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Date: Thu, 29 Apr 93 05:00:03
From: Space Digest maintainer <digests@isu.isunet.edu>
Reply-To: Space-request@isu.isunet.edu
Subject: Space Digest V16 #497
To: Space Digest Readers
Precedence: bulk
Space Digest Thu, 29 Apr 93 Volume 16 : Issue 497
Today's Topics:
Command Loss Timer (Re: Galileo Update - 04/22/93)
Death and Taxes (was Why not give $1 billion to...
Gamma Ray Burst Mystery (2 msgs)
HST Servicing Mission Scheduled for 11 Days (2 msgs)
Long Term Space Voyanges and Effect NEwsgroup?
New planet/Kuiper object found?
Report on redesign team
Solid state vs. tube/analog
Tsniimach Enterprise
Vandalizing the sky. (2 msgs)
What planets are habitable
Welcome to the Space Digest!! Please send your messages to
"space@isu.isunet.edu", and (un)subscription requests of the form
"Subscribe Space <your name>" to one of these addresses: listserv@uga
(BITNET), rice::boyle (SPAN/NSInet), utadnx::utspan::rice::boyle
(THENET), or space-REQUEST@isu.isunet.edu (Internet).
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: 27 Apr 1993 16:15:11 GMT
From: Carl J Lydick <carl@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU>
Subject: Command Loss Timer (Re: Galileo Update - 04/22/93)
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro,alt.sci.planetary
In article <1993Apr26.193924.1189@bnr.ca>, jcobban@bnr.ca (Jim Cobban) writes:
=Having read in the past about the fail-safe mechanisms on spacecraft, I had
=assumed that the Command Loss Timer had that sort of function. However I
=always find disturbing the oxymoron of a "NO-OP" command that does something.
=If the command changes the behavior or status of the spacecraft it is not
=a "NO-OP" command.
Using your argument, the NOOP operation in a computer isn't a NOOP, since it
causes the PC to be incremented.
=Of course this terminology comes from a Jet Propulsion Laboratory which has
=nothing to do with jet propulsion.
Of course, the complaint comes from someone who hasn't a clue as to what he's
talking about.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Carl J Lydick | INTERnet: CARL@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU | NSI/HEPnet: SOL1::CARL
Disclaimer: Hey, I understand VAXen and VMS. That's what I get paid for. My
understanding of astronomy is purely at the amateur level (or below). So
unless what I'm saying is directly related to VAX/VMS, don't hold me or my
organization responsible for it. If it IS related to VAX/VMS, you can try to
hold me responsible for it, but my organization had nothing to do with it.
------------------------------
Date: 27 Apr 93 09:41:24 -0500
From: tffreeba@indyvax.iupui.edu
Subject: Death and Taxes (was Why not give $1 billion to...
Newsgroups: sci.space
In article <1993Apr27.072512.439@bby.com.au>, gnb@baby.bby.com.au (Gregory N. Bond) writes:
> In article <1993Apr22.162501.747@indyvax.iupui.edu> tffreeba@indyvax.iupui.edu writes:
>
> ... So how about this? Give the winning group
> (I can't see one company or corp doing it) a 10, 20, or 50 year
> moratorium on taxes.
>
> You are talking about the bozos who can't even manage in November to
> keep promises about taxes made in October, and you expect them to make
> (and keep!) a 50-year promise like that?
We want to give lawyers something to do in the 21st cen., don't we?
>Your faith in the political
> system is much higher than mine. I wouldn't even begin to expect that
> in Australia, and we don't have institutionalised corruption like you
> do.
Oh I bet you do. They are probably just better at it than our crooks. :-)
> --
> Gregory Bond <gnb@bby.com.au> Burdett Buckeridge & Young Ltd Melbourne Australia
> Knox's 386 is slick. Fox in Sox, on Knox's Box
> Knox's box is very quick. Plays lots of LSL. He's sick!
> (Apologies to John "Iron Bar" Mackin.)
