn Grant? Didn't you recognize his style?? Dave Jessie |
#42
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In (rec.radio.amateur.space), Al Wilson wrote:
[snip the unimportant stuff, notice nothing remains] "Never go off on tangents, which are lines that intersect a curve at only one point and were discovered by Euclid, who lived in the 6th century, which was an era dominated by the Goths, who lived in what we now know as Poland." - Unknown from Nov. 1998 issue of Infosystems Executive. |
#43
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#44
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![]() Museums are for anything that comes back conveniently. For example, the Viking landers will never make it into the Smithsonian. Never is a LONG time. Who knows 50 years from now it might be recovered and returned for display. alongside snoopy and other long duration artifacts. If bushes plan happens we may have the ability to recover snoopy as part of a asteroid mission. With a new manned launch system additional servicing might be possible. You are promoting two different goals that are practically mutually exclusive. Additional servicing by a new manned launch system would mean that you're extending the life of Hubble beyond the life of the shuttle system. Simply put, Hubble isn't coming back to Earth in one piece without the shuttle. Jeff A cargo shuttle C is presently one possiblity. A new crew vehicle could be used for future service missions. Since we dont know YET what form future vehicles may take its too early to say it cant be returned. A new crew vehicle could be ready before shuttle retirement. In that case a shuttle could be sent to hubble and it loaded for recovery. If there were any imminent safety issuers a new crew capsule could be held on the pad and sent for the crew while the shuttle makes a unmmanned return. NASA is going to try to keep the shuttle around as long as possible. Who believes it will retired exactly on schedule? |
#45
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#46
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I agree with the sediments(sic) expressed here. I also think that a lot of
the suggestions on what to do with Hubble are generated from romantic notions and not by scientific and/or economic realities. One is trying to bring Hubble back to display it in the Smith. This is something that shouldn't be taken from the NASA budget, since the funding WILL come from other projects that need the funding right now. Case in point is that the funding for the Next Generation Space Telescope has been held back, if not cut back, for now, thanks to a tight NASA budget. I know this first hand because I lost a job working for that project because one of the contractors didn't have the funding they were expecting this year. Also, a lot of funding for the two rovers came from other projects that have sinced suffered; some were reorganized or simply cut. Those that want to see their romantic notions realized should raise the funding for it publically and not suggest "NASA do this" or "NASA do that". There's enough things done by NASA for image rather than scientific and technological return that robs programs that do the latter of funding. And those that say NASA isn't about science should be reminded that the images taken by Hubble were, for the most part, science oriented, whether you believe money should have been spent on the science or not, and not just for NASA's public image. -- ---------------------------------------------------------------------- There is a fifth dimension beyond that which is known to Man. It is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, Between Science and superstition And it lies between the pit of Man's fears and the Sunlight of his knowledge. It is the dimension of imagination. It is an area that might be called. . . The Twilight Zone. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- "Al Wilson" wrote in message om... "Bruce Kille" wrote in message ... I have read the extensive thread that my question has started, but I think most of you missed my point. I said once the Hubble was OFFLINE what should we do with it. My idea was to find a way to preserve it in space as a museum piece, since it is not practical to return it to the Smithsonian here on earth. Most of the posts talked about how it could not function at other orbits, etc., which was not my question. Rather than send a drone to de-orbit Hubble why not boost it to a LaGrange point or perhaps Geo-sync orbit, where in its offline state it could be visited in the future... Telescopes were built to look through, not at. The Hubble shouldn't be treated like a Questar. A safe but lame Hubble isn't worth a damn. Some people say putting it in the Smithsonian will be inspirational to the next generation. But we can't do that yet. And even when we do, wouldn't a better inspiration be something that is in space and operational? Spending money on the Hubble to continue ops is good, but spending money on it for museum purposes is a waste, just like buying a Questar scope. Our money would be better spent on a next generation scope like NGST/JWST, like buying an ETX. [snip !] |
#47
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![]() Case in point is that the funding for the Next Generation Space Telescope has been held back, if not cut back, for now, thanks to a tight NASA budget. I know this first hand because Great retire hubble prematurely then lack its replacement because of budget cuts. You realize if Bushes plan fails we will be left with a gutted nasa, little science, a crippled station lacking service vehicles and a future of a manned space shutdown if not a closed nasa./ |
#48
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![]() It's going to be a *long* time after the shuttle is retired before anything recoverable flies with a 15'x60' payload bay. Return of large payloads to earth is one of the capabilities that doesn't make much sense for sustained Could a shuttle C compete with a expendable? Figuring shuttle C would provide heavy lift with retaining the ability of big payloads too and from orbit. |
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#50
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![]() "Andy P. Jung" spam@yourownrisk wrote in message news:Wh%Tb.2227$Yj.625@lakeread02... "Bruce Kille" wrote in message .. . With or without any future service the Hubble will some day go offline. There have been a lot of ideas floating around as to what to do then. I was wondering if it could be possible to boost it to a LaGrange Point, rather than de-orbit it? Is an earth-moon point stable? I know the earth-sun point can be used as the SOHO satellite is there, but it would require a lot more fuel to reach. Apparently, recovery of the Hubble for placement in the Smithsonian is not possible, so I wanted to put an alternative idea out for discussion. Bruce I'd like to see it pointed at Mercury for a very good look just before they ditch it in the Pacific. They're ditching Mercury in the Pacific? Will it fit? -- Andy P. Jung Metairie, Louisiana U.S.A. http://www.JungWorld.com/ To reply via e-mail, please visit my web site. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
NASA Details Risks to Astronauts on Mission to Hubble | Scott M. Kozel | Space Shuttle | 174 | May 14th 04 09:38 PM |
NASA Urged to Reconsider Hubble Decision | Scott M. Kozel | Space Shuttle | 116 | April 2nd 04 07:14 PM |
Don't Desert Hubble | Scott M. Kozel | Space Shuttle | 54 | March 5th 04 04:38 PM |
Hubble Question... | Bruce Kille | Space Shuttle | 67 | February 29th 04 05:30 AM |
The Hubble Space Telescope... | Craig Fink | Space Shuttle | 118 | December 6th 03 04:41 PM |