Showing posts with label space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label space. Show all posts

30 July, 2008

Send your name to the moon!

Having already sent my name to Mars (project closed in 2002 and I only just get around to picking up my certificate, what am I like?) -
Mars certificate (from 2002-2003)
- so when this one popped up I thought "Why not?"...if you want to join me/us then you'll have to be quick - the moon project closes tomorrow!
Send your name to the moon
Send your name to the moon!

Oh and for bonus points NASA have just launched a new super friendly image and video portal (containing 140,000 images from space history)... ;)

07 September, 2007

The "Space Age" is 50 years young

Next month, humans will have been mucking about in space (and performing the odd bit of scientific research) for 50 years - Sputnik 1 was hurled spectactularly skywards on a pillar of flame by the Soviet Union on the 4th of October 1957...it's amazing to me (I guess because it all started way before I was born) to have it reenforced that it's actually only been 50 years (excepting, of course, all the Nazi war research that largely made it possible)...to me, the fact that we can do it has always been part of my accepted state of reality...

Anyway, New Scientist this month have a fantastic feature, refreshingly bereft of the oft-repeated bits of space history (only one mention of Apollo 13, for example), so if you have any interest in this kind of thing, pick up a paper copy if you can - I especially enjoyed the great piece on why we should think seriously about colonising Mars (and I quote "the first words spoken on the moon were in English, not because England sent astronaughts but because it planted a colony in North America that did"), that made me laugh... ;)

Something that didn't make me laugh was learning that North America, fearing disruption of communications following a nuclear war decided to create a fake ionosphere by dumping 480 million fragments of copper wire into orbit, they were supposed to thin out and form a nice harmelss reflective carpet, but instead (of course) they all clumped together into large mats (some of which are big enough to be detected by radar)...

Anyway, plenty to learn in there even if you thought you had heard it all before (won't spoil it)... ;)

28 September, 2006

Anousheh Ansari - blogging from space!

...a very interesting read, Anousheh Ansari (she of X-Prize) has been blogging about what it's like to be on the ISS... (executive summary - it made her feel sick to start with but she's loving it anyway)...if all goes to plan she'll be back on the planet today...fingers crossed... ;)

Update - Check out her Flickr stream!

Just imagine having that view to shoot... :0