Tom Freebairn | We came.
| We saw.
| We went home.
Some early 20th cen. baseball player
Anybody know who or why? (definitly e-mail stuff.)
------------------------------
Date: 27 Apr 93 09:21:57
From: "T. Joseph Lazio" <lazio@astrosun.tn.cornell.edu>
Subject: Gamma Ray Burst Mystery
Newsgroups: sci.physics,sci.astro,sci.space,sci.space
>>>>> On Tue, 27 Apr 1993 00:39:20 GMT, sarfatti@netcom.com (Jack Sarfatti) said:
js> Question: what is the power spectrum of the bursts. Are their sharp lines?
js> If so, can they be interpreted as blue-shifted atomic or molecular lines?
Don't remember the spectra, but have seen some autocorrelation functions
recently. The ACFs show correlation times of milliseconds to 10s of
seconds; interestingly, the higher energies show a shorter correlation
time.
js> Can electron-positron annihilation gammas be seen in the bursts? Are they
js> red shifted or blue shifted?
I believe there were claims from an earlier satellite (Ginga?) of
detection of cyclotron absorption lines. These lines were taken as
strong evidence for neutron stars being the objects responsible for
GRBs since the magnetic field indicated was 1.0E12, fairly typical
for a neutron star. However, Compton GRO has not seen any of these
lines and I get the impression that many are beginning to doubt whether
these lines were ever real.
js> Since the bursts are isotropic and maybe in the galactic halo they may
js> be saying something about dark matter in the halo.
*If* the bursts are in the halo, they most certainly are saying something
about dark matter there. However, if they are in the halo, in order
that they appear isotropic, the "core radius" of the halo (i.e. the
innermost region of the halo) has to be greater than about 50 kpc.
The halo itself would stretch much further than this. Since the
Andromeda Galaxy is only 700 kpc away, we should be seeing bursts
from that galaxy's halo, which we aren't.
js> If the bursts are something like the cosmic black body radiation from
js> way back then where are the red shifts - I mean cosmological red shifts?
Remember to get a redshift, one needs some type of emission or
absorption line so one can compare the observed line frequency
to the rest line frequency. Since no lines are seen in GRB spectra,
that comparison cannot be made.
--
| e-mail: lazio@astrosun.tn.cornell.edu
T. Joseph Lazio | phone: (607) 255-6420
| ICBM: 42 deg. 20' 08" N 76 deg. 28' 48" W
Cornell knows I exist?!? | STOP RAPE
------------------------------
Date: 27 Apr 93 10:23:43
From: "T. Joseph Lazio" <lazio@astrosun.tn.cornell.edu>
Subject: Gamma Ray Burst Mystery
Newsgroups: sci.physics,sci.astro,sci.space,sci.space
>>>>> On Tue, 27 Apr 1993 00:39:20 GMT, sarfatti@netcom.com (Jack Sarfatti) said:
js> Question: what is the power spectrum of the bursts. Are their sharp lines?
js> If so, can they be interpreted as blue-shifted atomic or molecular lines?
Don't remember the spectra, but have seen some autocorrelation functions
recently. The ACFs show correlation times of milliseconds to 10s of
seconds; interestingly, the higher energies show a shorter correlation
time.
js> Can electron-positron annihilation gammas be seen in the bursts? Are they
js> red shifted or blue shifted?
I believe there were claims from an earlier satellite (Ginga?) of
detection of cyclotron absorption lines. These lines were taken as
strong evidence for neutron stars being the objects responsible for
GRBs since the magnetic field indicated was 1.0E12, fairly typical
for a neutron star. However, Compton GRO has not seen any of these
lines and I get the impression that many are beginning to doubt whether
these lines were ever real.
js> Since the bursts are isotropic and maybe in the galactic halo they may
js> be saying something about dark matter in the halo.
*If* the bursts are in the halo, they most certainly are saying something
about dark matter there. However, if they are in the halo, in order
that they appear isotropic, the "core radius" of the halo (i.e. the
innermost region of the halo) has to be greater than about 50 kpc.
