Sunday, 21 February 2010

Beer?

A bit off topic but I thought it was funny.


Shuttle Astronauts Tackle Last Full Day in Space.



20 February 2010 3:33 p.m. EST

The six astronauts aboard NASA’s space shuttle Endeavour have begun what they hope will be their last full day in space as they prepare for a Sunday landing. Endeavour is due to land Sunday in Florida at 10:16 p.m. EST (0316 Mon. GMT), weather permitting. Mission Control woke the astronauts with the song “The Distance” by the band Cake.
The shuttle crew will check Endeavour’s systems for landing, participate in interviews with reporters and pack up last-minute items in preparation for Sunday’s landing opportunities. Here’s a look at today’s schedule in space:

4:30 p.m. ET – Post-Mission Management Team briefing
6:14 p.m. ET - Shuttle robotic arm station power down
6:29 p.m. ET - Shuttle cabin stowage
7:04 p.m. ET - Flight Control Systems checks
8:14 p.m. ET - Reaction Control System thruster test-firing
9:49 p.m. ET - In-flight Interviews
5:14 a.m. ET - Crew sleep
Today is Flight Day 14 of Endeavour’s 14-day mission to the International Space Station.

NASA's New Telescope Snaps a Comet's 10,000,000-Mile Tail


Back in December, NASA launched the WISE, an infrared telescope that was designed to map the entire visible universe. And one of its first shots? This epic comet.

This shot is one of four that NASA has processed and published after receiving the first batch of 250,000 raw images from the telescope. It shows Sliding Spring, a comet discovered in 2007 that has a 10 million-mile tail of dust being blown by the solar wind. Amazing stuff. [NASA via Wired Science]

Fake Mars Mission Befallen By Real Drama!


The Mars Society is a group that prepares for man's eventual exploration of Mars with simulations in the Utahan desert. But their mission logs, posted regularly on the group's website, reveal a tension that is very real—and very funny.

The two-week simulations, including various experiments and equipment tests, take place at the Mars Desert Research Station, located outside Hanksville, Utah. The volunteers who participate are expected to take the matter very seriously—after all, our future Mars colony depends on it. But of course, some pretend Mars astronauts are more dedicated than other pretend Mars astronauts and this is where the trouble starts.

The current team occupying the Research Station, Crew 90, is led by Nancy Vermeulen. According to their "Mission Info" page, they are the first team comprised entirely of Belgians. In the wake of the trouble they've been having, it now seems ominous that the last line of their statement reads, "the media is following our project very closely." Indeed, Geekosystem picked up on the mission and faithfully documented its simmering turmoil.

After days of snits and snubs, the tension came to a head on February 15. In that day's report, Commander Vermeulen explains:

The growing frustration that after 9 days PE, Nora and Margaux are
still not able to manage the Hab systems/ standard engineering
reporting system (and even don't consider this as a problem!), exploded
during the lunch.

The lack of dedication to the mission of some people overloads the
others and it had to be spoken out. The problem was already there from
the first day, when it came out that some people didn't prepare
anything for the mission, didn't look at the manuals, which were send
to them months ago and didn't even prepare the tasks for their own
role.
The accusation into my direction that I didn't brief enough about the
systems was too much. Nicky almost exploded.
Arjan reacted double: At one hand he couldn't stop criticising the
incompetence of some others during last week, but during the discussion
he acted as if he was from Barcelona (don't know anything). He has his
own mission and own world.

The Commander's Reports for the last days of the mission, which ended yesterday, obscure the interpersonal conflicts that paralyzed the crew. Only a few bloody noses are referenced, perhaps as physical manifestations of the crew's frustrations.

You can read the whole saga unfold on the Mars Society site, or check out the abridged version at Geekosystem, who has done a commendable job tracing how the drama transpired. To Crew 91: Godspeed. The Red Planet makes beasts of men. [Mars Society via Geekosystem]

Saturday, 20 February 2010

On the go.


Hi all this is my first test from my mobile.