MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸

3.1K posts

MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸

MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸

@StatisticalMind

Former defense analyst. My opinions are my own and don't represent any govt agency. Tweets do not contain any non-public info.

Earth انضم Mart 2013
72 يتبع133 المتابعون
MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
@kwrzesien @DJSnM Then they lose the payload. Same thing with if they could in theory but it requires more deltaV than they have available due to limits on propellant. Need to wait and see.
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Blue Origin
Blue Origin@blueorigin·
NG-3 Update: We have confirmed payload separation. AST SpaceMobile has confirmed the satellite has powered on. The payload was placed into an off-nominal orbit. We are currently assessing and will update when we have more detailed information.
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Kenny Reed
Kenny Reed@KennySwims189·
@DJSnM Was it the second stage engines that didn’t fire up for the SES - 2? What was the issue?
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
@carryunwind @AngryAstro66 @blueorigin Typically no. That is what insurance is for. The payload is insured. A bunch of insurance executives are having heartburn. For AST the loss is more the delay. The sat will need to be rebuilt and launched it pushes back their timelines.
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Angry2
Angry2@AngryAstro66·
BlueBird has Hall Effect ion thrusters with massive ISP. Satellites almost never run through their ion fuel in a typical lifetime. They're actually designed with this kind of scenario in mind. So, we'll see. Another problem will be the deorbit. If the second stage is malfunctioning, we could be looking at an uncontrolled burnup, and that ain't good with a massive second stage like this.
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Stock Fox
Stock Fox@realstockfox·
@blueorigin How much money is that going to cost $ASTS if it’s non operational?
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collapsealready
collapsealready@AnnoyedSoFLGuy·
@SinanAkyuz73 It isn’t war it’s killing. Cowardly. If you went the guy so bad go get him yourself.
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Sinan AKYÜZ
Sinan AKYÜZ@SinanAkyuz73·
Ukrayna askeri düşmanı, Rus askerlerini öldürmeden önce dalga geçmiş
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
@ShalFarley @DJSnM Total time until on helicopters was 1:41. Total time until on deck was 1:47 (so 25 minutes longer than SpaceX). They had high current, had to photograph the headshield under water, and comms issues. Entirely possible it is 20-30 min faster in A3.
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Shal Farley
Shal Farley@ShalFarley·
@DJSnM It wasn't just the time until the crew exited the capsule that seemed way too long, it was the time spent floating out there on the "porch" waiting for helicopter recovery, and that (seemingly unnecessary) step itself that rankled.
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Scott Manley
Scott Manley@DJSnM·
So, how much slower at spacecraft recovery was Orion compared to SpaceX? Looking at Artemis stream splashdown is 1:39:30 1st crew out at 3:02:58, 4th crew out at 3:06:59. SpaceX DM-2 landing at 6:28:04 1st crew at 7:46:48, 2nd at 7:50:33 Orion 1:27:29 Dragon 1:22:29 So, 5 minutes slower.
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OCD Off-Road 🇺🇸
OCD Off-Road 🇺🇸@ocd_offroad·
@mwc82 @JayAranha @NASAAdmin @rookisaacman @SciGuySpace Fair point, I think we easily have the ability to control that reaction. But a valid concern. Of course I would assume that once moonbase is established a simple orbital refuel and propulsion based decel will be the order of the day. Growing pains.
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
@LPATAN2 @blueorigin From the image the larger one AP2 is powered by solar. Note the second lander and cable between them. AP1 may just be a testbed. Runs on battery power with small sample to prove the concept.
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LPATAN
LPATAN@LPATAN2·
@blueorigin what energy source will you use? Will you be burning the fuel itself? The ISRU material extraction process requires a lot of energy because it heats the lunar regolith extremely well. If you want to produce decent quantities of propellant/oxygen, you'll need a lot of energy. 1/2
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Blue Origin
Blue Origin@blueorigin·
Melt. Extract. Fuel. Repeat. 🚀 To build an affordable, sustainable presence on the Moon, we must learn to live off the land. Air Pioneer is a scalable, modular system that creates purified oxygen to reduce dependency on supplies from Earth. Using Moon-extracted oxygen for propellant, fuel cells, and breathing reduces our lunar landers’ load by many metric tons of mass. Launching less mass from Earth lowers the cost of our Moon base, fueling a future cislunar economy. 🌕
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸@StatisticalMind·
@enbeeeh @forallcurious No. Orbit is more fast than up. The part of the atmosphere thick enough to slow the vessel down significantly is only 100 km thick. Coming straight down they would hit the ground at >8,000 m/s. Most of re-entry is just slowing down the getting "down" after that is easy.
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All day Astronomy
All day Astronomy@forallcurious·
Re-entry of Artemis II crew captured by the astronaut in International Space Station
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸@StatisticalMind·
@NigelKBaker @SciGuySpace The only proven vehicle for reentry from lunar return is Orion. 2 for 2. I mean Apollo was proven but unless you got a mint condition Apollo CSM in your garage that isn't going to help.
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Nigel Baker
Nigel Baker@NigelKBaker·
@SciGuySpace If only there was a proven reentry vehicle they could be using.
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TheSpaceEngineer
TheSpaceEngineer@mcrs987·
Something I've been watching for the last couple months is ongoing groundwork (last frame even driving piles already) on the northern end of LC36. New filing with the FAA confirms this will be a lightning tower for the second New Glenn launch pad dubbed 36b
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸@StatisticalMind·
@IvanDamnit @NASAArtemis The Earth has an atmosphere it refracts and scatters light. Space is notable for its lack of atmosphere. It is why the shadows on the moon are so sharp. However in a solar eclipse on Earth with a good camera you could capture the stars. It wouldn't be as clear as space.
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Iván El Terrible
Iván El Terrible@IvanDamnit·
@NASAArtemis You can see stars even though there’s basically a solar eclipse happening? You can’t do that on earth. 🤔
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NASA Artemis
NASA Artemis@NASAArtemis·
The eclipse from Orion. On April 6, external cameras attached to the Orion spacecraft's solar array wings captured the Moon backlit by the Sun during a solar eclipse.
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Pastor Ayo
Pastor Ayo@ayo392·
@NASAArtemis I'm still confused, why can we see the Earth, the Moon but not the stars, the sun and other planets?
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Adv Kiran
Adv Kiran@Adv_KiranKumar·
@NASA This is our Earth. Many people are calling this picture fake—why ?
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸@StatisticalMind·
@C_S_Skeptic @JefeGlancy @blueorigin It does if your BRING the nitrogen. Bring 30t of nitrogen in a single expended BM lander and combine it with O2 produced on size. that is enough to create 37.5t of air. At one atmosphere that is 28,000 m3 habitable area or the equivalent of 73 ISS.
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Blue Origin
Blue Origin@blueorigin·
Lunar Permanence will require using resources on the Moon rather than hauling them from Earth. Our in-situ resource utilization system extracts oxygen from lunar regolith to create breathable air for astronauts and propellant for refueling landers and fuel cells. It also produces iron, aluminum, silicon, construction materials, and even solar power systems. The materials for a Moon base are produced right where they’re needed, and at much lower cost than being brought from Earth.
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MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸
MrDeathAndTaxes 🇺🇦🇺🇸@StatisticalMind·
@Nellinose @davill @blueorigin You need engines to build boosters to recover them. Right now SpaceX has one active boosters (booster 1 died) and these engines give them a second. If they want to increase that to a fleet of say 5 boosters that would require 35 more engines.
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Dave Limp
Dave Limp@davill·
Our engine shop at Rocket Park continues to hum. The next BE-4 shipset is ready for install on our third New Glenn booster.
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