The halo itself would stretch much further than this. Since the
Andromeda Galaxy is only 700 kpc away, we should be seeing bursts
from that galaxy's halo, which we aren't.
js> If the bursts are something like the cosmic black body radiation from
js> way back then where are the red shifts - I mean cosmological red shifts?
Remember to get a redshift, one needs some type of emission or
absorption line so one can compare the observed line frequency
to the rest line frequency. Since no lines are seen in GRB spectra,
that comparison cannot be made.
--
| e-mail: lazio@astrosun.tn.cornell.edu
T. Joseph Lazio | phone: (607) 255-6420
| ICBM: 42 deg. 20' 08" N 76 deg. 28' 48" W
Cornell knows I exist?!? | STOP RAPE
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 16:04:36 GMT
From: Rob Douglas <rdouglas@stsci.edu>
Subject: HST Servicing Mission Scheduled for 11 Days
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.space.shuttle,sci.astro
In article <1993Apr27.094238.7682@samba.oit.unc.edu>, Bruce.Scott@launchpad.unc.edu (Bruce Scott) writes:
|> If re-boosting the HST by carrying it with a shuttle would not damage it,
|> then why couldn't HST be brought back to earth and the repair job done
|> here?
|>
Reboost may not be a problem, if they have enough fuel. If they don't do a
reboost this time, they will definitely have to do one on the next servicing
mission. But try to land a shuttle with that big huge telescope in the
back and you could have problems. The shuttle just isn't designed to land
with that much weight in the payload.
|> Is it because two shuttle flights would be required, adding to the alredy
|> horrendous expense?
|>
of course that is a concern too, and the loss of science during the time
that it is on the ground. plus a fear that if it comes down, some
big-wig might not allow it to go back up. but the main concern, I
believe is the danger of the landing. Just to add another bad vibe,
they also increase the risk of damaging an instrument. Finally,
this is a chance for NASA astronanuts to prove they could build and
service a space station. Hubble was designed for in flight servicing.
bringing the telescope down, to my understanding, was considered
even very recently, but all these factors contribute to the
decision to do it the way it was planned in the beginning.
|> Gruss,
|> Dr Bruce Scott The deadliest bullshit is
|> Max-Planck-Institut fuer Plasmaphysik odorless and transparent
|> bds at spl6n1.aug.ipp-garching.mpg.de -- W Gibson
ROB
--
===========================================================================
| Rob Douglas | SPACE | 3700 San Martin Drive |
| AI Software Engineer | TELESCOPE | Baltimore, MD 21218, USA |
| Advance Planning Systems Branch | SCIENCE | Phone: (410) 338-4497 |
| Internet: rdouglas@stsci.edu | INSTITUTE | Fax: (410) 338-1592 |
===========================================================================
Disclaimer-type-thingie>>>>> These opinions are mine! Unless of course
they fall under the standard intellectual property guidelines.
But with my intellect, I doubt it. Besides, if it was useful
intellectual property, do you think I would type it in here?
--
===========================================================================
| Rob Douglas | SPACE | 3700 San Martin Drive |
| AI Software Engineer | TELESCOPE | Baltimore, MD 21218, USA |
| Advance Planning Systems Branch | SCIENCE | Phone: (410) 338-4497 |
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 15:37:49 GMT
From: Henry Spencer <henry@zoo.toronto.edu>
Subject: HST Servicing Mission Scheduled for 11 Days
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.space.shuttle,sci.astro
In article <1993Apr27.094238.7682@samba.oit.unc.edu> Bruce.Scott@launchpad.unc.edu (Bruce Scott) writes:
>If re-boosting the HST by carrying it with a shuttle would not damage it,
>then why couldn't HST be brought back to earth and the repair job done
>here?
The forces and accelerations involved in doing a little bit of orbital
maneuvering with HST aboard are much smaller than those involved in
reentry, landing, and re-launch. The OMS engines aren't very powerful;
they don't have to be.
