Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 7997;andrew.cmu.edu;Ted Anderson Received: from corsica.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 ; Fri, 7 Jul 89 03:16:40 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: Reply-To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU From: space-request+@Andrew.CMU.EDU To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU Date: Fri, 7 Jul 89 03:16:33 -0400 (EDT) Subject: SPACE Digest V9 #539 SPACE Digest Volume 9 : Issue 539 Today's Topics: Re: Vaguely space related queries Re: new space goals Re: new space goals Re: SPACE Digest V9 #529 Re: Re: Space station computers ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Mon, 3 Jul 89 14:46 EST From: Subject: Re: Vaguely space related queries Will Martin asked several questions, which got various responses, some of which were rather dubious attempts at physics. >1) Regarding X-ray astronomy -- the X-ray detectors must be placed into space, > [ stuff deleted about atmosphere X-ray absorption ] Henry Spencer, among others, gave the correct answer. The atmosphere is actually opaque at all but visible wavelengths (plus a few others). The penetrability of ANY type of radiation has little to do with the density of the matter by itself, but rather with ALL of the properties of the matter, of which density is only one. >2) Regarding elementary particles -- one of their characteristics is called >"spin". Is this REALLY "spin" the way a top or gyroscope spins -- that is, > [ stuff deleted about what spin is and possible changes ] Here there was some misinformation. Spin is NOT angular momentum!! Rather, it is a purely quantum mechanical phenomenum (like the quantites of colour you mention above). People mistakenly think that it is an angular momentum because of its mathematical properties. In the mathematics of quantum mechanics, spin transforms and has operators that are identical to the normal angular momentum operator, though with its own unique eigenvalues (values that it can take on in particular physical situations). It does come in a particular quantum value, and cannot be reduced. In fact, spin is an intrinsic feature of any particle, just like mass and electrical charge. You can never change the magnitude of the spin of a particle, just its `direction'. (Another example of using macroscopic terms for unrelated microscopic processes.) >3) The 11-year (or so) Solar Cycle -- I realize the duration of this cycle > [ stuff deleted about causes of the cycle ] My knowledge is thin here, though I do know that the physics of the solar surface and how the surface interacts with the interior is not known well at all. This is due to the fact that the surface is turbulent and chaotic, as well as the fact that all solar models are generally spherical, with some tweaking to account for rotation. More than this, I cannot tell you. >4) Black hole temperature -- Are medium-sized black holes hot or cold? I have > [ stuff deleted about black hole radiation, etc ] Here there were a few mistaken answers. The surface area of a black hole is proportional to its ENTROPY, and INVERSELY proportional to its TEMPERATURE. Thus a small black hole is hotter than a large black hole. In fact, small black holes can `evaporate' and disappear from the universe because of the high rate of energy loss (that's how we define temperature in the first place - equivalent black bodies, and so on). If you want more information (I just ran dry), read stuff by Hawkings, Wheeler, or Israel. They know what they are talking about. A good place to look would be back issues of Scientific American. Sorry, no dates from me. >5) Neutronium and similar compressed matter -- is there any theoretical >way to keep compressed matter (the stuff that makes up white dwarfs and >neutron stars) compressed if a chunk of it could be brought away from >the intense gravity field of those bodies? Of would it expand >uncontrollably as the piece moves into regions of lower gravity? If it >could be kept compressed, what would it look like? I envision it as >looking something like lead, but that is just some sort of unreasoning >gut feel, not based on science. Would it actually be a perfect mirror? >If you touched this stuff, what would it feel like? I have an idea that >wouldn't be wise, but I'm not sure just what would happen to your finger... >Would it be a perfect conductor of heat and electricity, or a perfect >insulator? [I lean toward the latter -- electrons couldn't migrate >through it...] Neutronium is the popular name given to the neutron matter state as present in the cores of neutron stars (NOT