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Sun, 9 Jun 91 01:25:49 -0400 (EDT)
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Date: Sun, 9 Jun 91 01:25:40 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #624
SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 624
Today's Topics:
Payload Summary for 05/20/91 (Forwarded)
Re: Crater Found From 65-Million Year Old Asteriod
Re: Gravity vs. Mass
Re: Asteroid mining
Re: Rational next station design process
UW-Madison Researchers Make Major Discovery Using HST
Re: Fred cut, AXAF and SIRTF funded
Re: Revising a biased history of space science funding
Shuttle reports
Re: Saturn V and the ALS
Re: Why the space station?
NASA Headline News for 05/20/91 (Forwarded)
Administrivia:
Submissions to the SPACE Digest/sci.space should be mailed to
space+@andrew.cmu.edu. Other mail, esp. [un]subscription requests,
should be sent to space-request+@andrew.cmu.edu, or, if urgent, to
Would it possibly be less costly to send the polar corer probe with onboard electron microscope, gas chromatograph, etc, and sample the core every cubic milimeter and take a while to do it, then to transfer the material back to earth, with all the capabilities needed, not to mention the very tiny, but _not_ politically insignificant chance that there might be living spores frozen a goodly way down?
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Date: 20 May 91 17:14:30 GMT
From: usenet@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Peter E. Yee)
Subject: NASA Headline News for 05/20/91 (Forwarded)
Headline News
Internal Communications Branch (P-2) NASA
Headquarters
Monday, May 20, 1991 Audio Service: 202
/ 755-1788
This is NASA Headline News for Monday, May 20, 1991 . . .
NASA officials are continuing efforts to reverse the proposal of the
House Appropriations Subcommittee on VA, HUD and Independent Agencies
to terminate the space station program. Senior management personnel
are meeting this week with key Congressional and Administration leaders
to coordinate their efforts.
The crew of the STS-40 Space Shuttle Columbia arrived at Kennedy Space
Center yesterday afternoon to begin activities in preparation for
launch of their life science mission Wednesday morning. Medical exams
and flight equipment fit checks dominate their schedule today. STS- 40
Commander Bryan D. O'Connor and Pilot Sidney M. Gutierrez will log time
in the Shuttle Training Aircraft today, in preparation for the launch.
This morning, NASA test director Eric Redding termed countdown
operations "nominal" during the countdown status briefing, citing only
a minor instrumentation problem with a humidity separator on board
Columbia. The problem is not expected to affect the launch schedule.
At the launch pad, work continues in setting up Spacelab access
equipment for final preparation prior to launch. The shuttle's
internal power system has been fueled and the Spacelab module is being
powered up today. Checkout of the lab's animal holding facilities is
expected to begin this afternoon and the research animals will be
placed aboard Columbia early tomorrow morning.
Forecasters are watching a low pressure system over the central Gulf
that may affect Wednesday's launch. That system, in combination with
an upper level low pressure trough from the west, could produce lower
level wind conditions that would violate launch criteria. Shuttle
weather officer Ed Priselac predicts the possibility of a 60 percent
chance of weather violating launch criteria at T-minus zero Wednesday
and a 40 percent chance during the entire two-hour launch window.
Similar weather is expected Thursday, with Friday's weather improving.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
NASA announced today that a second Astro mission will fly aboard the
Space Shuttle. Cited as reason for the reflight was the success of the
first mission and the demonstrated ability of the instruments to
acquire high-quality scientific data. The Astro mission will fly the
Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope, the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope and
the Wisconsin Ultraviolet Photopolarimeter Experiment.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Orbiting Venus, the Magellan spacecraft operated its small thrusters
for more than a half hour Friday to slightly adjust its orbit to avoid
duplicating altimeter data obtained during the first phase of its
mapping mission. The new track over the planet's surface will
interleave with the first phase's track. Mapping of the planet was