Space Stuff and Launch Info

In summary, the SpaceX Dragon launch is upcoming, and it appears to be successful. The article has a lot of good information about the upcoming mission, as well as some interesting observations about the Great Red Spot.
  • #876
mfb said:
JWST had a mishap in the integration with Ariane 5. Four days delay to check that vibrations didn't exceed specifications, now the launch is planned for December 22.
Looks like the checkup results came back good.
 
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  • #877
I realized it is less than a month to launch, which feels quite weird since I've been waiting for many years now for the JWST.

I'm extremely excited that it hopefully will be operational soon.

But I'm also unusually nervous about the launch.
I would become very disappointed if something bad happens!

Like I said to my friends: if an unmanned Mars mission failed, I would be sad, but rather quickly get over it. :). But if the JWST mission fails, I would be devastated.

I'll be biting my nails when the launch happens. :)
 
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  • #878
DennisN said:
I realized it is less than a month to launch, which feels quite weird since I've been waiting for many years now for the JWST.

I'm extremely excited that it hopefully will be operational soon.

But I'm also unusually nervous about the launch.
I would become very disappointed if something bad happens!

Like I said to my friends: if an unmanned Mars mission failed, I would be sad, but rather quickly get over it. :). But if the JWST mission fails, I would be devastated.

I'll be biting my nails when the launch happens. :)
I fear your nails will have a half year of suffering.
The launch is the least risky part of the JWST deployment, the real challenge is the eventual deployment of the sunshade, the secondary mirror and the primary mirror segments. NASA has a poor record in this work, thinking back to the Galileo high gain antenna, even recently was not able to get two LUCY solar panels to deploy fully. The JWST needs to unfold multiple mirror segments, position a super precise secondary mirror and deploy a big sun shade. It is a 3D assemblage and I don't think there is much experience in that process.
 
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  • #879
etudiant said:
I don't think there is much experience in that process.
I reckon that could be down to the accountants. A test run with dummy equipment in a low orbit would still cost around $2k per kg (is that the best estimate these days?). If that worked perfectly then it would probably be described as a waste of money.
 
  • #880
Astronomer advent calendar

webb.png
23 hours until the launch of IXPE (Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer), Dec 9 at 6:00 UTC. SpaceX will have a live webcast. At 325 kg to low Earth orbit it's an extremely light payload to launch on a Falcon 9 (~16-22 tonnes to low Earth orbit), but that way it can be launched into an equatorial orbit directly. After launch the second stage will coast until it reaches the equator, and then do a ~3 km/s inclination change.

Half an hour until the launch of Soyuz MS-20, two tourists and one professional astronaut flying to the ISS for 12 days. It will be the first dedicated tourism flight to the ISS, previous tourists were individual seats when there was an opportunity. On board: Yusaku Maezawa, who also booked the dearMoon mission around the Moon with SpaceX for 2023, and Yozo Hirano, documenting the flight.
Axiom 1 will follow the same approach in February, three tourists and one professional astronaut visiting the ISS.
 
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  • #881
JWST not before December 24

Starliner now aims at May 2022 for its second uncrewed test flight. It was already on the launch pad in August, hours away from a planned launch. This is a repetition of the failed flight in December 2019. Two and a half years (or more with future delays) to fix the issues and try again. In the time between these test flights Dragon has flown 5 crews and 2 more are planned.
 
  • #882
mfb said:
JWST not before December 24

Starliner now aims at May 2022 for its second uncrewed test flight. It was already on the launch pad in August, hours away from a planned launch. This is a repetition of the failed flight in December 2019. Two and a half years (or more with future delays) to fix the issues and try again. In the time between these test flights Dragon has flown 5 crews and 2 more are planned.
Could it be down to poorer Engineering or to more stingy accountants?
 
  • #883
From what I see it's largely a management issue. Once you replace the engineers-became-managers with career managers they'll hire even more career managers who have no understanding of the thing they manage. They do understand costs, and cutting expenses is a great way to spend even more money later, fixing the problems it introduced. You also can't keep the best engineers that way, of course - they go to SpaceX, Rocket Lab and so on.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/feat...-from-737-max-woes-to-challenge-amazon-spacex

https://www.mondaq.com/aviation/959...but-and-the-role-of-governance-in-spaceflight
According to the Board Expertise analysis, using CGLytics Governance Data and Analytics tools in the software platform, the Company almost completely lacks Technology expertise on its Board. Only recently elected director, Steven M. MollenKopf (elected April 27, 2020), has the professional and industry experience to qualify as a technology expert.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/boeings-other-big-problem-fixing-its-space-program-11610773201
 
