Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 0;andrew.cmu.edu;Network-Mail Received: from po2.andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl@andrew.cmu.edu (->+dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl) (->ota+space.digests) ID ; Wed, 20 Jul 88 23:58:41 -0400 (EDT) Received: from andrew.cmu.edu via qmail ID ; Wed, 20 Jul 88 23:57:37 -0400 (EDT) Received: by andrew.cmu.edu (5.54/3.15) id for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl; Wed, 20 Jul 88 23:56:48 EDT Received: by angband.s1.gov id AA22004; Wed, 20 Jul 88 19:06:06 PDT id AA22004; Wed, 20 Jul 88 19:06:06 PDT Date: Wed, 20 Jul 88 19:06:06 PDT From: Ted Anderson Message-Id: <8807210206.AA22004@angband.s1.gov> To: Space@angband.s1.gov Reply-To: Space@angband.s1.gov Subject: SPACE Digest V8 #285 SPACE Digest Volume 8 : Issue 285 Today's Topics: Re: Space cities--replies Re: NASA news - Seasat Re: NASA news OZONE cont. New Ideas OZONE depletion NASA Deep Space Network to support Soviet Phobos mission (Forwarded) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 29 Jun 88 16:58:00 GMT From: mcvax!ukc!dcl-cs!nott-cs!pyr1.cs.ucl.ac.uk!william@uunet.uu.net Subject: Re: Space cities--replies Very interesting. Only one quibble ... In reply to John Turner's contribution, is it true that spin gravity is not similar to real gravity? This city would have to be some miles in diameter (I assume - I didn't get the original posting) so I would have thought the variation in the effective gravity would be minute over small movements. As (I think!) the effective gravity is proportional to the distance from the centre, a 10cm head-nod on a 5km radius ring would cause a force variation of 2e-5. Could a human detect this change? Of course, if you had a small radius and used a long cylinder then you would definitely get some effect. ... Bill ************************************************************************ Bill Witts, CS Dept. * UCL, London, Errrp * Don't believe everything you hear, william@uk.ac.ucl.cs(UK) * or anything you say. william@cs.ucl.ac.uk(US) *********************************************** ------------------------------ Date: 1 Jul 88 00:31:39 GMT From: aplcen!aplcomm!stdc.jhuapl.edu!jwm@mimsy.umd.edu (Jim Meritt) Subject: Re: NASA news - Seasat In article <1313@daisy.UUCP> wooding@daisy.UUCP (Mike Wooding) writes: }In article <13979@shemp.CS.UCLA.EDU>, khayo@sonia.math.ucla.edu (Eric Behr) writes: }< Downloaded from NASA SpaceLink BBS, Huntsville, Ala. (205) 895 0028 }< a radar altimeter to }< measure the height of the ocean surface and waves; } } How does the radar altimeter decouple its "height" above ocean } surface from the "height" of the ocean's surface? What scales } are involved (+-10 meters)? A reference point? There is an altimeter on the geosat that is a follow-up to the seasat one. I do the real-time processing of the data - you not only get "height above ocean", but significant wave height, winds, and a measure of roughness off the altimeter. (probably more, but that is all I lift). This can be used to get current "edges", fronts, eddy locations, and all kinds of neat stuff. I asked about satellite oceanography earlier, but didn't hear about anyone else using altimeter data for oceanography. Anyone else? (geosat is run from here at APL, the only ground station) oh yes - changes in ocean height varies greatly with where on the ocean you get 'em. Biggest off japan..... Disclaimer: Individuals have opinions, organizations have policy. Therefore, these opinions are mine and not any organizations! Q.E.D. jwm@aplvax.jhuapl.edu 128.244.65.5 (James W. Meritt) ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 1 Jul 88 13:14:31 PDT From: Eugene N. Miya To: yee@ames.arc.nasa.gov Subject: Re: NASA news Cc: space@angband.s1.gov A tie? You wore a tie today? ------------------------------ Date: 2 Jul 88 14:08:00 GMT From: mailrus!uflorida!novavax!ankh!Laurie_Forti@csd1.milw.wisc.edu (Laurie Forti) Subject: OZONE cont. Internationally, NRDC is urging the State Department to make ratification and reassessment of the Montreal agreement a top priority in dealings with our European allies and Japan, who with the U.S. account for the bulk of world production of CFC's. NRDC is also pressing for passage of legislation now pending before Congress which would phase out CFC's over 6-8 years and take away the producers' windfall profits." . . The Natural Resources