white dwarfs - they are a mixture of electrons, protons, and heavier elements!). It is produced by the intense gravitational pressures, exerts a force that stops the neutron star from collapsing, and is extremely relativistic. This matter cannot exist outside of the neutron stars, unless something else can be found to hold it together (something with, say, a pressure of 10^20 atmospheres or so - being off a few orders of magnitude here doesn't mean very much). It actually turns out that neutron matter is a superconductor. As evidence for this, consider pulsars. These are neutron stars with high magnetic fields that are corotating with the star. In other words, the magnetic field and the matter are `frozen' together. In MHD (MagnetoHydroDynamic) theory, this means that the conductivity has gone off to infinity. In quantum theory, the neutron energy states are all filled up, but the electron ones are empty, so that an electron can do whatever it wants within the neutron matter. In terms of heat conduction, I would say that pure neutronium cannot conduct heat well for the same reason - all of the neutron energy states are filled. However, I may be wrong on this last point. Arnold Gill Queen's University at Kingston BITNET: gill@qucdnast ------------------------------ Date: 3 Jul 89 17:08:00 GMT From: apollo!rehrauer@beaver.cs.washington.edu (Steve Rehrauer) Subject: Re: new space goals In article <1989Jun30.174703.27589@utzoo.uucp> henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) writes: >... and Mars is not >much harder than the Moon. In some ways it's easier, because we have >Phobos and Deimos as potential resources, and the Martian surface has >useful supplies of things like water. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Certainly not trying to dispute that, just curious: Have readily-accessible sources of water on Mars been identified, or do you mean that, given the presense in whatever amounts & form, accessing it is just a question of engineering? My impression from the most recent stuff I've read on the subject was that there was conflicting data (or at least, conflicting interpretations of it :). -- >>> "Aaiiyeeeee! Death from above!" <<< | Steve Rehrauer Fone: (508)256-6600 x6168 | Apollo Computer, Inc. ARPA: rehrauer@apollo.com | (A subsidiary of Hewlett-Packard) "Look, Max: 'Pressurized cheese in a can'. Even _WE_ wouldn't eat that!" ------------------------------ Date: 3 Jul 89 21:26:15 GMT From: bfmny0!tneff@uunet.uu.net (Tom Neff) Subject: Re: new space goals In article <1989Jun30.174703.27589@utzoo.uucp> henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) writes: >In article <14424@bfmny0.UUCP> tneff@bfmny0.UUCP (Tom Neff) writes: >> Mars is such >>a mammoth project (much harder than the Moon)... > >Uh, why is it much harder? Remember, going from Sputnik to Tranquillity >required developing a lot of new technologies. I see no comparable >requirement for Mars orbit+surface bases. ... [Improved technology] >would be useful, but basically we have the technology we need. The greater >distances to Mars simply require bigger vehicles (for larger crews and >more supplies); otherwise distance is just waiting time, and Mars is not >much harder than the Moon. Going to Tranquillity required that we invent manned spaceflight from scratch and develop a bunch of new technologies. We have what we need to GET TO Mars, and back, safely, in a sort of Apollo Mark II. What we do not have, and ain't even close to having, is the ability to go there and stay. To build anything there that would last. We know how to raid space like Leif Ericsson, now we must learn to build an outpost there like Robinson Crusoe. We could also do this on the moon, but Mars is sexier and has more to teach us I believe. And as Henry has pointed out, it's not that much farther up the gravity well. > In some ways it's easier, because we have >Phobos and Deimos as potential resources, and the Martian surface has >useful supplies of things like water. And you wanted to know what new technology we'd have to develop?? Be honest, wonderful ANALOG fodder though it makes, nobody has ever run anything industrial off Earth for any length of time. It's hard enough keeping a materials processing plant running right down here. We'll certainly do it some day, but not until humans have had the opportunity to kick around on-site for a while and play with things. To do that we have to get them there, with Earth materials. >We also have the immense advantage of the beginnings of a private space >launch industry. The clear number one problem for a major Mars effort >is the high cost