--
SVR4 resembles a high-speed collision | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
between SVR3 and SunOS. - Dick Dunn | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 15:39:48 GMT
From: Henry Spencer <henry@zoo.toronto.edu>
Subject: Long Term Space Voyanges and Effect NEwsgroup?
Newsgroups: sci.space
In article <1993Apr26.222659.1@aurora.alaska.edu> nsmca@aurora.alaska.edu writes:
>I vote for a later on sci.space.medicine or similar newsgroup fro the
>discussion of long term missions into space and there affects on humans and
>such..
Why bother with a new newsgroup? If you want to discuss the subject,
*start discussing it*. If there is enough traffic to annoy the rest of
us, we will let you know... and *then* it will be time for a new newsgroup.
--
SVR4 resembles a high-speed collision | Henry Spencer @ U of Toronto Zoology
between SVR3 and SunOS. - Dick Dunn | henry@zoo.toronto.edu utzoo!henry
------------------------------
Date: 27 Apr 93 16:45:05
From: Jan Vorbrueggen <jan@vesta.neuroinformatik.ruhr-uni-bochum.de>
Subject: New planet/Kuiper object found?
Newsgroups: sci.space
In article <C64t8E.6HB@news.cso.uiuc.edu> jbh55289@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu
(Josh Hopkins) writes:
Could someone explain where these names come from? I'm sure there's a
perfectly good reason to name a planetoid "Smiley," but I'm equally sure
that I don't know what that reason is.
Read John le Carre's "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy", "The Honorable Schoolboy"
or "Smiley's People".
Jan
------------------------------
Date: 27 Apr 1993 14:30:35 GMT
From: Andy Cohen <Cohen@ssdgwy.mdc.com>
Subject: Report on redesign team
Newsgroups: sci.space
The following is what they feed to us..... most has been posted already,
but there are a number of items not seen here yet.....
Redesign Activities Update -- Following is the weekly status on redesign,
based on information provided by NASA headquarters.
The station Redesign Team (SRT) provided a detailed status report to the
Advisory Committee on the Redesign of the Space Station on April 22. The
day-long meeting was held in ANSER facilities in Crystal City, VA; topics
covered by the SRT included a preliminary mission and goals statement for
the space station; science, technology and engineering research; the
assessment process; and the design approach. Discussions on management
options and operations concepts also were held.
The Design Teams then presented the three options under study:
Option A - Modular Buildup -- Pete Priest presented the A option. Priest
said the team is working to define a station that meets cost goals and has
identified three distinct phases of evolution - power station, human tended
and permanent presence. The team will define the minimum capability needed
to achieve each phase, the total cost of each phase and the achievable
capability for budget levels. The A option uses current or simplified
Freedom hardware where cost effective and is considering other existing
systems such as the so-called "Bus-1 spacecraft," the orbiter and Spacelab.
The Power Station Capability could be achieved in 3 flights with Freedom
photo voltaic modules providing 20 kW of power. 30-day Shuttle/Spacelab
missions docked to the power station are assumed for this phase.
Human Tended Capability would be provided by the addition of the U.S.
Common Module Module which adds subsystems and 9 payload racks and docking
ports for ESA and Japanese laboratories. 60-day missions with the orbiter
docked to the station are assumed for this phase. Different
operation/utilization modes are being studied for this phase.
Option B - Freedom Derived -- Mike Griffin presented the status of Option
B activities. Griffin detailed the evolution of the Freedom-derived option,
from initial Research Capability, to Human-Tended Capability, to Permanent
Human Presence Capability, to Two Fault Tolerance, and finally Permanent
Human Capability. Griffin also outlined proposed systems changes to the
baseline program, with minor changes to the Communications and Tracking
system, Crew Health Care System and ECLSS, and a major change to the Data
Management System.
