A Bittersweet Finale For Discovery Space Shuttle
Julie188 writes "The shuttle Discovery re-entered the Earth's atmosphere for the last time Wednesday to close out the space plane's 39th and final voyage. And so marks the beginning of the end for America's shuttle program. Everything about the last flight felt epic, from how it overcame a down-to-the-last-second problem to launch on its final mission in February, to its sunny final landing this week. As it coasted to a stop, Discovery's odometer stood at some 5,750 orbits covering nearly 150 million miles, during 39 flights spanning a full year in space — a record unrivaled in the history of manned rockets."
Only 2:30, but here is NASA's landing video from their Youtube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/NASAtelevision#p/a/724782A8B8BE3EE5/0/Drv0SS1rCpk
"Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
You'll soon be able to buy astronaut ice cream with a chinese space program theme. That and watch them go to the moon, then mars, all while NASA rocket scientists are driving cabs and eating government cheese.
I have to give credit to NASA. Their HD real-time stream was great! I was able to put it full screen on my 23" monitor, sit back, and enjoy the whole thing!
yeah, just watch, the odometer'll read 750 orbits when they trade it in!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Don't wanna close my eyes, don't wanna fall asleep, cause I'd miss you baby, and DON'T WANNA MISS A THIIIING
50,000 characters used to live here.
If only we knew what comes next.
It seems every 4-8 years a new 20 year plan is given to NASA that may or may not have anything to do with the last 20 year plan. Between politics and NASA's own bureacracy, it seems that the US manned space program is stalled. Thank goodness we still have JPL and its hardy unmanned probes.
While we are getting rides from Russia to install experiments from the EU and Japan, perhaps our private sector will advance enough to pick up where NASA left off. Here's to you, Burt Rutan.
As someone who was there watching the launch in person, it was definitely a nail biter. Forty seconds left in the launch window, though I suppose they could have waited a day and gone up then.
It almost got delayed a day anyway. There's a minimum separation time between when one ship leaves ISS and another one docks, and if they had held fast to that schedule, it would have been delayed until Friday because of the late departure of... I think it was a Soyuz mission. They decided to override that and go on Thursday anyway. Either way, there presumably was an alternate launch window already planned for Friday.
The best part was how many people reacted to the original mission schedule in the same way. NASA's banners said that it would be up for 10 days and spend 363 days in orbit. Immediately, my reaction was, "Wait... you're within two days of being up there for a year, and you're not going to do it?" Well, they extended the mission by two days.
And just to anthropomorphize the shuttle a bit, I don't think general purpose computer 5 was ready to go to a museum. It failed to shut off. I particularly liked the controller's comment when he said that they'd be sure not to use that switch on the next flight. Hilarious.
Wow. Just... wow.
Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.
I just thought I should point that out. The picture of me aboard the shuttle totally added to the epicness of it all.
(And yes, I printed out my flight certificate already, though no one in my office was nearly as impressed with it as I.)
Sweet informative mod.
I have been feeling that the shuttle program was a big mistake for NASA. It's had too many problems, never flew as often as it was supposed to, and couldn't get out of low orbit, and has been shut down too many times, and cost more than it should have per launch. It might have been ok if they could have flown monthly as was originally planned, but it never even approached that ideal.
What would have happened if they dropped the shuttle program early on, and did anything different for manned flight. The shuttle program is known more for its problems than for its successes. It never grabbed much public attention, and became more of a "another shuttle launched? when did that happen?". It didn't have a plan to evolve, so we have been stuck with the same technology for these long years. A non-reusable program would, at least, give us more chances to evolve the design.
Who would win this election: Andrew Weiner vs Andrew Weiner's weiner.
If it hadn't been for all their schizophrenic dipshit specifications (polar orbit launches from Vandenburg, etc.) the Shuttle might have been designed to live up to the hype, instead of the camel-by-committee it turned out to be. As it is, we're retiring a 27 year-old vehicle which spent 365 days on orbit. The "space pickup truck" flew 39 missions - that's not even close to two a year. Still, a decent ship we learned a lot from. Maybe the commercial people will learn to stick to a single mission criteria envelope.
No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
n/t
IMHO, The end of the shuttle program is due to massive amounts of tax dollars wasted on unnecessary bureaucratic expenses. The only things in orbit thanks to NASA are the profits and salaries of a whole lot of parasites. The shuttle was successful despite NASA's incompetent and grossly overpaid senior management.
who occupy the White House and Congress. Who are more concerned with staying in power and therefor buying off friends, family, and supporters, with our money instead of keeping America great. America has become their second priority behind themselves. Where we have such a convoluted tax system that the IRS's budget is two thirds of NASA's.
While I was not a fan of the shuttle program for many years it is the image people most associate with the American space program. They were big, bold, and beautiful, compared to simple rockets. Each launch was impressive. Unfortunately tragedy and money being directed at buying off people for votes will keep us from getting back to the good days of NASA. Sure we still fly the occasional probe and such but they don't inspire me at least, not like seeing men do something up "there".