Defense Council is a not-for-profit member supported organization dedicated to protecting America's natural resources and to improve the quality of the human environment through scientific research, legal action, and citizen education. Memberships are $10 per year. NRDC, POBox 37269, Washington, DC 20013. . . (Why is the ozone layer so important?? Stress on the plant biomass by increased UV only adds to the attack on same by pollution, chemical agricultural systems, global deforestation, and desertification. Thousands of plant (and animal) species have already been destroyed by human activity, and there very well may be a threshold level of stress beyond which major areas of plant material are destroyed leading to loss of atmospheric oxygen and collapse of agricultural and other ecosystems. Read this as global famine and major depopulation of the planet. Let's hear it for technology, folks .... Laurie) -- FidoNet : 369/6 the Eye of Osiris - 305-973-1947 - OPUS/UFGATE UUCP : ...!{gatech!uflorida!novavax, hoptoad, umbio, attmail}!ankh ------------------------------ Date: 3 Jul 88 17:09:26 GMT From: fluke!ssc-vax!eder@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Dani Eder) Subject: New Ideas In article <2064@pt.cs.cmu.edu>, ralf@b.gp.cs.cmu.edu (Ralf Brown) writes: In article <8806262055.AA10047@angband.s1.gov> PH418000@BROWNVM.BITNET writes: There's also an interesting proposal to use a tether concept to deorbit the space shuttle from the space-station, simultaneously reboosting the station every time you drop a shuttle off. This isn't all that new an idea. See the SF novel "Descent of A????" (it's been at least five years since I read it), which gives a nice account of using just this concept to deorbit a shuttle (though the other end was its payload, rather than the space station). Written ca. 1980. -- There has been observed by myself and others a 'signal delay' of about five years within NASA for new ideas. Hypotheses to explain this delay range from the 'Not Invented Here' syndrome, to there not being a significant 'office of new ideas'. At the same time, the past few years has had an explosion of new ideas in space development. In the propulsion area alone, my friends and I have catalogued over fifty ways to get to and around in space (see the book "Mirror Matter" by Forward and Davis for a list). Only a few (chemical rocket, airbreathing, ion) are receiving non-trivial attention. Expect a revolution in the 'Paradigm' for space development over the next few years, as all the new ideas, not just the propulsion ones, but the extraterrestrial materials and energy, closed life support, seriously smart computers and robots, teleoperation, etc. get folded into the mix, and interact. For refernce the current paradigm: Space Shuttle launches Space Station Space Station is a staging base for chemical Orbit Transfer Vehicle Lunar Surface Station is Set up from Space Station using OTV All this occurs over now-2010 time period. Over next ten years (2010-2020) a few (3) manned mars missions are mounted from space station using large chemical rockets and aerobraking for arrival. -- Dani Eder / Boeing / Space Station Program / uw-beaver!ssc-vax!eder (205)461-2606(w) (205)461-7801(h) 1075 Dockside Drive #905 Huntsville, AL 35824 34 40 N latitude 86 40 W longitude +100m altitude, Earth ------------------------------ Date: 2 Jul 88 14:04:00 GMT From: mailrus!uflorida!novavax!ankh!Laurie_Forti@csd1.milw.wisc.edu (Laurie Forti) Subject: OZONE depletion This article excerpted from the NRDC Newsline Vol. 6, No.2, May/Jun 1988 . "Ozone Depletion Worsens, NRDC Leads drive for Total CFC Phase-out" . Stratospheric ozone depletion is dramatically worse than we thought, according to a new report just issued by an international panel of more than one hundred scientists. The report prepared under the auspices of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), documents an unexpectedly rapid thinning of the stratospheric ozone shied all over the globe, with chlorofluorocarbons (CFC's) the likely cause. The alarming findings add new urgency to NRDC's drive for a total phase-out of CFC's and other ozone-depleting chemicals. According to the scientists report, even after natural factors are accounted for, satellite and ground-based monitors show ozone losses since 1969 as high as 3% over the heavily populated regions of North America and Europe and 5% over parts