Atlantis Expected to Launch Today
PreacherTom writes "Following recent delays, NASA makes its fifth attempt to get Atlantis off the launchpad at 11:15 a.m. EDT today. NASA stopped Friday's launch try only 45 minutes before its scheduled departure for a faulty fuel tank sensor: the same glitch that thwarted two previous missions. The launch delay cost NASA $616,000, and if the mission is scrubbed again, the space agency must abandon for a few weeks its efforts to send the shuttle off on a construction mission to the International Space Station."
I just watched it launch.
n/t
according to the clock on the nasa site in 9 minutes we have lift off. god speed.
It's launched, tank's seperated, Atlantis is in space.
--
# Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
$Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
They found a working ZPM?
I don't even like the show that much, but to me, Atlantis == Stargate, especially when I'm just waking up.
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
Was that money spent on things it wouldn't otherwise have been spent on? IE, is it a marginal cost or just that day's "share" of a fixed cost? Did it have to get taken from some other budget (either within NASA or not)?
NASA accounting always confuses me.
The launch went ok, only one issue with a support system for engine cooling (they were assuming there was water in it.) they cycled it and it's working fine. So it's all good for now.
hopefully the flash evaporator problems they were reporting (which have since been cleared to my knowledge) dont flare up again either in orbit or re-entry overall a good launch, i still love the views from the external tank looking down and at the shuttle
-10 Timing.
I just sat at my laptop watching NASA TV (we don't have cable) with my four-year-old and two-year-old explaining as much of the activity as I knew. They got excited and kept gushing "wow!" just at the sight of the shuttle on the pad. When it lifted off, they were both quiet, eyes wide and mouths open. I caught myself with my own mouth open both at the wonder of us going into space and the equally powerful wonder of watching my daughters get this excited about it.
When someone asks me why we have to spend so much money on space exploration, I should have them watch a launch with my daughters. It's all about the thrill of exploration, the daring of it, the wonder of fellow humans climbing up off this planet and touching the stars.
I can't wait to see what we do next.
Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
Well, sort of. I'm in the LA area - and only NBC gave even half-assed coverage of the launch (breaking away for a *very* short period, from an unbelievably moromic show for brain-damaged three year olds). All I caught of the launch was the solid rocket boosters falling away, and a few seconds more, before NBC went back to their normal programing. Of course, the awful NBC coverage was just *slightly* better than the coverage offered by the other area broadcasters in the area (who didn't cover the event AT ALL). It's too bad I can't pull all of their broadcast licenses - if I could, I would: dead air would be an improvement over the absolute garbage on television.
She made it into orbit successfully. Liftoff was at 11:14:55 Eastern time.
i ndex.html
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/launch/
I have a girlfriend whose name doesn't end in
None of the local network TV broadcast stations here bothered to break away from regular programming to cover the launch. They all suck.
Ok I don't get it. The "delay" caused that? Or do they mean that is the costs that arose to "diagnose/fix" the faults detected? I mean, there is a big difference here. They would have had to "fix" the problem no matter what or just scrap the shuttle, so how does that money become the "costs of the delay", when it is really "the costs for maintaining the shuttle"?
We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
Thank goodness it succeeded because if it didn't, space development would be halted for dozens of years because of stupid, useless, braindead politicians in charge of a budget almost as large as their ignorance and folly.
I was about to say 13256278887989457651018865901401704640, but it appears this number is private property.
Posted by CowboyNeal on 09-09-06 11:22 AM
NASA makes its fifth attempt to get Atlantis off the launchpad at 11:15 a.m. EDT today.
What?
NASA TV always has it available. www.nasa.gov and it's a link on the main page. You need RealPlayer or Windows Media Player. It streams the whole thing including the Mission Control guy's narration.
You can watch in Quicktime too,
That's a shame. I watch the whole thing on CBC Newsworld. Odd that foreign countries are more interested in the space programs than America.
Welcome to America :-/
Why didn't they just use the Stargate? Flying to Atlantis is going to take A LONG LONG time!
Envy, of course. (/me is 'foreigner')
I'll do the stupid thing first and then you shy people follow...
Might want to watch last night's episode.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
It always amazes me how fast the shuttle gets up into space, and how quickly it reaches amazing speeds.
So, I guess the question is "How fast can Atlantis make the Kessel Run?" My gues is at least 30 parsecs.
The Internet is generally stupid
"Following recent delays, CowboyNeal makes its Nth attempt to get a timely Atlantis story off the launchpad before it goes stale. He missed Wednesday's news by almost 2 days and will try to get the announcement of Saturdays launch posted on time. The delay costs CowboyNeal 3 karma points, and if he misses the mark again, the Space Cowboy must abandon editing few weeks while he lets his karma recover.
UPDATED: Sat 11:22AM: He missed the mark.... Again."
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
When someone asks me why we have to spend so much money on space exploration, I should have them watch a launch with my daughters. It's all about the thrill of exploration, the daring of it, the wonder of fellow humans climbing up off this planet and touching the stars.
