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The December 2003 National Geographic contains two excellent articles
pertinent to these newsgroups. The first article takes a retrospective look at the first one hundred years of flight and then looks forward to the possibilities looming in the next one hundred years. An abbreviated version, sans most of the hard copy published photographs can be found he http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/...re1/index.html The above article mentions the Columbia accident in regard to hypersonic travel and the future of commercial flights taking tourists to the edge of space at speeds of Mach 7 to 10. The second article features some stunning Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photographs and details the saga of the HST servicing missions quite well. It also forecasts the possible future of HST as well. http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/...re3/index.html This month's magazine is worth picking up if you do not subscribe. Personally I think the HST is the Space Shuttle's greatest success story to date. Without the Space Shuttle servicing missions the HST would have been one more out of focus NASA flop. -- Daniel http://www.challengerdisaster.info Mount Charleston, not Charleston, SC |
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For the cost of three shuttle joyrides,
NASA could buy another HST (preferably with 27 gyroscopes) T. Charleston wrote: The December 2003 National Geographic contains two excellent articles pertinent to these newsgroups. The first article takes a retrospective look at the first one hundred years of flight and then looks forward to the possibilities looming in the next one hundred years. An abbreviated version, sans most of the hard copy published photographs can be found he http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/...re1/index.html The above article mentions the Columbia accident in regard to hypersonic travel and the future of commercial flights taking tourists to the edge of space at speeds of Mach 7 to 10. The second article features some stunning Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photographs and details the saga of the HST servicing missions quite well. It also forecasts the possible future of HST as well. http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/...re3/index.html This month's magazine is worth picking up if you do not subscribe. Personally I think the HST is the Space Shuttle's greatest success story to date. Without the Space Shuttle servicing missions the HST would have been one more out of focus NASA flop. -- Daniel http://www.challengerdisaster.info Mount Charleston, not Charleston, SC |
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