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SS1 success reported widely



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 4th 04, 06:31 PM
dave schneider
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Default SS1 success reported widely

In addition to the usual outlets (Yahoo, etc), the appearent success
of this morning's flight even made it to the Peter Tilden Morning Show
on KZLA. The "Five Things You Need To Know to Be Smarter Then Your
Friends" segment features 5 selections from the wire service, and
today they lead off with the SS1 story, including a paraphrase of
X-Prize officials saying that "it looks like they did it".

Is the early morning time of the trials just because Rutan can't
sleep, or is there a technical reason, such as atmospheric density?
Or are they just making the launch window as big as possible, and
haven't had any delays at this point?

/dps

(almost posted with the subject line saying "retorted widely", which
may be a Freudian reference to celebrating with champagne)

  #5  
Old October 5th 04, 01:48 AM
Peter Stickney
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In article ,
(dave schneider) writes:
In addition to the usual outlets (Yahoo, etc), the appearent success
of this morning's flight even made it to the Peter Tilden Morning Show
on KZLA. The "Five Things You Need To Know to Be Smarter Then Your
Friends" segment features 5 selections from the wire service, and
today they lead off with the SS1 story, including a paraphrase of
X-Prize officials saying that "it looks like they did it".

Is the early morning time of the trials just because Rutan can't
sleep, or is there a technical reason, such as atmospheric density?
Or are they just making the launch window as big as possible, and
haven't had any delays at this point?


Things are a lot smoother, at lower altitudes, in the early morning
and late evening. Most of the air motion that gets felt as turbulence
come from convection heating of various parts of the surface (The
darker stuff heats up more than the light stuff - warm air rises, &
cooler air from the lighter surroundings rushes in, & so forth & so
on) With a light unpowered critter like SS1, that could make quite a
difference.
It might also affect the performance of White Knight (The carrier
airplane) While the temperature above the Tropopause is stable, and
things are pretty smooth, modulo the occasional standing wave, which
can reach higher than 70,000', the height of the Tropopause can vary,
somewhat, due to local conditions. In general, a cooler & lower
Tropopause is better for a jet airplane's performance, but that
depends on what you're trying to do.


--
Pete Stickney
A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many
bad measures. -- Daniel Webster

  #6  
Old October 5th 04, 01:40 PM
Bruce Hoult
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Default

In article ,
Mary Shafer wrote:

Turbulence and density altitude. Mostly turbulence. We try to fly
everything early in the desert in the summer.


Except sailplanes :-) We wait for the heat and "turbulence" of the day.

Some pics I took from a sailplane overhead Mojave Spaceport when I
visited the USA for the June SS1 flight:

http://www.hoult.org/bruce/MojaveJun...ges/Image15.ht
ml

--
Bruce | 41.1670S | \ spoken | -+-
Hoult | 174.8263E | /\ here. | ----------O----------

  #7  
Old October 5th 04, 01:58 PM
Tony Rusi
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That's the most likely time for low wind conditions. It can get very
windy in the afternoon.


It was not very windy today at all there. Ansari just said on CNN that
she and her husband will be two of the first ten passengers on space
ship one.

 




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