Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab
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It's amazing to watch them catch a booster that effortlessly.
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@antipodean said in Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab:
It's amazing to watch them catch a booster that effortlessly.
it's massive too! Hard to get a sense of scale on a screen
Starship though looks like it's lost
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T+8:05 it loses engines
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T+9:27 they're all dead.
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Well the catch was cool. Guess they didn't get all the issues whey we looking at this week with the delays.
Launch, hot stage, flip and burn, and catch all becoming reliable aspects of the system. Hopefully they got some good data from the mishap.
On a plus, the re-entry pictures will look cool again.
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@antipodean said in Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab:
T+9:27 they're all dead.
ok, i saw the preview of @Rembrandt post about the returning astronauts...but this was the first unread one i had so popped up first....que a few second of slight panic
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@Rembrandt said in Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab:
Really incredible stuff
It would be even more incredible if they caught the capsule with chopsticks mounted on a boat
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@canefan indeed it would. Weirdly enough though I was more impressed by this resue mission than the chopstick stuff. I know it wasn't as technically marvelous but something about the human element of rescuing stranded astronauts.
Can't even imagine a work assignment that was supposed to be like 2 weeks ended up going for 9 months straight!
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@Rembrandt said in Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab:
Can't even imagine a work assignment that was supposed to be like 2 weeks ended up going for 9 months straight!
Imagine the overtime payments collected if they were wages employees.
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@Rembrandt said in Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab:
Can't even imagine a work assignment that was supposed to be like 2 weeks ended up going for 9 months straight!
I once had a work-trip, to India, supposed to be 1 week - turned into 9 weeks. But - split over 3 trips of 3 weeks each. And in a (so-called) 5 star hotel.
I can't imagine being stuck with workmates in a much more enclosed space, for 9 months, without murder becoming a factor.
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According to NASAโs Orbital Debris Program Office, there are over 8,800 metric tonnes of defunct satellites, spent rocket stages, broken components, and collision fragments in orbit. Only ~43% of objects are actively used for communication, navigation, scientific missions, or military surveillance.
This debris orbits at up to 28,000 km/h, posing a major threat to spacecraft, satellites, and the International Space Station.
Related Facts:
๐ธ To get all this mass to orbit in the modern day, even with SpaceX's extremely low cost of $2,700/kg, would cost over $37 billion.๐ฐ๏ธ As of 2024, there are ~36,500 tracked objects in orbit larger than 10 cm, and millions of smaller untracked fragments.
๐ The Kessler Syndrome is a feared cascade scenario where collisions create more debris, triggering an unstoppable chain reaction.
๐ก๏ธ The ISS regularly performs debris avoidance maneuvers to prevent catastrophic impacts.
๐งน Active cleanup missions are in development, including magnetized tethers, robotic arms, nets, and laser systems.
๐ The U.S., China, Russia, and private companies like SpaceX are the largest contributors to orbital hardware.
๐ก The growing space economy makes orbital debris one of the most pressing 21st-century environmental issues, though itโs invisible to most people.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab:
Are we supposed to see something in that video - or are my eyes completely stuffed
I couldn't see anything in the video either. The story was pretty cool though