Initial Research Capability would be achieved with 2 flights to 28.5 degree
inclination (3 flights to 51.6 degrees) and consist of an extended duration
orbiter-Spacelab combination docked to a truss segment with 2 photo voltaic
arrays providing 18.75 kW of power.
Human-Tended Capability would be achieved in 6 flights and add truss
segments and the U.S. lab.
Permanent Human Presence Capability would be achieved in 8 flights with two
orbiters providing habitation and assured crew return.
Two Fault Tolerance, achieved in 11 flights, would build out the other
section of truss with another set of PV modules, thermal control and
propulsion systems.
The freedom derived configuration could achieve an International Complete
state with 16 flights. Three more flights, to bring up the habitat module,
a third PV array and two Assured Crew Return Vehicles (ACRV) would complete
the Permanent Human Capability with International stage.
Griffin told the Redesign Advisory Committee that eliminating hardware
would not, by itself, meet budget guidelines for the Freedom derived
option. Major reductions or deferrals must occur in other areas including
program management, contractor non-hardware, early utilization and
operations costs, he said.
Option C - Singe Launch Core Station -- Chet Vaughn presented Option C,
the Single Launch Core Station concept. A Shuttle external tank and solid
rocket boosters would be used to launch the station into orbit. Shuttle
main engines would be mounted to the tail of the station module for launch
and jettisoned after ET separation.
The module, 23 feet in diameter and 92 feet long, would provide 26,000
cubic feet of pressured volume, separated into 7 "decks" connected by a
centralized passageway. Seven berthing ports would be located at various
places on the circumference of the module to place the international
modules, and other elements. This "can" would have two fixed photo voltaic
arrays producing approximately 40 kW of power flying in a solar interial
attitude.
In his closing comments to the Redesign Advisory Committee, Bryan O'Connor
said a design freeze would be established for the 3 options on April 26 so
that detailed costing of the options can begin. The next meeting with the
Redesign Advisory Committee will be May 3.
Russian Consultants Arrive in U.S. -- A delegation of 16 Russian space
experts arrived in the U.S. on April 21 and briefings to the SRT by members
of the Russian team began on the 22nd. The group includes Russian Space
Agency General Director Y. M. Koptev, and V. A. Yatsenko, also of the RSA.
Others on the team include representatives from the Ministry of Defense,
the Design Bureau SALYUT, the Institute of Biomedical Problems, the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, NPO Energia and TsNIJMASH. The Russian team
briefed the SRT on environmental control and life support system, docking
systems, the Proton launch vehicle, Mir operations and utilization, and the
Soyuz TM spacecraft.
The Russian consultants are available to the SRT to assess the capabilities
of the Mir space station, and the possible use of Mir and other Russian
capabilities and systems as part of the space station redesign. They will
be available to the SRT through May 5.
Management and Operations Review Continues -- Work continued in the SRT
subgroups. The Management Group under Dr. Walt Brooks is working to
develop a family of options that solve the current problems and build a
foundation for the transition to development and operations. Various
management options have been developed including:
Lead Center with the Center Director in the programmatic chain of
command.
Host Center with the Program Manager reporting directly to an Associate
Administrator.
Skunk Works/Dedicated Program Office with a small dedicated co-located
hand-picked program office.
Combine Space Station with Shuttle, with the space station becoming an
element of the current program.
Major Tune Up to Current Organization, with current contracts and
geographical distribution maintained but streamlined.
The Operations Group under Dr. John Cox is building on the work of the
Operations Phase Assessment Team lead by Gene Kranz of NASA-JSC, which had
already begun a comprehensive review of operations and had concluded in its
preliminary results that significant cost reductions are possible.
As part of its work, the Operations Group has identified teams of agency
experts to develop detailed evaluations of each design in the areas of
assembly and operations, utilization, maintenance and logistics and testing
and ground operations.
What's in the Week Ahead? -- The Design Support Teams will provide a
comprehensive status of their option to the Station Redesign Team on Monday
and Tuesday at which point the design will be "frozen" to begin the
detailed cost assessment. Also this week, the team will begin preparing
for the next round of discussions with the redesign Advisory Committee, to
be held May 3.