Um...not to be cynical, and Slashdotters hate being reminded of these things, but your daughters are in awe because they don't know that:
Personally, I don't find any thrill in NASA's "exploration", which seems to consist mostly of "let's see what _______ does in space" and the nation's military and scientific elite (yes, military- many of the people you see up there are military officers) playing. There is no "daring" (save the small chance their shuttle will be destroyed) and they're not touching any stars.
Please help metamoderate.
I always hope my tax money, that huge amount sent to the giant black hole, bought at least a bolt on the shuttle, or a tile (good one), or for one of the engineers, or even the guy who cuts the lawn outside Mission Control. I'm always afraid it paid for Karl Rove's expense account, though.
I see you've got all the karma you need. Here's a little kudos to go with it :-)
As always, all IMO. Insert "I think" everywhere grammatically possible.
I get NASA TV and 2 or 3 local channels ALWAYS cover Shuttle launches. Hmmm, probably because I live maybe 15 miles from the pad. Why watch it on TV when you can just walk outside and watch it?
Our founding fathers removed the guys in charge. Be American. Vote incumbents out.
Atlantis is actually named after the Research Vehicle Atlantis, the first ship of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. It was in use from 1931-1964 by WHOI, and apparently is still in use in Argentina.
All of the shuttle orbiters are named after sailing ships which were involved in research or exploration.
Worst...sig...ever!
Attach two solid rocket boosters to that slice of cake, light it up, and THEN see how much they're amazed.
Yeah, I'm as old as my UID would suggest.
Break away and interrupt my Jerry Falwell?
Are you some kind of crazy, boy!?
My Computer Music Tutorial Videos
Wasn't the original idea behind the Shuttle that it would be launching so often it wouldn't be a special event? :) I know that goal is now impossible, but it's still kind of funny that you'd be mad about a lack of coverage.
You did, it's due to NASA using the Microsoft Windows release schedule. Okay it's launching now... no now... no now... bit laters... no now... no now... okay we'll launch it when were ready!
In the not too distant future, next Sunday A.D.
TV channels have schedules. Shuttle launches don't. You can't expect them to dedicate a day's programming to an event that they don't know when is going to happen, or whether it's going to happen at all. If it does happen, you can't expect them to disrupt their normal programming because it's not that important an event.
The only times programming should be interrupted is acts of terrorism or large natural disasters, not expensive scientific experiments. There are things happening all over the world that have just as much scientific value as the shuttle launch, should they also get blanket coverage?
Why ? The chances are that if you didn't already know about it, then neither will affect you directly in any way. There's no reason why either should get immediate coverage. Besides, terrorism thrives on attention; interrupting the programming for it is a great way of helping terrorists spread terror.
The best response for terrorism is to continue the programming as normal and then cover the event in evening news. Interrupting the programming will inflate the fear generated by the strike and therefore help terrorists. It won't help anyone else, except ratings.
As for natural disasters, again, unless you happen to be in their route the chances are that you don't need to know immediately. They, too, can wait until evening news.
Besides, in the end, natural catastrophes are basically just big accidents and terrorism is a few maniacs murdering people. Neither is likely to have a lasting impact, unless we are talking about an extinction level event. Shuttle launches - all space vechile launches - on the other hand are absolutely vital for the future of humanity as a species, and certainly deserve coverage.
Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.
It took off over 5 hours ago..
For those who hates streaming video, here is a 14 MB MP4 one that can be downloaded.
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
I'm in Australia, and a huge follower of spaceflight and the ISS construction. The launch was a quarter past twelve in the morning, local time. I was watching it via streamed NASA TV for a couple hours beforehand. And I did the same thing Friday night until the launch was scrubbed. So yes, we in the rest of the world (ie. the unimportant bit outside the east and west coasts of North America) are definately interested in all this stuff, it's a pity you guys don't spend more money and resources on national treasures such as NASA :(
You must not have cable. It was on C-Span and CNN.
I live in Washington, DC. If I had a dime for everytime I heard someone say "I never visit the museums, the monuments, etc..." I'd be a billionaire. And the museums here are free. Not free as in "we're going to make you feel guilty at the door". No. Really Free. Nobody bothers you at all, except that now there are metal detectors.
Anyway, I think that when something is right in your own backyard, (sort of), there is a tendancy to not appreciate it. Here in the US, there are a lot of people that pay attention to the Brittish Royal Family. Personally, I could care less. I sometimes wonder if the British themselves pay as much attention as some Americans do.
For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
Not to mention HDNet; they have a contract with NASA to cover all shuttle launches through 2010. They provided 5 hours of coverage today, and about 4 hours of coverage leading up to Friday's aborted launch.
including the Mission Control guy's narration
I think that guy should be fired (no offense to him personally). It's starting to sound like an advertisement. Put descriptive text at the bottom of the screen and let everyone watch the show. It doesn't need narration, as spectacular things are trivialized when some moron does "on-the-scene"-type reporting.
Remember "go at throttle up"?
Besides, terrorism thrives on attention; interrupting the programming for it is a great way of helping terrorists spread terror.
Exactly.
Here are some questions for you:
Perhaps we should focus on correcting environmental problems present, instead of pie in the sky escapism.
Please help metamoderate.
I saw it on CNN, they did live coverage of the last 30 seconds of countdown and the whole liftoff, launch and booster separation procedure. Total time about 5 minutes. :)