of the southern hemisphere. What's more, depletion is occurring at 2 to 3 times the rate predicted by computer models scientists have previously relied on. "We are facing a global emergency," NRDC senior attorney David Doniger testified before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee on March 30. Doniger called for immediate steps to strengthen the international agreement reached last September in Montreal -- which the Senate ratified by a vote of 83-0 just one day before the new scientific report was issued -- as well as Environmental Protection Agency regulations proposed last December under a court-ordered deadline won by NRDC. "The Montreal accord and the proposed EPA rules will cut CFC's (production) by less than 50% over 10 years. The world has _already_ suffered more ozone depletion than EPA predicted would occur under that level of cuts _by the year 2050_. Safeguarding the ozone layer requires a rapid and total CFC phase-out, not just a 10 year halfway measure." The findings of global ozone losses follow on the heels of proof, gathered by NASA last year, that CFC's are the cause of the massive Antarctic ozone "hole" that opens each year when spring returns to the southern hemisphere. Ozone levels over Antarctica plummeted by more than _50%_ last September and October. Ozone depletion will allow more ultraviolet (UV) radiation to penetrate to the Earth's surface, causing tens of thousands of extra skin cancers, cataracts, and immunological diseases in the U.S. (alone) over the coming decades. More UV also damages crops and other vegetation and endangers the marine food web. Even the Earth's climate may be changed. The new scientific report prompted a surprise announcement from du Pont, the world's largest CFC producer, which had led the industry _opposition_ to controls on these chemicals for more than a _decade_. Du Pont stated a "goal" of totally phasing out its CFC production and called for immediately reassessing the Montreal agreement once it takes effect next year. "While du Pont's new position is welcome, its conversion is far from complete," said NRDC's Doniger. "Du Pont has set _no schedule_ for its own actions, and it still opposes any move to phase-out U.S. production and use prior to reaching a new international agreement. In addition, du Pont and other CFC producers stand to make billions of dolFrom space-request@angband.s1.gov Tue Jul 5 08:55:20 1988 Received: by angband.s1.gov id AA00430; Tue, 5 Jul 88 08:55:20 PDT id AA00430; Tue, 5 Jul 88 08:55:20 PDT Received: by ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (5.59/1.28) id AA15156; Sun, 3 Jul 88 23:20:44 PDT Received: from USENET by ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU with netnews for space-incoming@angband.s1.gov (space@angband.s1.gov) (contact usenet@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU if you have questions) Date: 3 Jul 88 05:01:00 GMT From: a.cs.uiuc.edu!m.cs.uiuc.edu!kenny@ee.ecn.purdue.edu Subject: Soviet space station elements Message-Id: <21900023@m.cs.uiuc.edu> Sender: space-request@angband.s1.gov To: space@angband.s1.gov Salyut 7 1 13138U 88179.68414465 0.00010405 33290-3 0 1404 2 13138 51.6128 239.0138 0001070 150.7375 209.3187 15.32968712353693 Mir 1 16609U 88179.75592934 0.00050649 35750-3 0 2763 2 16609 51.6160 13.0567 0003430 100.9284 259.3027 15.73519445135493 Satellite: Salyut 7 Catalog id 13138 Element set 140 Epoch: 88179.68414465 Inclination: 51.6128 degrees RA of node: 239.0138 degrees Eccentricity: 0.0001070 Argument of perigee: 150.7375 degrees Mean anomaly: 209.3187 degrees Mean motion: 15.32968712 revs/day Mean motion acceleration: 0.00010405 * 2 revs/day/day Epoch Revolution: 35369 Semimajor axis: 6845.05 km Apogee height*: 467.63 km Perigee height*: 466.16 km Source: NASA Goddard via T.S.Kelso's `Celestial RCP/M' * Apogee and perigee altitudes are referred to the mean radius of the Earth (6378.15 km), and not to the local radius of the geoid. They are only approximate, and should not be used for orbit prediction. Satellite: Mir Catalog id 16609 Element set 276 Epoch: 88179.75592934 Inclination: 51.6160 degrees RA of node: 13.0567 degrees Eccentricity: 0.0003430 Argument of perigee: 100.9284 degrees Mean anomaly: 259.3027 degrees Mean motion: 15.73519445 revs/day Mean motion acceleration: 0.00050649 * 2 revs/day/day Epoch Revolution: 13549 Semimajor axis: 6726.94 km Apogee height*: 351.09 km