Dr. Shea Steps Down -- Dr. Joe Shea stepped down as director of the
Station Redesign Team on April 22 and Bryan O'Connor will take over the
activities of the team. Dr. Shea submitted his resignation as assistant
deputy administrator for space station analysis, but will continue to serve
as a special advisory to NASA Administrator Goldin and be available to
consult with the SRT. Mr Goldin accepted the resignation so that a request
from Dr. Shea to reduce his workload could be accommodated.
Key Milestones -- The key dates for the SRT as they are currently being
carried on the schedule are:
April 26
Design Freeze on Options for Costing
April 27
Design Support Team Present Selected Options to SRT
May 3
Status report to Redesign Advisory Committee
May 15
Interim report by Redesign Advisory Committee
June 7
Final report to Redesign Advisory Committee
(Oct. 31-cancellation .....just my opinion...AC)
------------------------------
Date: 26 Apr 1993 23:57:15 -0400
From: Pat <prb@access.digex.com>
Subject: Solid state vs. tube/analog
Newsgroups: sci.space
In article <C6479K.6BA.1@cs.cmu.edu> 18084TM@msu.edu (Tom) writes:
|
|Also, ask any electric-guitar enthusiast which type of amp they prefer, and
|they'll tell you tube-type, since tubes have lower distortion and noise
|than transistors. 'Course, most of your electric guitar types just say
>"Tubes sound better, dude." :-)
>
Of course, they then turn up the REverb, the Gain, add in the analog
delay line and the Fuzz box. I'd think they wouldn't notice the
distortion. Oh I forgot the phase shifters.
>Also, transistors have the advantage in both waste-heat and energy-use,
>mainly because of the heaters on the cathodes of the tubes.
Ah, but how do they compare to Mechanical systems :-)
pat
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 93 20:54:29 EET
From: flb@flb.optiplan.fi (F.Baube[tm])
Subject: Tsniimach Enterprise
From: Wales.Larrison@ofa123.fidonet.org
>
> COMMERCIAL SPACE NEWS/SPACE TECHNOLOGY INVESTOR NUMBER 22
>
> 7- ANOTHER PEGASUS COMPETITOR IS ANNOUNCED
> [..]
> Tsniimach Enterprise is described as a ex-military
> establishment, focusing on aerodynamics and thermal protection
> of spacecraft and which has participated in the development of
> the Buran shuttle system, They are located near the NPO Energia
> facility in Kaliningrad, outside of Moscow.
If this facility is in Kaliningrad, this is not near Moscow,
it is in fact the ex-East Prussian Konigsberg, now a Russian
enclave on the Baltic coast. It is served by ships and rail,
and the intrepid traveller in Europe would find it accessible
and might even want to try to arrange a tour (??).
* Fred Baube (tm) * In times of intellectual ferment,
* baube@optiplan.fi * advantage to him with the intellect
* #include <disclaimer.h> * most fermented
* May '68, Paris: It's Retrospective Time !!
P.S. I'm quite glad that a couple of people stated quite eloquently
the aesthetic/natural objections to the space billboard.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 15:37:07 GMT
From: "George F. Krumins" <gfk39017@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu>
Subject: Vandalizing the sky.
Newsgroups: sci.astro,sci.space
nicho@vnet.IBM.COM (Greg Stewart-Nicholls) writes:
>In <C63nA8.4C1@news.cso.uiuc.edu> George F. Krumins writes:
>>I was suggesting that the minority of professional and amateur astronomers
>>have the right to a dark, uncluttered night sky.
> Sorry, you have a _wish_ for an uncluttered night sky, but it
>isn't a right. When you get down to it, you actually have no rights
>that the majority haven't agreed to give you (and them in the process).
>It's a common misconception that being born somehow endows you with
>rights to this that and the other. Sadly this is not true.
