by iamlucky13 » Mon Mar 16, 2009 4:51 am
aristarchusinexile wrote:fatcitymax wrote: " an ISS that's little more than a tourist destination for the Russians, and a management willing to silence its scientists during the Bush administration to suit its political purposes."
You are crediting the ISS to NASA when the U.S. didn't have the technology to lift the main components into orbit?
I'm not sure where you might have gotten that impression, but the US lifted all but two of the major components of the ISS in to orbit (Russia: Zarya and Zvezda; US: Unity, Destiny, Harmony, Columbus, Kibo, Quest, and all seven major pieces of the truss and solar array structure).
Zarya and Zvezda were lifted by the Russians, not because the US couldn't lift them (or the space station Freedom equivalents from before it was the ISS), but because those were components the Russians offered as part of their contribution to the project. Frankly, it was a reasonable use for them, since they were already partially built for the cancelled Mir-2 space station.
Anyways, among space missions, Kepler is one of the more remarkable ones for how it will affect the general public's understanding of their place in the universe, and the cost ($650 million), is relatively low for the amount it will accomplish.
Frenchy wrote:I guess it would have to depend on the interacting energies between the solar systems' within a galaxy.
Galactic collapse of a galaxy might be triggered by W.I.M.P's (Winding Intergalactic Massive Planets), but far as the connection with global warming you're probably right...it would be a bit of a stretch. Large scale volcanic eruptions blocking out sunlight would probably be the best thing to tame global warming.
There are still probably lots of others things to consider too. Blackbody radiation, temperatures in space (is it uniform), and laws of thermodynamics as well (are they the same as on Earth?). A lot of these things I am unfamiliar with.
Kepler won't be used to study the earth's orbit. Regarding the rest of your post, you seem to be putting forth a lot of disjoint ideas, so I don't understand what your overall point or question is. WIMP means "Weakly Interacting Massive Particle" and is a candidate to explain dark matter. No proposed connection to global warming. There is no proposed link between interstellar interaction and volcanoes. Thermodynamics is expected to be the same anywhere else in the universe, and observations generally appear to support this. The temperature of space has long been known to vary, and these variations have been mapped with excellent detail by the WMAP space probe.
And while I'm at it, Chris, great job putting space exploration in context with the rest of human endeavor.
[quote="aristarchusinexile"][quote="fatcitymax"][quote] " an ISS that's little more than a tourist destination for the Russians, and a management willing to silence its scientists during the Bush administration to suit its political purposes."[/quote][/quote]
You are crediting the ISS to NASA when the U.S. didn't have the technology to lift the main components into orbit?[/quote]
I'm not sure where you might have gotten that impression, but the US lifted all but two of the major components of the ISS in to orbit (Russia: Zarya and Zvezda; US: Unity, Destiny, Harmony, Columbus, Kibo, Quest, and all seven major pieces of the truss and solar array structure).
Zarya and Zvezda were lifted by the Russians, not because the US couldn't lift them (or the space station Freedom equivalents from before it was the ISS), but because those were components the Russians offered as part of their contribution to the project. Frankly, it was a reasonable use for them, since they were already partially built for the cancelled Mir-2 space station.
Anyways, among space missions, Kepler is one of the more remarkable ones for how it will affect the general public's understanding of their place in the universe, and the cost ($650 million), is relatively low for the amount it will accomplish.
[quote="Frenchy"]I guess it would have to depend on the interacting energies between the solar systems' within a galaxy.
Galactic collapse of a galaxy might be triggered by W.I.M.P's (Winding Intergalactic Massive Planets), but far as the connection with global warming you're probably right...it would be a bit of a stretch. Large scale volcanic eruptions blocking out sunlight would probably be the best thing to tame global warming.
There are still probably lots of others things to consider too. Blackbody radiation, temperatures in space (is it uniform), and laws of thermodynamics as well (are they the same as on Earth?). A lot of these things I am unfamiliar with.[/quote]
Kepler won't be used to study the earth's orbit. Regarding the rest of your post, you seem to be putting forth a lot of disjoint ideas, so I don't understand what your overall point or question is. WIMP means "Weakly Interacting Massive Particle" and is a candidate to explain dark matter. No proposed connection to global warming. There is no proposed link between interstellar interaction and volcanoes. Thermodynamics is expected to be the same anywhere else in the universe, and observations generally appear to support this. The temperature of space has long been known to vary, and these variations have been mapped with excellent detail by the WMAP space probe.
And while I'm at it, Chris, great job putting space exploration in context with the rest of human endeavor.