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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.




 

"There's a sucker born every minute"

By Janet Evans
Sunday, Aug 17 2008, 08:12 AM







And with the higher gas prices, and the prices of practically everything going up, it’s tempting to believe those deals that sound too good to be true.

Some of them may have basic scientific fact behind them, like this one…


Run Your Car On Water
and Double Your Gas Mileage…



Water can be used to fuel a car when used as a supplement to gasoline. In fact, very little water is needed! only one quart of water provides over 1800 gallons of HHO gas which can literally last for months and significantly increase your vehicle's fuel efficiently, improve emissions quality, and save you money.

Thousands of successful water-conversions around the world are proof that this technology works and will soon catch on! Some industry insiders say its just a matter of time before this water-burning technology will be standard in new automobiles. One expert estimates most cars will be using this technology by 2012, but until the auto manufacturers catch up, you can use this technology for yourself today at a very reasonable set-up cost.

You can go to the ad's website by clicking HERE

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Of course there are several things wrong with this picture...

They want you to convert your car to run with water and gas.

This does sound dangerous for the average person, even though they say it isn't.

And, it doesn't sound like it will work.

The Laws of Thermodynamics


Since you need to use electricity to separate the water into the "Brown's gas," doesn't that defeat the purpose of saving energy/money?

And aren't people too smart to fall for this anyway?




 

Something Huge is Missing...Can You Find It?

By Janet Evans
Saturday, May 17 2008, 08:10 PM

It’s been missing since 1999 and NASA is asking for your help to find it now….

What is it?

"Mars Polar Lander was due to reach the Red Planet's south polar region in 1999, but it went out of contact during its descent from the surface and was never heard from again. Investigators surmised that a glitch with the spacecraft's thruster system led to a catastrophically hard landing."



Mars Polar Lander, shown in this
artist's conception, disappeared
during its descent in 1999. NASA



I’m serious.....

NASA is looking for help in finding it.

The University of Arizona Department of Planetary Sciences site has many high resolution imaging maps taken from the one below for you to look over.



Click on the image below to join in or to read what other people have found:


 

And read the story about it on MSNBC


PORING OVER MARS PICTURES



Happy hunting!




 

Cover Your Heads! (Just In Case)

By Janet Evans
Friday, Feb 15 2008, 06:30 AM



Good news!

The story from January, about the Spy Satellite that is supposed to fall from the sky in March; well it looks like the U.S. is here to save the day.

Our Navy is planning to shoot down the broken satellite, according to the Pentagon.

Officials said we would most likely shoot it down before it re-enters the atmosphere, using a special missile modified for the task.

The last time the U.S. attempted to do such a thing was 20 years ago. 

China did the same sort of thing just last year.

If the mission should fail, the satellite would fall to earth as anticipated.

Read the story from the International Herald Tribune

U.S. Officials Say Broken Satellite Will Be Shot Down   ¡ here


______________________________


Remember Skylab?

Do you know where you were when it fell in 1979?

I remember where I was.

There was so much hype about Skylab falling...

No one was sure where it would fall.

For some reason I was up visiting the Cave of the Mounds.

Don't know if that was on purpose. 

I do love looking at caves.

I remember they were selling novelty spray cans of Skylab repellent!

Guess what?

There's a new kid in town....


U.S. Spy Satellite Falling To Earth   ç  here








P.S.

An Australian municipality, the Shire of Esperance, fined the United States $400 for littering when Skylab fell.  In 2004, the History Channel documentary "History Rocks" stated, in an episode covering major events of 1979, that this fine has never been paid.



 


 

Boy, it's hot!

By Janet Evans
Friday, Jan 11 2008, 11:05 AM


The body heat from hundreds of thousands of people who pass through the Stockholm Central Station each day will be used to heat a new office building nearby


"All people produce heat, and that heat is in fact fairly difficult to get rid of. Instead of opening windows and letting all that heat go to waste we want to harness it through the ventilation system," said Karl Sundholm, of the Swedish state-held property administration company Jernhuset.

He said the body heat would warm up water that in turn would be pumped through pipes over to the new office building, which will also house a small hotel and a few shops and is expected to be completed by the beginning of 2010.     

Read more about it from the Associated Press on Life Science  


Swedes to Capture, Recycle Commuter Body Heat  R 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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