![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The New York Times
May 31, 2006 Golf Shot in Space Is Postponed by Russians By WARREN E. LEARY WASHINGTON, May 30 — Russian and American astronauts on the International Space Station ran through a dress rehearsal on Tuesday of the five-and-a-half-hour spacewalk planned for Thursday. The mission will not include a previously planned attempt to whack a golf ball into orbit for the longest drive in history. During a televised news conference on Tuesday from the Johnson Space Center in Houston, NASA officials said everything was ready for the station crew to don Russian Orlan spacesuits and exit the Pirs airlock on the Russian side of the station on the scheduled 65th spacewalk to build and maintain the orbiting laboratory. Kirk Shireman, NASA's deputy manager for the station program, said the venture outside the station was unusual in that part of it would be managed from mission control in Houston while most of it would be orchestrated by the Russian control center near Moscow. During the spacewalk, Pavel V. Vinogradov, the Russian station commander, and Col. Jeffrey N. Williams of the Army, the mission flight engineer and NASA science officer, will install a new hydrogen vent valve on the hull of the Zvezda Service Module that is part of the Russian Elektron oxygen-generation system. The spacewalkers will also recover a thruster rocket residue collector and retrieve a contamination-monitoring device and a package of biology experiments. Afterward, American controllers are to take control of the excursion as Mr. Vinogradov and Colonel Williams head for the American side of the station, where they are to replace a malfunctioning camera on the Mobile Base System rail car that moves up and down the truss that supports the complex. Holly Ridings, spacewalk director for the mission, said Russian and American officials added the camera replacement task to the schedule several weeks ago after the Russians had decided to delay a commercial golf stunt planned by a Canadian company. Russian officials had cleared Mr. Vinogradov to use golf equipment carried to the station on earlier cargo flights to drive a special ball into orbit. The Element 21 Golf Company in Toronto had paid Russia an unspecified amount for its Golf Shot in Space project, in which a special radio-transmitting ball would be smacked into a three-year orbit of Earth. The company said the promotion was to celebrate the 35th anniversary of Alan B. Shepard Jr.'s famous golf shot on the Moon on the Apollo 14 mission. Ms. Ridings said the Russians did not specify why they delayed the golf stunt, which had raised some early concerns about the swinging club or the ball possibly endangering the station. An American safety review of the proposal is about done, she said, and the venture will probably go ahead, perhaps on a Russian-controlled spacewalk scheduled this fall. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 30 May 2006 22:33:04 -0700, in a place far, far away, Dale
made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: The New York Times May 31, 2006 Golf Shot in Space Is Postponed by Russians By WARREN E. LEARY WASHINGTON, May 30 — Russian and American astronauts on the International Space Station ran through a dress rehearsal on Tuesday of the five-and-a-half-hour spacewalk planned for Thursday. The mission will not include a previously planned attempt to whack a golf ball into orbit for the longest drive in history. It's already in orbit. More technological illiteracy from the Gray Lady. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The New York Times
The mission will not include a previously planned attempt to whack a golf ball into orbit for the longest drive in history. It's already in orbit. More technological illiteracy from the Gray Lady. Well, the Times has to take the blame for publishing it, or not, but I would assume that it is the golf company sponsoring this which came up with that way of characterizing the shot. "Whack a golf ball into orbit" sounds more impressive than "Slightly modify a golf ball's orbit". But my first reaction was that the whole thing seemed somehow emblematic of an aging and cautious agency. On the moon, the astronaut acting alone smuggles a golf head in his spacesuit pocket, and waits for a lax moment in the schedule for his shot: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/a14/a14.clsout2.html (Not that this source really spells out who knew about this golf shot before the mission, and whether there was some kind of tacit/informal approval, or even something more official). On ISS, a committee has to go over the shot in great detail, analyzing all the risks, the benefits. And all for something which is backward looking - trying to pay homage to the glory days of past space missions, rather than come up with something of their own. Is that an unfair comparison? Almost surely. But somehow it seems evocative nonetheless. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim Kingdon wrote in
news ![]() But my first reaction was that the whole thing seemed somehow emblematic of an aging and cautious agency. Yes, the Russians are getting overly cautious in their old age. (No, NASA had nothing to do with delaying this stunt. Yes, if you meant to imply they did, you were being presumptuous and unfair.) -- JRF Reply-to address spam-proofed - to reply by E-mail, check "Organization" (I am not assimilated) and think one step ahead of IBM. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
(No, NASA had nothing to do with delaying this stunt.
I'm not sure how to read the following (from the Times article which was posted, which was my only source for information). "About done" wouldn't seem to mean "done" although it might be "would have been done in time for the spacewalk if not for the delay which was unrelated". An American safety review of the proposal is about done, she said, and the venture will probably go ahead, perhaps on a Russian-controlled spacewalk scheduled this fall. Yes, if you meant to imply they did, you were being presumptuous and unfair.) Well, I wasn't reacting to the delay, rather to the stunt itself. But of course the whole analogy/reaction breaks down if you start thinking about NASA vs. the Russians vs. the golf company (or in any number of other ways - in my previous post I said "Is that an unfair comparison? Almost surely."). |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Yes, Virginia, Man NEVER Walked on the Moon... | Ed Conrad | Amateur Astronomy | 12 | September 4th 06 01:20 PM |
Sleazeball Science SMITHSONIAN's Middle Name -- Man as Old as Coal -- Physical Evidence Galore! -- Evolution vs. Intelligent Design | Ed Conrad | Astronomy Misc | 3 | May 24th 06 04:25 AM |
The GOSPEL OF JUDAS -- Hmmm! Ed Conrad right again!. | Ed Conrad | Astronomy Misc | 0 | April 7th 06 01:00 PM |
Ed Conrad's NEW Letter to Prof. Michael Behe | Ed Conrad | Astronomy Misc | 0 | June 21st 05 10:50 AM |
MYSTERIOUS ARTIFACTS, FOSSILS - Exhibit Now in Berlin -- Smallest Woman (5 in. or 14 cm) - Petrified Human Bones Found in Coal Seams & MORE | Ed Conrad | Astronomy Misc | 0 | June 9th 05 01:00 AM |