of launch to low Earth orbit. The way to fix that is >to say, *believably*, "starting in 1995, we will buy one million pounds >a year of freight capacity to low orbit from the lowest qualified bidders, >price not to exceed $500/lb, tested hardware required; development funding >must be private, the Mars project will provide none". Perilously close to special pleading here. Henry is a Usenet treasure, but David Copperfield's Mr. Dick was beloved too, and he couldn't seem to keep King Charles's head from popping up in everything he did... :-) We don't need commercial megaboosters to go to Mars. We do need USG to get out of the comsat business BY LAW and get back to exploring, experimenting and blowing up Ivan like it's supposed to. (My primary objection to SDI is that it doesn't kill anybody.** We pay these guys to kill people, not build Maginot Modules. Back to work sojer!) Reaffirm the original NASA charter and insist it get back in the business of exploring the solar system -- not trying to make a buck off it or "establishing presence" or other Zen nonsense -- and you'll see some action. > General Dynamics, >Martin Marietta, McDonnell Douglas, Arianespace, etc., will scream bloody >murder, hire lobbyists, and start talking excitedly to Congressthings, >because they simply can't do it. Precisely the kind of catfight that kills missions. QED. >And cheap transport to low orbit makes the whole thing much easier and >much less demanding, because it's no longer necessary to pare every gram >off the project's hardware. Paring grams off the hardware is where you learn. Weight exigencies are the soul of spinoff. The trick is to structure the mission so that staying there is something you DON'T give up. Better to live three years in a Mylar bubble than three nights in titanium.** >>What we can do in 10 years simply doesn't last. What we can do in 50 >>might. I want to follow the Antarctica model - establish an >>international scientific outpost in a distant, hostile environment. > >Why can't we get the hardware in place for that in 10 years? Our track record supports my assertion better than your objection, I think. We can't get that hardware ready in 10 years because we can't do ANYTHING in 10 years anymore. The can-do technocracy that gave us Vietnam and Apollo is ancient history. It's suicidally futile to predicate a Mars mission on JFK rising Arthur-like from the grave. We have to design something around the do-able. While we don't have Sputnik or Camelot to lean on anymore, we do have new dynamics like international cooperation, plus the huge quantum leap in one fundamental ability: to send back killer images from anywhere we visit. Neptune about to provide a fresh example it appears. The early Moon race had the support of the nation even though most Americans only "saw" it through paragraphs in the newspaper. What could Ogilvy & Mather do with the Viking stuff and the JPL Mars Movie? But I digress. > [Apollo] developed -- but was >never allowed to *use* -- most of the hardware needed for more permanent >follow-ons. It would be more accurate to say that some NASA and contractor groups designed, but were not allowed to build or fly, follow-ons. If Henry or anyone else is aware of built, unflown hardware besides CSMs, LMs and Saturn hardware, I would like to hear about it. > (Anyone who claims that Apollo was always meant to be a >one-shot has never seen some of the work Apollo did on follow-ons to the >early missions. Apollo was strangled in infancy.) I guess that depends on who is doing the "meaning." Certainly by the time the White House gave Lunar Orbit Rendezvous (LOR) the nod as the mission strategy that would beat the Soviets and the JFK deadline without busting the budget, things were "meant" to go pretty much as they did. No doubt there was a constituency within NASA for ambitious followups, but the program as pitched, designed and built logically culminated at Taurus Littrow. (18 would have been nice, but not revolutionary.) Apollo was not strangled at birth, it was conceived in haste and repented at leisure.