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Hopefully NASA can roll it back a few million before putting it up for sale. What's the KBB on a used space shuttle?
Do you have ESP?
the one we're in has way too short a future, for way too many of us. must be worn out, used up, out of time/space/sequence? no turning back.
He'll be remembered as the anti-Kennedy for shutting down the US manned space program. The shuttles were only 35% through their rated lifespan. Obama didnt help much by shutting down its successor.
A thousand years from now people will probably remember the brief flash-in-the-pan which was the Space Program, rather than any US president or middle-eastern war.
You're an idiot and a troll. You have no appreciation whatsoever for the engineering or contingency planning involved. If you want to bitch about government waste, take a look at the Defense Department, which gets more like 50% of the budget, rather than at NASA, which gets more like 1%.
No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
The thing that so many "the space shuttle was a waste" commentors forget is that the effect that it has on the imaginations of the children and youth world wide. I changed my entire career path because I wanted to be an astronaut. My children would not have been born other wise. (I wouldn't have gone to Naval flight school and would not have met my then wife) And that's just one family. The manned space program shows what we can do when we strive and work together. The intangible benefits and the knowledge learned are worth as much, if not more, than the actual accomplishments. We pushed back the boundries of the possible. We showed what can be done when we work together.
Its WAY more than just an economic proposition.
Of course there is definitely a place for unmanned missions, but its not an either or, its a balance.
So yes I guess I WAS a BIG fan of the shuttle and the space program in general.
I will miss them, but I do look forward to whats next.
We have lost our ambitions for spaceflight. Drones and unmanned craft will be a hollow replacement for the human experience.
"Everything about the last flight felt epic"
including the cost
NASA are boring.
Yep. They're also chamfering, planing, adhering, and vibration-testing. Among about 10,000 other things.
So the only reason the shuttle remained was to get to the station, and the only reason the station remained was to have a place for the shuttle to go.
Almost everything else got cut for budget reasons, etc.
So, now that the shuttle is all done, that means the station is all done and will be deorbited rather soon, correct?
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
There has to be a simple reason why they don't leave it up there, but I don't know what it is. It costs $$$ for every kilo that goes into orbit. It's an airtight space full of equipment and other useful things. It has engines and a bit of leftover fuel that could be used for station keeping.
What aren't the shuttles just made a permanent part of the station and source of parts and the crew just sent down via MIR or something?
-- your Web browser is Ronald Reagan
US Government's Plan for Nasa - 2011 to 2031:
-Gradually close down the US space program and subcontract all spaceflight to private sector companies
-Sell off the shuttles so we can finally pay off our pawn loan and get that sweet guitar back
-Lose edge on space-based achievements and discoveries to other more honest nations that don't have need to over-fund stealing oil from the middle east
-Divert all space funding to an illegitimate war for control of a doomed source of fuel
-Gradually divert all science, math, reading, arts, and education funding to the same false war
-Lose all respect from your citizens
(Present)
-Give up once China, the UK, and various other countries with their shit together own our giant slab of faux democracy, only to be turned into a hovercar parking lot by the Japanese
If the only way you can accept an assertion is by faith, then you are conceding that it can't be taken on its own merits
My three year old is fanatical about space, planets, the moon, astronauts, everything. How am I supposed to explain to him that our "great" country doesn't do any of that stuff any more? What sort of answer can I give him that doesn't sound a complete fucking cop-out? I have yet to think of one.
As it coasted to a stop, Discovery's odometer stood at some 5,750 orbits covering nearly 150 million miles, during 39 flights spanning a full year in space — a record unrivaled in the history of manned rockets.
I'd like to offer you $1 for this piece of crap beater - I'm sure it will save you money in the cost of scrapping it.
There are pseudo-intellectuals, and then there are anti-intellectuals. You know, the people who make hasty generalizations, talk to stereotypes, and defend what is against their own interests with play yard tactics like name-calling and ordering others to go live somewhere else.
When a shuttle lands and rolls to a stop, does the crew call out "Wheels Stopped", or is it "Wheel Stop"? I always thought it was the latter, and it bugs me to no end that most transcripts and news stories about landings always print the former. Yeah, it's a small nitpick, but as the shuttle program winds down it's time to get all the little stuff put to bed.
Congratulations to Discovery and all who built, flew and maintained her lo these many years. You will be missed.
NASA still has about 58 "active astronauts". NASA had 95 in 2005, which was far too many for the number of flights.. Downsizing will continue.
One ex-astronaut was recently annoyed that JSC pulled his pass. Ex-astronauts used to be entitled to visit NASA installations.
... people will be ranting that there never was any such thing as the space shuttles, and that airplane-looking-thingy with "Discovery" painted under the pilot's windows, that's sitting in the Smithsonian is just some kind of old, elaborate movie prop.
I wonder if it's worth more whole or if they break it up and sell the parts.
Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
...spent on the Shuttle and ISS had been spent on robotic probes and more Hubble / Kepler / Weber-like telescopes, we would today probably:
- got back samples from Mars, Europa, Enceladus and Titan,
- have a pretty good idea about whether there was/is bacterial life on these,
- have a consequent catalog of known earth like exo-planets,
- have detected oxygen and methane on some of them with ratio similar to our atmosphere,
- be working like crazy to build The Space Telescope allowing use to see the surface of the latter ones.
