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Those Flying Machines

By Janet Evans
Saturday, Oct 4 2008, 04:21 PM



EVERYONE knows I’m a Lost fan.  And Lost wouldn’t be lost if it weren’t for aviation.  Why, one of the main characters, who has been rescued from the island that was his home for several months, spends his weekends flying in hopes of repeating the crash that made him “lost” in the first place!

But Lost isn’t the only movie or show that features aviation that’s been a hit with me. How about the original Tarzan The Ape Man
?  The plane crashing in the jungle…with an infant onboard, raised by apes.  He grows up to fall in love with the beautiful Jane.  Not trying to make “apes” the feature, but you can’t forget that King Kong, while on top of the Empire State building was attacked by a plane.

And then there’s Top Gun, with Tom Cruise, or Cliff Hanger with Sylvester Stallone.  Or Apocalypse Now with Marlon Brando, Memphis Belle or A Bridge Too Far.

Can’t forget Airplane!,    Planes, Trains and Automobiles, or Home Alone. 

I know, some of these movies have aviation touching them only for a short period of time, while others have them as the main focus.  But it was important just the same.  The movie wouldn’t have gotten where it was supposed to be without aviation.  Just like we wouldn’t be where we are today without it. 

Just think where we have come and how quickly since 1903 when the Wright Bros. had their first success.

Aviation.com recognizes that and has put together what they believe are the Great Innovations In Aviation....

Take a look…what do you think?  

GREAT INNOVATIONS IN AVIATION



Also, check out the  Famous Firsts in Aviation



View scenes from the movie Cliffhanger

HERE

Warning: Viewer discretion advised - language/violence.




 

NASA Is Definitely Not A Flop

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Sep 23 2008, 07:24 AM


U.S. Satellite Vanguard  Photo U.S. Navy




Sometimes the path it takes to get somewhere can be long or short, bumpy or smooth…





On December 6, 1957, hot on the heels of Sputnik, the United States Navy readied the first American satellite, Vanguard, for launch. The grapefruit-sized device lofted 3 feet from Earth before it exploded. Press and public jeered, dubbing it “Flopnik.” (“The exact cause is classified,” says the crisp narrator in a vintage video [below] of the attempt.) A red-faced U.S. government redoubled their efforts. Within a year and a half, Vanguard’s replacement took the first measurements of Earth’s upper atmosphere and its successor, Vanguard II, the first scan of Earth’s clouds. Meanwhile, NASA, the agency charged with managing this new technology, was born.

 



"Oh, what a flopnik! The Vanguard rocket that held the satellite failed miserably, blowing up before take-off."




Spaceborne observation of the planet has come a long way since Flopnik. Today, 150 Earth-observation satellites are in orbit, capturing more than 10 terabytes of information per day. NASA operates, in whole or in part, about 20 of them. The legacy of NASA's first assignment has radically altered our concept of the planet. In the view from space, political boundaries dissolve, Earth’s parts become a whole, and its changes are made visible and real.



Continue at POP SCI HERE






 

Outta Sight (and Space)

By Janet Evans
Tuesday, Sep 2 2008, 06:40 AM


 

I love space! 

Who doesn’t love looking at the stars on a clear night?

You have heard NASA is celebrating its 50th Anniversary, haven’t you?

You’ve just got to check out this cool animated tour of NASA from the 50s through the future.

Make sure you move your cursor over EVERYTHING! 

The site’s out of this world!

Give yourself some time though.

There’s 50 years of interesting history to see!
 

So

10
09
08
07
06
05
04
03
02
01

Blast off!

Click on the image to go to NASA...and once you are there...click anywhere on the main page.






 

Sun Rise, Sun Set

By Janet Evans
Sunday, Feb 10 2008, 08:00 PM


Wikipedia



Forget about all of this talk of Global Warming….

Maybe we should be more concerned about Global Cooling….

Our Sun has a larger impact on the temperature and climate changes happening to Earth than pollution, the loss of rainforests, aerosols, or any other Global Warming propaganda that is out there right now.

Canadian scientists have been studying the impact of sun spots since the end of World War II.
  

Solar activity can fluctuate and usually has spans of 11 year cycles.
 

Scientists say activity lately has been very quiet.
 

This is disturbing and may mean that a period of bitter cold could be on the horizon.
 

This happened before in the 17th century, and in Europe caused crop failures, famine and death.


Canada is seeking more funding for the use of solar flux monitor telescopes to better observe what is going on with the sun.


They have been using radio-telescopic monitoring since World War II.


Popular Mechanics science section has a article on this, with a beautiful graphic


Sun Stays Sluggish as Weathermen Fight for Anti-Ice Aging Funding    à here



Wikipedia explains
Global Cooling  à here




 

You've Got Mail!

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Dec 13 2007, 06:30 AM


Forget e-mail....

How about space mail?



In an experiment combining elements of a package delivery service, the sport of kite surfing and a REALLY big fishing reel, Russian and European engineers sought to pioneer a technology that could be used in the future to retrieve cargo from space.

The experiment involving a 19-mile, super-strength tether hit a glitch, however, when the line failed to unwind fully, but Russian Mission Control said it hopes to salvage the test by recalculating the landing capsule's orbit.

"Even a fishing line could get stuck sometimes," Mission Control said spokesman Valery Lyndin.

The second Young Engineers Satellite, whose preparation involved nearly 500 university students from Europe, Japan, North America and Australia, was launched into orbit September 14 on a Russian-built Foton-M3 spacecraft, along with other European Space Agency experiments.

The goal of the YES2 experiment was to deliver Fotino -- a 12-pound reddish spherical capsule the size of a beach ball -- to Earth with the help of a long tether made of a substance the European Space Agency described as the world's strongest fiber.

In the experiment, the Fotino, held in a metal brace by straps, was to be shot out from the Foton-M3 spacecraft with springs as the tether gradually unwound, swinging the capsule forward into a lower orbit about 18 miles below.

About 2½ hours later, after gravity takes firm hold and the entire unit swings in a vertical position below the spacecraft, the Fotino is then released from its straps and glides through the atmosphere for about 20 minutes before a parachute deploys and the sphere bumps to a landing in the steppes of the Central Asian nation of Kazakhstan.

The capsule has a thermal shield to protect it from the searing heat of re-entry through the Earth's atmosphere, while the tether and the holding clamps burn up.

The experiment went awry when only five miles of the tether were unwound from the spacecraft at about 190 miles above the Earth before the capsule was released.

The reason for the problem wasn't immediately clear, Lyndin said. "It could be that the tether got stuck," he added.

The Fotino is equipped with a radio beacon to allow experts to track it as it glides down through the atmosphere, and Mission Control will try to calculate its current orbit to determine when and where it will land, Lyndin said.

The Russian Space Agency sought to play down the problem, saying the experiment provided a "valuable information about the tether's dynamics in space flight."

"The results of the experiment could be considered partly successful," it said.

Roger Walker, the project manager for ESA's Education Office, also played down the glitch, saying on the agency's Web site that it was a "largely successful demonstration" and that the agency was proud of the students' work, even though full deployment was not reached.

The tether is .0196 inches thick and is made of Dyneema, which the ESA said is used by kite surfers.


Read an article from MSNBC.com 
One Small Step Toward Deliveries From Outer Space  ◄  here.




 
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