First Controllable Solar Sail Launched Today
clustermonkey writes "The first controllable solar sail was launched earlier today from a Russian sub in the Barents Sea. The Planetary Society, founded by Carl Sagan, organized the project and were funded by Cosmos Studios, founded by Sagan's widow. There have been 2 other solar sail deployments by others, but this will be the first to attempt controlled flight. The sail is scheduled to deploy June 25." All may not be well, though: Snot Locker writes "The Cosmos 1 Weblog is showing that, although the launch initially looked successful, they can't seem to find it or hear it. Bummer. Previous Slashdot coverage on the Cosmos 1 Solar Sail mission can be found here."
It's a bit more than a "Bummer":
Engineer #1: Yessiree, that solar sail is up there! This calls for a celebration!
Engineer #2: Um. Where is it?
Engineer #1: [points] Up there!
Engineer #2: Where up there?
Engineer #1: Way, way up there.
Engineer #2: You have no idea, right?
Engineer #1: [weak laugh] Nah.
Engineer #1: [shrug] Bummer.
I'm just waiting for when it comes back as a near omnipotent being and starts demanding to see it's creator.
Waiting for an amusing sig.
The requested URL (science/05/06/21/2251211.shtml?tid=160&tid=126&t
...
Unfortunately I can't locate a google cache for the missing spacecraft.
Anyone able to post a mirror?
When I tied a Keep on Truckin' T-shirt to an Estes Andromeda.
In other words, what you're trying to say is that somewhere downrange of post-Soviet Russia, solar sail will eventually find yo*CRUNCH*
NO CARRIER
Engineer #1: A few hundred kilometers that way or this way wouldn't matter...
Engineer #2: Miles
Engineer #1: What do you mean "miles"?
pwnd!
... it must be halfway to Coruscant by now.
Don't blame me, I voted for Durga.
Actually, I'm betting that this time it was due to a spelling error. The sub that launched the Volna rocket was the Borisoglebsk, The first receiving station was at Petropavlovsk on the Kamchatka penninsula. The temporary ground station to pick it up next was on Majuro. Then it will next contact Panska Ves in the Czech republic. It's not until the ground stations at the Tarusa and Bear Lakes that the spelling becomes sufferable. :)
The War of 1812... the good 'ol days when the federal government actually tried to save New Orleans.
I know what really happened
You see, the Russians never launched Cosmos 1, they realized that these guys would be a bunch of suckers so what they did, is they got them to pay for the launch, and then launched their own new spy satellite In the same orbit that Cosmos 1 was supposed to be in. And now they are going to tell them "tough luck, you must have out bad communications equipment on her or something". So the Americans pay the money, and the Russians get to launch their spy satellite.
Next Week on Conspiracy Theory 101
Sony and Microsoft are really in bed against Nintendo!
Call is sour grapes if you will, but I'm proud to be an american. Besides, we are forced learn metric in school from the time we're young. We "choose" to be different.
You sure do.
...hanging out with the Vikings.
Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
It's in space!
Go ahead and call me unreliable; reliable is just a synonym for predictable.
It uses a solar anchor.
Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
I'll probably get modded down for this, but...
... check
:)
The Project Operations Assistant.
Let's review:
Sexy foreign (to me) accent... check
Geek... check
Cute... check
Knows how to blog... check
Plays with models all day long
Gets to work with stuff that makes a REALLY BIG BOOM... check
Can take a joke... we'll see.
If I knew the wedgies I gave you back in 6th grade would have resulted in this . . . I might have taken a moments pause.
Link for those too young to remember.
From the story:
the first stage engine experienced "a spontaneous stoppage" 83 seconds into launch. The vehicle was allowed to continue flying because it lacked a destruct system. But there has been no further confirmation of the report.
I just love that. The vehicle was "allowed" to continue to fly, because there's no way in hell they could stop it... Oops.
Well, I hope it's doing ok, wherever it is.
Gieven the young average age of the slashdot crowd, many may not be familiar with the joys of BBS'ing on modems, so I dare say that in post-Soviet Russia, no carrier jokes are for old people.
I mean, in post Soviet Russia, ICBM welcomes you as overlord for old people.