Perigee height*: 346.47 km Source: NASA Goddard via T.S.Kelso's `Celestial RCP/M' * Apogee and perigee altitudes are referred to the mean radius of the Earth (6378.15 km), and not to the local radius of the geoid. They are only approximate, and should not be used for orbit prediction. ------------------------------ Date: 3 Jul 88 15:59:07 GMT From: yee@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Peter E. Yee) Subject: NASA Deep Space Network to support Soviet Phobos mission (Forwarded) Charles Redmond Headquarters, Washington, D.C. July 1, 1988 Jeff Vincent Headquarters, Washington, D.C. Jim Wilson Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif, RELEASE: 88-87 NASA DEEP SPACE NETWORK TO SUPPORT SOVIET PHOBOS MISSION When the USSR's Phobos 1 spacecraft lifts off for Mars on Thursday, July 7, it will be headed not only for a landing on the tiny Martian moon Phobos but also for a radio rendezvous with NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN). Phobos 1 and Phobos 2, scheduled for launch a week later, each carry 100-pound landers designed to analyze the 17-mile- long, potato-shaped moon, and the DSN's role in the mission is to provide essential tracking data to permit their landing on Phobos. The DSN then will shift to enabling a key scientific goal of the mission, to track Phobos very precisely. The DSN's 230-foot dish antennas in California, Spain and Australia, as well as a Soviet radio telescope in the Crimea will be used. The landings, and the special DSN tracking, are expected to begin in April 1989. Scientists are interested in the orbit of Phobos because it appears to be decaying. They believe tidal forces, the unequal attraction of gravity between different parts of two bodies, are making the moon spiral very slowly toward Mars and eventual destruction. Optical tracking is barely accurate enough to detect this phenomenon. Only active radio tracking, with a spacecraft on the site, can measure the orbit's decay rate. The Deep Space Network, developed and operated by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory over the past 3 decades, has built up unique expertise in determining the distance, within yards, and the velocity of spacecraft billions of miles from Earth. - more - - 2 - During the passage of Comet Halley in 1986, JPL and Soviet scientists cooperated to pin down the location of the comet's nucleus for the European spacecraft Giotto by precisely locating the Soviet Vegas spacecraft while they were photographing the nucleus, then reckoning from known camera locations and angles to find the target for Giotto's later flyby. This time, U.S. scientists will use a radio-astronomy technique called very long baseline interferometry (VLBI), which employs widely-spaced, paired ground antennas, as well as doppler and range tracking to pinpoint the position and motions of the moon Phobos. The Deep Space Network will receive telemetry, including images and other scientific measurements, from the two landers, but its principal responsibility will be the ranging and VLBI measurements. These will be complicated by the moon's rapid rotation once every 7 hours, 37 minutes and the fact that the lander antenna will be fixed, rather than tracking the Earth. Scientists expect to be able to track lander and moon for only about 17 minutes out of each rotation period, without the DSN's worldwide facilities, this would be still further reduced. Lander telemetry, like that from the Phobos orbiters, also will be collected by Soviet receiving stations. Between October 1988 and year's end, Phobos project and DSN scientists will check the VLBI technique under space flight conditions. Hardware was checked at the Goldstone tracking site in April. Then, after the Phobos spacecraft go into Mars orbit in late January, precise tracking by the DSN will help first Phobos 1 and then Phobos 2 edge down very close to the moon's orbit so that the manifold scientific operations can begin. The Phobos mission involves more than three dozen experiments, with scientists representing nations of Eastern and Western Europe as well as the United States and the U.S.S.R. Two orbiters and two landers, consisting of a long-lived scientific package and a 100-pound hopper which measures surface properties at several positions 20 to 40 yards apart, carry the instruments. - end - ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V8 #285 *******************