zenith654
zenith654 t1_j4fqv1n wrote
Reply to The 7 second sunset aboard the International Space Station. More details in comments. by astro_pettit
Very cool, love to have actual crew members posting their photos here. I’ve always wanted to sit in the cupola and watch the sun or watch a vehicle arrive.
zenith654 t1_j3qts4n wrote
Reply to comment by Lucas_7437 in Dead NASA satellite returns to Earth after 38 years | CNN by dem676
Because satellites this is a satellite from decades ago and the US actually has pretty good planned reentries/design for end of life that doesn’t endanger people Vs China still literally drops massive rocket stages on Earth without planning.
Every US rocket has a flight termination system that self destructs if it goes off course to protect the people below, and they’re all launched over the ocean. China just drops the stages on villages as part of its design.
zenith654 t1_j1m1pfi wrote
Reply to A suitable space book by sreyashthesavior
Failure is Not an Option by Gene Kranz or Riding Rockets by Mike Mullane. Both detail a personal history of NASA and inspired me when I was your age.
zenith654 t1_j0z51ad wrote
Reply to comment by Sweetbeans2001 in Which astronauts would be your picks for Artemis III? by Emble12
During Apollo it was also an explicitly political choice to exclude these groups completely, so I think I’m fine with it. If they’re an astronaut they’re already incredibly competent.
zenith654 t1_isk47g9 wrote
Reply to comment by TheHermitofHuron in The Solar System Isn’t Ready to Deal With Humanity’s Garbage by Maxcactus
Low Earth Orbit is already pretty polluted actually. It’s just that this article talks about planetary bodies and interplanetary orbits which is way more vast
zenith654 t1_isk2buj wrote
Reply to comment by TheHermitofHuron in The Solar System Isn’t Ready to Deal With Humanity’s Garbage by Maxcactus
I agree with your first part, but a trajectory to the sun takes so much more propellant than most things
zenith654 t1_j5ynxvh wrote
Reply to What educational books about space should be read for a general idea of it? by happy__teo
Most people are giving great recommendations for general astrophysics/cosmology books, so I’ll go a different direction with space exploration history /engineering.
The book “Failure is Not an Option” by Gene Kranz is an autobiography from a NASA flight director who was in Mission Control for Apollo 11 and 13 and documents NASA history from Mercury to Apollo. It does get very technical and nitty gritty but it’s a great read and lets your realize just how complex space exploration is.