X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 7997;andrew.cmu.edu;Ted Anderson
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Thu, 12 Apr 90 02:08:58 -0400 (EDT)
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Date: Thu, 12 Apr 90 02:08:17 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: SPACE Digest V11 #251
SPACE Digest Volume 11 : Issue 251
Today's Topics:
Payload Status for 04/10/90 (Forwarded)
Re: Pegasus launch from Valkyrie (or ...
Payload Status for 04/11/90 (Forwarded)
Re: HST Images (long)
Re: Interview with head of Glavkosmos (long: 226 lines)
>>I predict there'll be HST images adorning the popular astronomy
>>magazines every month or two, and lots appearing in general science
>>magazines you can buy at the newsstand.
>
>So what? The word, in case you've forgotten, is "digital". Glossy photos
>we *know* NASA will release.
>--
I have access to a 300 dpi digital color scanner and have made numerous GIF
images of Voyager photos from magazines and books. The resolution is
640x480x256; typical file size is 200K. While obviously not "raw science
data" I suppose they might be interesting to manipulate digitally.
They typically come out better than the frame-grabbed images I've seen.
I'd like to offer them to anyone interested, but having no access to an ftp
site, I can't put them in a place where they can conveniently be retrieved.
If anyone with ftp access would volunteer, I could mail them the floppies
(what a network!) and they could upload them to the ftp site.
Also, I would like to know if there is a good source for Voyager photographs.
Magazine photos digitize on my scanner pretty well if they are 1/2 page
or larger, but with smaller photos I start seeing evidence of the four-color
printing process when the image is blown up. I'd love to get 8x11 or larger
glossies.
Thanks,
Joe Knapp att!cbnews!jmk
------------------------------
Date: 11 Apr 90 15:14:13 GMT
From: zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!samsung!cs.utexas.edu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!watserv1!watdragon!watyew!jdnicoll@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (Brian or James)
Subject: Re: Interview with head of Glavkosmos (long: 226 lines)
In article <134248@sun.Eng.Sun.COM> fiddler@concertina.Sun.COM (Steve Hix) writes:
>In article <1990Apr9.203305.10907@Neon.Stanford.EDU>, jchapin@Neon.Stanford.EDU (John M. Chapin) writes:
>> Dunayev's comments about ozone depletion really surprised me.
>> If this hasn't been thrashed out in this newsgroup recently,
>> would someone please comment on:
>>
>> 1) Is he correct in estimating that 300 shuttle launches could
>> significantly affect the ozone layer?
>
>Perhaps 300 simultaneous launches, evenly distributed over the earth?
>No idea of how long the hole in the ozone layer persists after the
>launch.
They wouldn't be evenly distributed, would they? I'd expect
clustering in launch facilties [Mid-Florida, Northern South America,
a couple of sites in Asia] just to avoid needless duplication of
launch resources. Mind you, most launch sites are as close to the equator
as convinient, and the ozone munching processes seem to run with
maximum efficiency at the poles [Of course, CFCs seem to got the
problem of getting to the poles solved, and they get used mostly in
temperate countries].
If there *is* an upper limit to tolerable launch rates, it will
be interesting to see how launches get allocated. Is there an
obvious international authority for this kind of thing [and does