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  • #884
mfb said:
From what I see it's largely a management issue. Once you replace the engineers-became-managers with career managers they'll hire even more career managers who have no understanding of the thing they manage. They do understand costs, and cutting expenses is a great way to spend even more money later, fixing the problems it introduced. You also can't keep the best engineers that way, of course - they go to SpaceX, Rocket Lab and so on.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/feat...-from-737-max-woes-to-challenge-amazon-spacex

https://www.mondaq.com/aviation/959...but-and-the-role-of-governance-in-spaceflighthttps://www.wsj.com/articles/boeings-other-big-problem-fixing-its-space-program-11610773201
The faint hope is that this debacle may cost Boeing so much money that they recognize that a course change is essential.
Sadly the more likely outcome is that the huge loss (they have received over 80% of the contract money, but still have to perform, now on their own dime) will push the board to slash investment in this space.
 
  • #885
While watching the pre-launch program on NASA this morning, there was an interview with a spokesperson from the Tide company talking about the cleaning products that they're designing for NASA in order to efficiently clean clothing during a long trip to Mars with minimal water usage. I never thought about that before. :wideeyed:
 
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  • #886
JWST launch countdown
2 days, 15.5 hours until the launch of the most ambitious space telescope ever built.

It passed the launch readiness review. The next major event will be the transport to the launch site tomorrow.
 
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  • #887
Due to bad weather they shifted the launch by a day - now 12:20 GMT (or up to 32 minutes later) on December 25, in 3 days and 7.5 hours.
 
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  • #888
Ariane 5 with JWST has rolled to the launch pad.

The weather forecast looks good. 22 hours 40 minutes left.

----

In spaceflight, 2021 will be remembered as the year where commercial space tourism started. Sure, the Russians flew a few people to the ISS before when there was an open seat, but this year we got dedicated commercial missions.
  • Virgin Galactic/SpaceShipTwo made a suborbital tourism flight May 22
  • Blue Origin/New Shepard made a suborbital tourism flight July 20
  • SpaceX/Dragon made an orbital tourism flight September 15-18
  • Russia/Soyuz launched an actress and a movie director to the ISS October 5-17
  • Russia/Soyuz made a dedicated tourism flight to the ISS December 8-20
From nothing to five, using four different spacecraft , within one year.

----

SpaceX has set a new company record with three launches within three days - one per launch pad. Out of 31 flights this year only two had a new booster, everything else was reusing existing boosters. The most recent flight also achieved the 100th successful booster recovery.
 
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  • #889
mfb said:
If you have $100/month disposable income, you probably pay less tax than the average taxpayer. Your contribution would be even smaller.

All these projects are cheap per person and day. There are many of them, of course.
Divide the highest ITER cost estimates by 2 billion (population of participating countries) and you get $10 per person, or ~0.1 cent per day over 25 years. For the option to have a very clean energy source in the future? Build two of them!

The US and many European countries spend about 3% of the federal/country budget on research. We could double science funding if everyone would be fine with paying 3% higher taxes. In the US that would be about $1.2 per person and day on average, in Germany it would be something similar but estimating the number is complicated.
I'd happily pay that. Okay, I am biased, because my income is from this budget item...
This post has aged very well. With ref to Webb and Luvoir. I don't want to dilute the Webb thread but I thought this was a great comment.
 
  • #890
An off-topic discussion has been placed in Moderation. Please keep the discussion on-topic for this thread. Thanks.
 
  • #891
Update -- the off-topic (for this thread) discussion about funding for space exploration has been deleted and the members notified. If you want to discuss that topic, please start a new thread in GD. Thanks.
 
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  • #892
1967 had 139 orbital launches, out of these 120 were successful. Both numbers were records for over 50 years.
2021 had 146 orbital launches, out of these 135 were successful.

Today's rockets tend to be larger on average (even though 1967 had the maiden flight of the Saturn V), and most of the flights are done by more reliable rockets. The failures are largely coming from start-ups trying to reach orbit the first time (8 of the 10 failures last year).
 
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  • #893
Video of Blue Origin NS-19 from the passenger perspective - the suborbital tourism flight in December.

8:50 capsule is closed
17:50 takeoff
20:20 they unbuckle and float around in the cabin
22:50 back to the seats
~26:10 parachute deployment
27:40 touchdown
35:30 unbuckling

Here is the outside view

----

After the first successful launch in November last year Astra is now trying to rapidly increase the launch rate: One rocket is being prepared in Florida for a launch in the next few days and another one in Alaska for a February 20 launch. After that they have at least one launch planned for March, April and May each.

Rocket Lab and SpaceX had almost a full year between their first successful flights and the next launch.
 
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  • #894
mfb said:
the suborbital tourism flight in December.
Much less of a fuss to re-enter from sub-orbital compared with re-entry from orbit. Less potential energy to get rid of and no kinetic energy.
 
