Astronauts Begin Final Spacewalk To Repair Hubble
An anonymous reader writes "Astronauts John Grunsfield and Andrew Feustel began the fifth and final spacewalk of their Hubble Space Telescope repair mission this morning at 8:20AM. During their spacewalk the two will install the second battery group replacement in an equipment bay above the Wide Field Camera 2 and next to the compartment where the first battery set was installed on the second spacewalk. Each of the battery module weighs 460 pounds and contains three batteries. The batteries provide electrical power to support Hubble's operations during the night when there's no sun to power the solar arrays."
I'm willing to bet that the batteries don't weigh anything right now. ;) Of course using "mass" as a verb is just taking the piss, so I won't do that. I'm sure someone will.
No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
Check it out on NASA TV if you haven't had the chance yet. Viewing Hubble the way the astronauts see it is a neat experience.
It's actually Wide Field Camera 3 now. It has been exchanged in the first spacewalk.
Let me just say, thanks NASA for the astronaut helmet cams! That footage lets me live out my astronaut fantasies without all the space-induced nausea and military training.
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Seems like it would have been a perfectly valid statement if they added ".... on Earth." to the end of the sentence.
Would you prefer they only talk about the mass of objects in space? (something that wouldn't make sense to the majority of their readers)
Whereas, "460 pounds" makes sense to everyone (well, everyone using the imperial system) even if it's technically incorrect.
There are two possibilities:
1. "Science" Journalist studied journalism in journalism school. He writes ok; but his only science credentials involve being able to "rewrite in his own words" NASA press releases.
2. Science Journalist is a perfectly decent dude, and submitted a story with a mass in kilograms value. He was then smacked down by an editor for violating "standards" that require using imperial measures in the US. Since, as everybody knows, a kilogram is 2.2lbs universally, a simple multiplication brought the copy into compliance with correct standards.
http://twitter.com/Astro_Mike
one of the astronauts is live blogging on twitter from the shuttle
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I've been listening to and occasionally watching all the space walks streaming live on NASA TV while at work. Thats one video site they havent banned yet. I'm listening to the fifth space-walk now. The view is straight down at earth behind the shuttle.
Every once in a while I hear them count off. I think they are counting seconds they apply a tool, but I haven't been paying close attention.
Technically the batteries have the same mass while on Earth as they do while orbiting it. The weight in orbit is zero. (which is the point the above are making)
See here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_versus_weight
wot no sig
If it redirects you to the "no player found" page (as it did for me), try:
mplayer -playlist 'http://playlist.yahoo.com/makeplaylist.dll?id=1369080&segment=149773'
(The original link is http://www.nasa.gov/55644main_NASATV_Windows.asx , but MPlayer doesn't seem to be able to handle multiple levels of playlists.)
As one who (perhaps from Kubrick's 2001) had a sense of EVA actions being slow, deliberate things, it's neat to see that the work's going practically as smoothly as if it was being done in a lab.