> Now if you want to talk about the responsibility that _should_ go with
>the power to clutter the night sky, then that's a different matter.
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>Greg Nicholls ... : Vidi
>nicho@vnet.ibm.com or : Vici
>nicho@olympus.demon.co.uk : Veni
According to this reasoning there are no rights, at least none that I can think
of....
Let's see. Do I have a right to unpolluted air? No, because the majority
drive cars and use goods that create air pollution in the manufacturing process.
Do I have the right to clean water? I guess not, by the same reasoning.
I could go on with these examples for a long time....
Look at Nazi Germany. Because of the majority, Jews, homosexuals, blacks,
and others that were different had no rights. In fact they were terrorized,
imprisoned, and slaughtered. In this country did blacks have the right to be
free from slavery? I guess not, because the majority said that slavery was
good for them.
I think that a right has a moral imperative. If a law, imposed by the majority,
is immoral, one should not follow it. In fact, one should do everything in
his/her power to stop it. Of course, that doesn't mean that I would lose all
common sense to break the law, just because I thought it was immoral. I pay
my Federal Income Tax even though I am morally opposed to the U.S. Government
taking my money and spending it on weapons of mass destruction and terrorism.
This is precisely the point I am trying to make. We should _persude_ people
by logic, pointing out that it is in their self-interest to let all have
equal rights in all aspects of life, including adequate housing, food, and
medical care. I just happen to think that for a full life the aesthetic of
beauty and joy is also necessary. That is why I consider an uncluttered
night sky a right.
Have you ever been out in the desert, away from local lights, and most people?
The sky is dark and transparent. The Milky Way is ablaze with more detail
than you thought possible. The beauty and wonder takes your breath away.
Now imagine you live in the worst ghetto, say in L.A. Due to light pollution
you have never seen a dark sky. You might in fact never, not in your whole
life, ever see the majesty of the night sky. Every where around you, you see
squalor, and through your life runs a thread of dispair. What is there to live
for?
I admit these two scenarios are extreme examples, but I have seen both.
I, for one, need dreams and hopes, and yes, beauty, as a reason for living.
That is why I consider an uncluttered night sky a right.
George
--
| George Krumins /^\ The Serpent and the Rainbow |
| gfk39017@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu <^^. .^^> |
| Pufferfish Observatory <_ (o) _> |
| \_/ |
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 17:18:04 GMT
From: hathaway@stsci.edu
Subject: Vandalizing the sky.
Newsgroups: sci.astro,sci.space
>Newsgroups: sci.astro,sci.space
>Subject: Re: Vandalizing the sky.
>
My apologies if this is a re-post - I submitted it on Friday, but
got a message that my post might not have gone out. Considering
the confusing spitting contest over 'rights', (there are TOO
inalienable rights damn it! The majority can be just as destructive
of liberty as a despot), I suspect that my post did not get out
of my site. (I ain't saying that dark skies are included in these
rights, although we can only preserve any rights by exercising them.)
Anyway, here are my thoughts on this:
I'd like to add that some of the "protests" do not come from a strictly
practical consideration of what pollution levels are acceptable for
research activities by professional astronomers. Some of what I
would complain about is rooted in aesthetics. Many readers may
never have known a time where the heavens were pristine - sacred -
unsullied by the actions of humans. The space between the stars
as profoundly black as an abyss can be. With full horizons and
a pure sky one could look out upon half of all creation at a time
- none of which had any connection with the petty matters of man.
Any lights were supplied solely by nature; uncorruptable by men.
Whole religions were based on mortal man somehow getting up there
and becoming immortal as the stars, whether by apotheosis or a belief
in an afterlife.
The Space Age changed all that. The effect of the first Sputniks
and Echo, etc. on this view could only happen once. To see a light
crossing the night sky and know it was put there by us puny people
is still impressive and the sense of size one gets by assimilating
the scales involved is also awesome - even if the few hundreds or
thousands of miles involved is still dwarfed by the rest of the universe.
