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June 28 - Today in Science History - Scientists born on June 28th, died, and events - 0 views

  • Satellite
  • In 1965, the first commerical telephone conversation over a satellite took place over Early Bird I between America and Europe. It had capacity for 240 voice circuits or one black and white TV channel. Positioned to serve the Atlantic Ocean region, Early Bird provided commercial communications service between North America and Western Europe. It exceeded its 18 months designed in-orbit life by 2 additional years. (It was later renamed as Intelsat I.) By 1 Jul 1969, three Intelsat satellites in geostationary orbit provided full global coverage. Only 19 days after Intelsat III became operational, Neil Armstrong and the Apollo 11 crew made their historic first landing on the moon, watched by 500 million people back on Earth
Mars Base

June 26 - Today in Science History - Scientists born on June 26th, died, and events - 0 views

  • Bar code
  • In 1974, at 8:01 a.m., a package of Wrigley’s chewing gum with a bar code printed on it passed over a scanner at the Marsh Supermarket, Troy, Ohio, and became the first product ever logged under the new Universal Product Code (UPC) computerized recognition system. Invented by IBM, and approved for use in 1973, the UPC is a 12-number bar code representing the manufacturer's identity and an assigned product number. Within nanoseconds, this information is read with a laser beam moving at around 10,000 inches per second and transfers it to the store’s database computer for price lookup and inventory management
  • Toothbrush
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  • In 1498, the bristle toothbrush was invented in China. Coarse hairs taken from the back of a hog's neck were used for the bristles, attached at right angles to a bone or bamboo handle (similar to the modern type). The best bristles came from hogs raised in the colder climates of China and Siberia, where the animals grew stouter and firmer hair. Since 3000 BC, ancient civilizations had been cleaning teeth with a "chew-stick" by using a thin twig with a frayed end
Mars Base

June 25 - Today in Science History - Scientists born on June 25th, died, and events - 0 views

  • Space station Mir accident
  • In 1997, the space-station Mir suffered a near-fatal mishap when a Progress ferry being docked via remote control by Russian cosmonaut Vasily Tsibliyev accidentally rammed into the Spektr science module, putting a hole in the pressure vessel and damaging its solar arrays beyond use. To salvage the station, which consisted of a core, a connecting node, and five science modules, crew members severed electrical and data connections between Spektr and the rest of the station and then sealed off the module. They saved the station but lost about half of their electrical power
Mars Base

June 30 - Today in Science History - Scientists born on June 30th, died, and events - 0 views

  • Tunguska meteorite
  • In 1908, at around 7:15 am, northwest of Lake Baikal, Russia, a huge fireball nearly as bright as the Sun was seen crossing the sky. Minutes later, there was a huge flash and a shock wave felt up to 650 km (400 mi) away. Over Tunguska, a meteorite over 50-m diameter, travelling at over 25 km per second (60,000 mph) penetrated Earth's atmosphere, heated to about 10,000 ºC and detonated 6 to10 km above the ground. The blast released the energy of 10-50 Megatons of TNT, destroying 2,200 sq km of forest leaving no trace of life. The Tunguska rock came out of the Taurid Meteor storm that crosses Earth's orbit twice a year. The first scientific expedition for which records survive was made by Russian mineralogist Leonid Kulik in 1927
Mars Base

Asteroid-Turned-Comet 2013 UQ4 Catalina Brightens: How to See it This Summer - 0 views

  • 2013 UQ4 Catalina is brightening on schedule and should be a binocular object greater than +10th magnitude by the end of June
  • 2013 UQ4 belongs to a class of objects known as damocloids
  • These are thought to be inactive varieties of comet nuclei
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  • reaches perihelion on July 6th only four days before its closest approach to the Earth
  • At that point, the comet will have an apparent motion of about 7 degrees a day — that’s the span of a Full Moon once every 1 hour and 42 minutes
Mars Base

Mercury Passes in Front of the Sun, as Seen From Mars - Mars Science Laboratory - 0 views

