Astronaut Loses Tools While Performing an EVA
tpheiska writes "NASA press release states that 'At approx. 3:33 p.m. EST, Piper reported that one of the Braycote lubrication guns had released grease into her toolbag. As she was cleaning the bag and wiping the tools and equipment inside, the bag floated away. Another bag carrying identical equipment is now being shared by Piper and Bowen.' Luckily they had a spare."
Why isn't the tools bag somehow linked to the suit? with a strap or something ...
Maybe some other people also haven seen the anime "Planetes" that is about space debris collectors because too much stuff was lost in space that it was dangerous with all the stuff flying around.
Lets say it starts with a screw flying at high speed at a space ship that went "boom".
It might really become a problem in the future.
NASA just added $750 million to the rapidly growing U.S. national debt to send up a repair mission for a purposeless low-orbit space station that we never needed and can't afford.
Now go ahead, mod me down, tell me about how space is our future, repeat some urban legends about NASA developing velcro, tell me how relatively small NASA's budget is, etc. It still won't change the facts that the U.S. government is headed at an increasingly rapid pace towards bankruptcy, each shuttle mission runs around $650-$750 million, the ISS has served little practical prupose, and that a very expensive low-orbit vehicle like the shuttle also serves little real purpose anymore, except to serve the aforementioned ISS.
The shuttle and the ISS are money-sinks. I'm sorry, but for a long tiem the U.S. government has been spending like a teenager with dad's credit card. If we're going to have any chance of getting the deficit under control before the dollar becomes worthless and we become a debtor nation, we have to stop deluding ourselves on these old science fiction dreams that just aren't practical in the real world that we live in. It's down to what we REALLY NEED at this point, not what we WANT.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Story goes, the Apollo missions were supposed to run on reduced cabin pressure. 80% of air is just fairly useless nitrogen, so they figured, we can get away with a lower pressure but still have the astronauts breathing the same amount of oxygen, if we use a lower pressure but "up" the oxygen content to compensate.
So the Apollo 1 training exercise used a 100% oxygen environment. But since it was done on the ground, they were using pure oxygen at atmospheric-pressure. Now as anyone who's read the regs on bus driving licences knows, pure oxygen is potentially very dangerous stuff. Velcro is deliberately made of soft flexible plastics, and has a very high surface area, and it's been suggested that hot velcro in 1-atmosphere pure oxygen might be somewhat prone to bursting into flames.
Probably perfectly safe in the context of anchoring things in a vacuum, but ... triggers some uncomfortable memories of incinerated astronauts.
Eric Baird