  • #895
sophiecentaur said:
Much less of a fuss to re-enter from sub-orbital compared with re-entry from orbit. Less potential energy to get rid of and no kinetic energy.
Although for a higher suborbital flight the g forces associated with a ballistic re-entry can be very high. The flight profile of manned launches is adjusted to mitigate these possible high g reintries if abort is necessary part way to orbit. The unsuccessful Soyuz 7K-T No.39 launch to the Salyut space station produce more than 20g for the cosmonauts during their return.

/
 
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  • #896
Was the high g due to the path of the craft or the aerodynamics / shape presented by the craft on its trajectory? Was it facing the ‘right way’?
We may be comparing apples with apples here.
 
  • #897
My understanding of the issue is the trade- off between vertical and horizontal speed and the increasing air density closer to the surface. One does not want to hit the dense atmosphere too soon coming down.
Shephard had 11 gees max on reentry after a peak speed of 8200 mph. Glenn had 6 gees reentry (8 gees on the way up) after orbital re-entry
I know that the crew dragon follows a more shallow climb to orbit than is maximal for this reason, but I don't find a quantitative treatment and I haven't worked it out myself.
 
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  • #898
hutchphd said:
My understanding of the issue is the trade- off between vertical and horizontal speed and the increasing air density closer to the surface. One does not want to hit the dense atmosphere too soon coming down.
Shephard had 11 gees max on reentry after a peak speed of 8200 mph. Glenn had 6 gees reentry (8 gees on the way up) after orbital re-entry
I know that the crew dragon follows a more shallow climb to orbit than is maximal for this reason, but I don't find a quantitative treatment and I haven't worked it out myself.
That's pretty reasonable but g is not the only factor because what you have written doesn't consider how dissipation of the total orbital kinetic energy can be dealt with. It seems that either the craft has to get hot or rocket braking has to be used for orbital re-entry. All that is in addition to your idea that the entry trajectory has also to be tailored to mitigate against g forces.

I remember suggesting that a shuttle could just glide gently down to the surface, at a suitable angle, without any fireworks and glowing heat shields. (PF a few years ago). I was put right on the grounds that a slow re-entry would still need to heat up the craft and that doing it slowly would give a lower skin temperature at the expense of cooking the crew because the heat would have time to get into them. As the cost of lifting a payload decreases, there is more chance of carrying enough fuel to avoid the heating problem.
 
  • #899
mfb said:
8:50 capsule is closed
17:50 takeoff
20:20 they unbuckle and float around in the cabin
22:50 back to the seats
~26:10 parachute deployment
27:40 touchdown
35:30 unbuckling
Sigh, I'm dense sometimes, and I can't keep the different competing space tourism companies straight. I read those times as military time (Army brat and Medic here), and thought, "Wow, what a boring 9 hour wait just sitting there before takeoff. At least they had a couple hours of weightlessness...".

Then I saw the last three not-so-military times at the end of the timeline, and realized my mistake... o0)
 
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  • #900
sophiecentaur said:
but g is not the only factor because what you have written doesn't consider how dissipation of the total orbital kinetic energy can be dealt with. It seems that either the craft has to get hot or rocket braking has to be used for orbital re-entry.
Absolutely the energy either gets radiated, ablated or shock-convected for passive re-entry. The other factor is the aerodynamic lift available to all spacecraft since Mercury (and Vostok) because the center of mass is off the center line. I think the Apollo did a dipsy-doodle coming home make the re-entry aiming requirements less stringent and the period of high radiative loss more effective. Sounds a lot like rocket science to me.
I fear it will stand as the pinnacle of human achievement for some centuries to come...hope not
 
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  • #901
The mystery winner of the Inspiration4 raffle (who gave his seat to Chris Sembroski) has spoken with the press. He exceeded the maximal weight for Dragon passengers and losing the difference fast enough would have been problematic.

SpaceX prepares another triple launch using each launch pad. A radar satellite for Italy 28 January 23:11, a Starlink launch 29 January 20:00, and a military US satellite 2 February in the afternoon UTC, exact time still classified.

berkeman said:
"Wow, what a boring 9 hour wait just sitting there before takeoff. At least they had a couple hours of weightlessness...".
And 8 hours in the seat after landing!
I have seen 25:00 used for 01:00 of the next day if the association to the previous day should be clearer, but in my post above it's video timestamps.
 
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  • #902
hutchphd said:
pinnacle of human achievement
Certainly a critical factor in the whole exercise. Just imagine; in the future there could be 're-entry stages' which would rendezvous with an incoming craft and deliver it safely to the ground, exactly where it's needed and in pristine condition.

