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WHOA. So a defect in manufacturing which then failed ... and said defect should have never occurred in the first place. WHAT THE ****.

 

That kind of defect just doesn't happen. Not even in Russia. Nobody is that careless.

 

NASA is gonna pull our people for sure now. A defect like this can and will cause explosive decompression events if there are other engineering/design defects. Any Engineer worth their salt knows how to work down a fault tree.

DARPA Blackjack: DoD pivot to LEO satellite constellations

 

Leveraging large LEO constellations and techs (SpaceX's StarLink, OneWeb) for DoD purposes

 

Given the USAF interest, and recent test programs, for using SpaceX's StarLink for military aircraft comms, this sounds way more serious than most DARPA projects. Pages 4 & 5 pf the presentation show a Falcon 9 launch vehicle.

 

Interview with Blackjack Program Manager  Paul "Rusty" Thomas, formerly of SpaceX (Senior Director, Dragon Production) 

 

https://www.c4isrnet.com/thought-leadership/2018/07/30/the-calculus-of-cheaper-military-comms-satellites/

 

Quote

Thomas: Blackjack is aimed at leveraging the new mesh networks being set up by these commercial companies. A user currently in the DoD might need to look up at two or three different options in space to actually talk and do communications in this space segment. Once we link up and do encryption, the user on the ground will look up and see hundreds or more potential network nodes overhead at any given point on the planet, North Pole to South Pole; it’s going to drastically change how the DoD does communication.

That is a bit independent of what Blackjack is going to do. If the commercial companies succeed and come out, that capability, call it raw gigabit-per-second class, not all of them it. But they all have many megabit data links from one point of the planet to another, at very low latency, 100-200 milliseconds, so you do really change the game for how any user, DoD included, does global communication.

 

PowerPoint...

 

PowerPoint as PDF...

Edited by DocM

69th IAC from 1st to the 5th of October, 2018.

 

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GLOBAL NETWORKING FORUM

Reusability: The Key to Reliability and Affordability

Wednesday 3 October 2018, 11:20 – 12:20

Location: Bremen Conference Center – DLR Hall

 

Quote

Hans Koenigsmann

Vice President of Build and Flight Reliability,

SpaceX,

http://www.iafastro.org/events/iac/iac-2018/global-networking-forum/wednesday-dlr-hall-1120-1220-reusability-the-key-to-reliability-and-affordability/

India Unveils Its Own Spacesuit Design for 2022 Astronaut Flights

 

1917444856_ISROsuit.thumb.jpg.e3803fb88485724438c454c9685fe7bd.jpg

 

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The Indian Space Research Organisation showed off the spacesuit it has designed in-house for its first human space missions at an event held on Sept. 6.

The display comes weeks after the country announced an ambitious timeline to launch its first crewed mission by 2022 in time to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the country's independence. The human-spaceflight program is called Gaganyaan and will build on the legacy of India's first astronaut, Rakesh Sharma, who flew in 1984. But this time, India is developing every aspect of the program, which means tackling problems like spacesuit design. 

https://www.space.com/41774-india-unveils-spacesuit-design-gagayaan-2022.html?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social

Farewell, Delta II !!

What a workhorse, and still launched by an 'ugly bag of mostly water' pressing a console button.

There's one more in storage, currently spare parts for this mission but likely headed for a museum after the ICESat-2 launch.

 

NASA's ICESat-2; observations of ice-sheet elevation change, sea-ice freeboard, and vegetation canopy height.

 

Saturday Sept. 15

 

SLC-2W, Vandenberg Air Force Base

 

0546-0820 PDT; 0846-1120 EDT; 1246-1520 GMT

 

 

Edited by DocM
  • Like 2

We know SpaceX and Blue Origin are in full reusable mode. China is also slowly adapting to this.

 

Look familiar....

 

China's latest satellite launch used a parafoil to limit damage downrange

 

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China tested the use of a parafoil on the payload fairing of its latest orbital launch last Friday, with the aim of improving accuracy of its return to Earth and potentially eventual reusability.

The launch of the Haiyang-1C marine observation satellite took place at the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Centre in north China, with a Long March 2C rocket successfully placing the satellite into a 770 x 786 km altitude orbit inclined by 98.6 degrees.

China's traditional satellite launch sites are situated deep inland, due in main to the security concerns raised by the ongoing Cold War and Sino-Soviet split. This means discarded stages, boosters and payload fairings often fall to ground - sometimes in inhabited areas - instead of the oceans, as with US and European launches.

Following and inspired by the successes of SpaceX and Blue Origin in launching and landing and, in this case, attempting to recover payloads, the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), the main space programme contractor, is seeking to bring similar technology to bear on its own launch vehicles.

https://gbtimes.com/chinas-latest-satellite-launch-used-a-parafoil-to-limit-damage-downrange

 

[youtube]

 

 

?

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40 years ago today, September 17, 1978: Audiences are introduced to the Twelve Colonies of Mankind, which are about to have a very, very bad day.

https://twitter.com/daytonward/status/1041671442893615104

 

1397715070_40yearsagoSeptember171978.thumb.jpg.dc09456dd590be7ff28fce166bd12d87.jpg

  • Like 3

Michigan Low Earth Orbit Launch Facility

There's a 2-day workshp this weekend in Traverse City. State, local; Boeing Defense, Space & Security; United Launch Alliance, ATLAS Space Operations (moved here from California), etc.

Keynote Address: Lt Gen David A. Deptula, USAF (Ret.)

 

Wonder if they're going to re-open the Upper Peninsula's Keweenaw Rocket Range, which closed in 1971?

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