It damn sure ain't obvious that a dozen people can get the job done quicker and/or better than one, when all are nodding after drinking the same kool-aid and marching like lemmings to the same death-drummer perfect decisions.
US excel at irrational consensus, blame-storming, and career-management.
CN excel at irrational obedience, blame-covering, and career-management.
Not much damn difference in the box, the labeling for US is prettier.
Unaccountable leaders are masters, and unrepresented people are slaves. How do US and EU fare?
I am truly sad at this great moment in history. Farewell Discovery. You have flown well. You have carried our greatest dreams, lifted us up after tragedy, and inspired the hearts and minds of millions. Adieu. We will always remember you.
Number Five is Alive!
and nothing of value was lost
So on this day, President Barak Hussain Obama aka Obama-Vision, succeeded in killing the NASA Space Transportation System.
-308
never was so much spent to put so little into space so riskily as with the shuttle. bye bye. and dont let the door hit you in the ass on the way out. time to bring back something akin to the saturn v. it cost about the same as the shuttle, and put 6 times the payload into orbit, without a single failure, all before the shuttles time. falcon XX would be about right
...and thanks for all the fish!
Nope, the shuttle odometer pales into insignificance compared to the two Voyager craft, which have travelled more than a billion miles and are still flying.
Given that it has done many millions of miles at "high" speeds. How much younger than the earth is it now than when it started?
long-windedly, tl;dr-ingly stumping for the time-tested, well-proven system known as Communism. GoodLuckWithThat.
39 missions. The design goal we were sold on was a lifespan of 100 missions and that should have taken just a few years to accomplish.
And how many of the parts in the current parts on Discovery are still original? Reusable? I don't think these things fit that description.
Yes, many neat and interesting things have come of the space shuttle program, but it was a failure when measured against of the original design goals. It was more expensive, less reliable, less repairable, and flew fewer missions and less often than it was supposed to.
To put it in perspective, would you call your car re-usable if you could only drive it every third day instead of whenever you wanted? Would you consider it a good value if it came promised with a 100,000 mile useful life and you had to retire it after on 30,000 miles? Would you spend the money to have it completely overhauled every time you used it?
I'm for happy to see the shuttle program go, lets invest the money in a space vehicle program than can deliver what SST promised 30 years ago.
Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
"Think it would be hard to make an automated McDonald's? Of course not." - by hairyfeet (841228) on Thursday March 10, @12:38AM (#35439614)
Well, ITT Tech Boy: I am one of the folks that actually programmed some parts of the "bump bar" system that MickieD's, Burger King, & Boston Market eateries use, and you yourself have most likely used before indirectly (that system takes & tracks customer orders from the registers on down the line to the kitchen people etc., & a lot more back to you as the customer in reporting etc. & back to main offices @ "day end")...
It's NOT "easy", & it's NOT a small program either, as of 1997 the last time I worked on it @ least (VB coded menu system for mgt. personnel & more in C/C++ to "talk back" to the server systems via their OWN middleware & network protocols even...).
(However - it is a repetitive as hell object-oriented monster, and a typical "Client-Server" design from the franchises back to the main office where all the materials come from & go back to)
Still, as YOU seem to imply (especially from the "likes of you", a mere TECHIE @ most), as to it being "so easy to do"? Please... have YOU done the same level of work?? I doubt it, & until you have??? Don't speak!
APK
P.S.=> Big talkers like you, amaze me... it's ALL "so easy to do", sure sure... can YOU do that? HAVE YOU DONE THAT OR EVEN PART OF IT?? I doubt it, espeically as I know you can't program yourself to save your LIFE... but, "sure is 'EASY'" though... not! apk
You were asked if you'd ever done anything like your BIG MOUTH said was "easy" in "automating McDonalds"... lol, you stupid little "techie"... have you?
No.
It is also FUNNY how you avoid questions put to you, everytime... just like you did here in the past also:
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1930156&cid=34734160
(LMAO!)
No small wonder you went to "ITT Tech", & here is what folks say, about that "bad move":
http://slashdot.org/story/11/03/07/1552215/Can-For-Profit-Tech-Colleges-Be-Trusted
(Especially when it produces "no minds" like you, that act the "big shot" but haven't done shit with themselves... just like you)
APK
P.S.=> ITT Tech boy: All you're capable of, is a LOT OF TALK, but no real action (especially ones that have done well that others in this field have noted as good in written respected publications, trade show contests, or commercial softwares (as I have on ALL accounts there, many times))
I also like how you used arstechnica, lol... ask Jeremy Reimer, or Jay Little (both of whom impersonated me there and on their own forums, with DEATH THREATS no less, & had their sites removed by their hosting providers... lol!)... ask them the 1 single question I asked of them (same as I asked you), of what had any of them EVER done that did well in software? Not a SINGLE ONE could... just like you, loser! apk