But "pinnacle" is a very subjective term and assumes a certain set of values. I still have massive reservations about manned space flight and value for money. JWSS should deliver much more worthwhile evidence than a manned landing on Mars. But I understand we need to have a public which is ok with their taxes being spent on space so PR is a relevant factor.
 
  • #903
I was in a far darker place here. It is not at all clear to me that civilization as we know it will persist long enough to get to the next zenith. Maybe after a few centuries and a new Renaissance.
I am very fond of Gene Cernan's assertion that Apollo was a piece of the 21st century grafted onto the 20th century by fiat. I fervently hope that the 21st century lives up to the previews, but the trend is not promising IMHO. Disabuse me of this assessment...please!
 
  • #904
We are launching more to space than ever before, cheaper than ever before, by more countries and companies than ever before, with more users than ever before. The 21st century is seeing the longest continuous human presence in space (since Oct 2000).
We are not flying to the Moon at the moment (NASA and its partners are working on that), but in every other aspect spaceflight is so much bigger now.
 
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  • #905
Following Elon Musk in action is a little like watching a great high wire artist with your heart pounding the whole time. So far he has had the same vision and drive as Korolev and von Braun and fewer impediments (Gulags, wars, genocides). He is impressive and those damned F9 landings still look miraculous every time.
Although Nasa seems vaguely moribund let us not forget Cassini-Huyghens, Hubble (and the fixit crew) and perhaps (fingers crossed) Webb. I want another deep field image.
 
  • #906
mfb said:
SpaceX prepares another triple launch using each launch pad. A radar satellite for Italy 28 January 23:11, a Starlink launch 29 January 20:00, and a military US satellite 2 February in the afternoon UTC, exact time still classified.
First delayed by weather, then delayed by a ship entering the keep-out zone. Now the launches are planned for 31 Jan 23:11, 1 Feb 18:57 and 2 Feb 20:18, i.e. three launches in 48 hours. A record for SpaceX and maybe an overall record for any launch provider.
Another Starlink launch is planned for February 15.

SpaceX wants to launch up to 52 times this year, or once per week on average. While these plans are always too optimistic: So far they are on track - six launches in five weeks once these three missions are done.

Weather delays will play an important role with such a high launch rate. They are caused by a design decision over 15 years ago: SpaceX wanted the rocket to be powerful enough to carry a crew capsule, and thin enough to be transported by road. That leads to a long thin rocket. Here is one driving through a village. Reusing the booster lowers the performance, so SpaceX made the boosters even longer to compensate. Making them wider would have been a major change to everything. Now they have an extremely skinny rocket, which means it's very sensitive to wind, leading to more weather delays than most other rockets.
 
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  • #907
Tonight's SpaceX launch was especially spectacular in the sky. That is because the launch time was at almost exactly sunset. That means than we on the ground were in partial darkness, while the rocket and exhaust gasses were in sunlight.

At first, the smoke trail was a beautiful flamingo pink (as were the few clouds around). A few seconds later the smoke trail was pure white as it was lit by direct sunlight not filtered in the atmosphere. By then, the pink portion below was in almost total darkness and it seemed to glow in the dark.

After stage separation, we could see two rockets, side by side. We could also see white "smoke rings" from the 1st stage as the first stage cold gas thrusters pulsed. Then after some minutes, the brilliant orange flame as the first stage engines fired. Be sure to watch until the landing back at Cape Canaveral. (This landing was on land, not on the barge.) It too was spectacular.

The video captured much of what I described. Watch starting at 1:10:45
 
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  • #908
"Now they have an extremely skinny rocket, which means it's very sensitive to wind, leading to more weather delays than most other rockets."

I'm not necessarily disagreeing, but you've lumped a lot of things into one statement.

'Weather' and 'WInd' are actually 2 different things (for purposes of a rocket launch). 'Weather' is thunderstorms, turbulence, visibility, etc., and aren't really vehicle-specific. 'Wind' is examined for at least 2 different purposes: Loads on the structure and control authority. The wind profile (magnitude and direction at altitude) is examined to make sure that the proper thrust vector can be achieved and that the result won't create excessive loads on the structure.

A 'longer' rocket aggravates both of the 'Wind' factors. Many 'other rockets' achieve maximum capacity by adding 'strap-on' boosters. These are typically not 'steerable' and (as a result) the thrust vector becomes less 'steerable.' The heaviest configuration of the Delta-II rocket (for example) suffered massively from this issue.
 
  • #909
I see wind as part of weather.

The SpaceX livestream had awesome shots from the ground. Shortly before main engine cutoff. You can see the main engines cut off, the stages separating, the second stage starting up, the booster rotating and starting its boostback burn. Not as diffuse blobs of variable brightness, but actually as resolved objects. Even the fairing deployment - well in space and traveling almost 2 km/s at that point - was still visible from the ground.
 
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