** >>By drawing the program out timewise, you provide an ongoing focus of >>activity that *defines* a half century of endeavor... > >You also tell everyone involved with it now that they will be old or dead >before they see results. Old yes, dead maybe, proud definitely. It also means your kids would be doing something meaningful in space, which is more than we can tell the men who built Apollo. Also keep in mind it wouldn't be 50 years of silent drudgery capped by a sudden extravaganza. There would be intermediate projects of great satisfaction. A lovely Space Station (Prometheus! Down with jingoism) with an actual well-I'll-be-damned MISSION would be nice within Henry's 10 year time frame. And since we can in fact place hardware out at Mars quicker than 50 years, another intermediate goal is Phobos Station. The perfect observatory and it solves some of the problems with a free floater, while yielding a scientific bonanza beyond comprehension if you can actually bunk exogeologists on it. All this without the fatal extra gravity well to deal with. > ... set your sights higher. Mars is not that >hard. Prove it! Let's go there and prove me wrong! Mars is too easy? Nice problem to have!** >(The folks at Spar Aerospace are fond of pointing out that the question >of who would build the arm finally came down to Canada vs. an unnamed US >company. Canada won. The US company [Spar refuses to identify them!] >went after, and got, the contract to build... the shuttle toilet.) This is just the kind of thing that happens when you evaluate bids by a process of elimination. :-) >>Let's see... Glavkosmos is to spaceflight as the USSR is to vodka?** :-) -- NOTE: Aphorisms marked ** are approved for use in .signatures, with credit given of course! :-) -- "My God, Thiokol, when do you \\ Tom Neff want me to launch -- next April?" \\ uunet!bfmny0!tneff ------------------------------ Date: 4 Jul 89 00:49:51 GMT From: bfmny0!tneff@uunet.uu.net (Tom Neff) Subject: Re: SPACE Digest V9 #529 In article <615503897.amon@H.GP.CS.CMU.EDU> Dale.Amon@H.GP.CS.CMU.EDU writes: [about recovering LDEF, which I pointed out is an SDI fetish just now] >True, but the information on the effects of long term exposure of >electronics and materials to LEO are going to be very useful to other >people as well ... > ... Assuming the data doesn't get classified. A very nice assumption indeed. If the data prove meaningful to SDI, look for a push to classify it. Musn't threathen the vital potency of our precious Peace Shield. I do hope I'm wrong though, it would be nice to have some public domain data on how materials fare up there. -- "My God, Thiokol, when do you \\ Tom Neff want me to launch -- next April?" \\ uunet!bfmny0!tneff ------------------------------ Date: 4 Jul 89 04:52:55 GMT From: shelby!portia!brooks@decwrl.pa.dec.com (Michael Brooks) Subject: Re: Re: Space station computers In <11630015@hpfcdj.HP.COM> (Bob Myers) writes: >"He`s talking about LCDs and other flat-panel technologies." Persons >asking such questions are invited to study LCD manufacturing >technology... The basic idea was that LCD development is not at a stage now, nor will it be likely available in 1998 for computer displays (sorry Bob, I may have the exact quote wrong). Well, this might be unfortunately true. Before I went back to school (don`t ask me why!) I helped build mil-spec developmental devices of this sort for Hughes Aircraft. These were designed to function as sources for the Advanced Tactical Fighter`s headsup display, as well as to be retrofitted into the newer aircraft. Well, last time I checked the project was lamely continuing, with only lukewarm top level support. This is not because the folks doing it are incompetant---far from. It`s because LCDs are tough to build for a high reliability environment, and the best of these are coming from those who invest heavily in the technology and its applied science. Seiko Epson is currently building acceptable commercial displays of small size (as are other Japanese manufacturers). I am happily employed part-time at Lawrence Livermore National Labs, where I am part of a group trying to employ some novel technology to get a new start in this area that Americans seem to have given up on. The optimistic forcast by S. Morozumi (head of the Seiko Group) is to have is to have LCDs for HDTV in the mid-late `90s. Unrealistic? Don`t bet against the Japanese in this. You can probably bet against a US sponsored effort and make money. IF such displays do become available, they will probably be commercial and not mil-spec`d (let alone space-spec`d), unless we license the technology (from the Japanese) and build an appropriate version. The sad part is that we here in the US will not likely build them for sale, within the time frame mentioned, on our own. They could conceivably be built, but only by those who want them (perhaps exclusively for mil-spec systems). In the race for LCD technology we are far behind, like that of other electronics items (256K DRAMS). (maybe there`s hope, I could be wrong again! :-)) Mike Brooks/Stanford Electronics Labs/SU ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V9 #539 *******************