But there is still a hunger for the pure beauty of a virgin sky.
Yes, I know aircraft are almost always in sight. I have to live
in a very populated area (6 miles from an international airport
currently) where light pollution on the ground is ghastly. The
impact of humans is so extreme here - virtually no place exists
that has not been shaped, sculpted, modified, trashed or whipped
into shape by the hands of man. In some places the only life
forms larger than bacteria are humans, cockroaches, and squirrels
(or rats). I visited some friends up in the Appalacian mountains
one weekend, "getting away from it all" (paved roads, indoor plumbing,
malls, ...) and it felt good for a while - then I quickly noticed
the hollow was directly under the main flight path into Dulles - 60-80
miles to the east. (Their 'security light' didn't help matters
much either.) But I've heard the artic wilderness gets lots of
high air traffic. So I know the skies are rarely perfect.
But there is still this desire to see a place that man hasn't
fouled in some way. (I mean they've been TRYING this forever -
like, concerning Tesla's idea to banish night, - wow!) I don't watch
commercial television, but I can imagine just how disgusting beer,
truck, or hemmorrhoid ointment advertisements would be if seen up so high.
If ya' gotta make a buck on it (displaying products in heaven), at
least consider the reactions from those for whom the sky is a last
beautiful refuge from the baseness of modern life.
To be open about this though, I have here my listing of the passage
of HST in the evening sky for this weekend - tonight Friday at
8:25 p.m. EDT it will reach an altitude of 20.1 degrees on the
local meridian from Baltimore vicinity. I'll be trying to see it
if I can - it _is_ my mealticket after all. So I suppose I could
be called an elitist for supporting this intrusion on the night sky
while complaining about billboards proposed by others. Be that
as it may, I think my point about a desire for beauty is valid,
even if it can't ever be perfectly achieved.
Regards,
Wm. Hathaway
Baltimore MD
(P.S. added Tuesday - this again is not a rights/vs./reality tome,
just a warning that someone into destroying beauty had better know
that other people may not accept it without a complaint.)
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 14:14:39 GMT
From: "John S. Neff" <neff@iaiowa.physics.uiowa.edu>
Subject: What planets are habitable
Newsgroups: sci.space
In article <C659w7.IyD@fs7.ece.cmu.edu> loss@fs7.ECE.CMU.EDU (Doug Loss) writes:
>From: loss@fs7.ECE.CMU.EDU (Doug Loss)
>Subject: Re: What planets are habitable
>Date: Tue, 27 Apr 1993 13:38:28 GMT
>In article <JPG.93Apr27135219@holly.bnr.co.uk> jpg@bnr.co.uk (Jonathan P. Gibbons) writes:
>>I would appreciate any thoughts on what makes a planet habitable for Humans.
>>I am making asumptions that life and a similar atmosphere evolve given a range
>>of physical aspects of the planet. The question is what physical aspects
>>simply disallow earth like conditions.
>>
>>eg Temperature range of 280K to 315K (where temp is purely dependant on dist
>> from the sun and the suns temperature..)
>> Atmospheric presure ? - I know nothing of human tolerance
There are people who have adapted to high altitudes in the Andes and in
Tibet. I suspect that it took them several generations to make the
adaptation because Europeans had difficulty making the adaptation. They
had to send the women to a lower altitude when they were pregnant in order
to insure sucessful childbirth.
>> Planetary Mass ? - again gravity at surface is important, how much
>> can human bodies take day after day. Also how does the mass effect
>> atmosphere. I thinking of planets between .3 and 3 times mass of the
>> earth. I suppose density should be important as well.
>>
Another factor you should consider is the X-ray opacity of the atmosphere
in case of stellar flares, the uv opacity is also important because uv
radiation can kill or damage microbes, plants, and animals.
>>Climate etc does not concern me, nor does axial tilt etc etc. Just the above
>>three factors and how they relate to one another.
>>
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End of Space Digest Volume 16 : Issue 497
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