  • This is the first transit of the sun by a planet observed from any planet other than Earth, and also the first imaging of Mercury from Mars
  • Mercury fills only about one-sixth of one pixel as seen from such great distance, so the darkening does not have a distinct shape, but its position follows Mercury's expected path based on orbital calculations.
  • The observations were made on June 3, 2014,
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  • the same Mastcam frames show two sunspots approximately the size of Earth. The sunspots move only at the pace of the sun's rotation, much slower than the movement of Mercury.
  • The next Mercury transit visible from Earth will be May 9, 2016.
  • Mercury and Venus transits are visible more often from Mars than from Earth
Mars Base

Space College: ISEE-3 Reboot Project Archives - 0 views

  • It has 4 large antennas that span 91 meters and it spins
  • once every 3 seconds
  • Using GNU Radio to Talk to ISEE-3
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  • What ISEE-3 Really Looks Like
  • successfully
  • uplink commands to the space craft
  • accomplished through a lot of team work, strong leadership
  • and generous support from the community at large
  • designed a deep-space uplink modulator in a couple of days,
  • products like the Ettus Research USRP, the open source SDR framework GNU Radio have made this exceedingly easy.
  • 12 June 2014
  • telemetry from ISEE-3 indicating that its entire suite of science instruments is powered up and has been powered up since NASA last commanded the spacecraft many years ago
  • getting data back from the magentometer that indicates that science data is coming back
  • Just because an instrument is powered up doesn't mean that it is functioning normally
  • some of the ISEE-3 instruments had begun to fail or become partially functional as early as 1982
  • plans to briefly fire two of the spacecraft's thrusters on 21 June so as to spin it up from 19.16 rpm to the mission specification of 19.75 +/- 0.2 rpm
  • spin-up target is 19.733 rpm
  • This burn would utilize spin-up thrusters A and B
  • This optimal spin rate is required in order to properly fire the axial thrusters during the much longer trajectory correction maneuver (TCM) we need to perform to adjust the spacecraft's course
Mars Base

ISEE-3 Propulsion System Overview - Space College - 0 views

  •  
    What it looks lke
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This Week's Sky at a Glance, June 13 - 21 | Sky & Telescope - 0 views

  • Friday, June 20
  • the two brightest stars of summer, Arcturus and Vega, shine equally high overhead as evening grows late: Arcturus in the southwest, Vega toward the east
  • Saturday, June 21
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  • June solstice
  • the Sun reaches its northernmost point in the sky for the year and begins its six-month return south
  • Summer begins in the Northern Hemisphere, where today is the longest day. In the Southern Hemisphere, this is the start of winter and the longest night
  • Mercury
  • lost in the glow of sunset
  • Venus
  • low in the east during dawn
  • Mars (
  • high in the south-southwest in twilight, with Spica to its left
  • sets in the west around 1 or 2 a.m. daylight saving time.
  • Jupiter
  • low in the west-northwest in twilight and sets around nightfall
  • Saturn
  • southeast to south during evening
Mars Base

June 19 - Today in Science History - Scientists born on June 19th, died, and events - 0 views

  • First woman in space
  • In 1963, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova returned to Earth after spending nearly three days as the first woman in space. She had been interested in parachute jumping when she was young, and that expertise was one of the reasons she was picked for the cosmonaut program. She became the first person to be recruited without experience as a test pilot. On 16 Jun 1963, Tereshkova was launched into space aboard Vostok 6, and became the first woman to travel in space. Her radio name was "Chaika," Russian for "seagull." Her flight made 48 orbits of Earth. Tereshkova never made a second trip into space. She became an important member of the Communist Party and a representative of the Soviet government.
  • Eratosthenes
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  • In 240 BC, Eratosthenes, a Greek astronomer and mathematician, estimated the circumference of the earth. As the director of the great library of Alexandria, he read in a papyrus book that in Syene, approaching noon on the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, shadows of temple columns grew shorter. At noon, they were gone. The sun was directly overhead. However, a stick in Alexandria, far to the north, could cast a pronounced shadow. Thus, he realized that the surface of the Earth could not be flat. It must be curved. Not only that, but the greater the curvature, the greater the difference in the shadow lengths. By measurement on the ground and application of geometry, he calculated the circumference of the earth.
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