Saturday, June 8, 2024

A Couple of Short Stories

First, the cool story

SpaceX Releases New Video from IFT-4

SpaceX released a new video today, showing the final moments of the Super Heavy booster's mission, slowing to nearly zero, vertical over the Gulf, then touching down, shutting down the last running engines and tipping over. 

This video from The Launch Pad isn't narrated but shows the landing. If you want some narration, a much longer version is offered by TheSpaceBucket

Now, the rougher story

Apollo 8 LM pilot dies in plane crash

Apollo 8 astronaut William Anders, 90, died in a firey plane crash over Puget Sound, Washington on Friday.

At the time of the airplane crash, Anders was piloting his vintage Beechcraft T-34 Mentor – a single-engine, propeller-driven aircraft primarily used for flight training during the 1950s by the United States Air Force and U.S. Navy.

The details of the crash were confirmed by his son, Greg Anders. 

"The family is devastated," said Greg Anders. "He was a great pilot. He will be missed."

"He traveled to the threshold of the moon and helped all of us see something else: ourselves. He embodied the lessons and the purpose of exploration. We will miss him," said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson in a statement.

Anders was a member of the astronaut corps selected in 1963, and while he trained for and was a backup crew member to a Gemini mission, alongside Neil Armstrong on the backup crew for Gemini 11, his first flight was Apollo 8 a particularly noteworthy mission. It was the first Saturn V mission, it was the program's (and America's) first mission to orbit the moon.  Which made the crew of Apollo 8: Jim Lovell, Frank Borman and Bill Anders the first humans to ever see the far side of the moon - at all, let alone up close. 

Anders graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis with a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering in 1955. He was then commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force, where he underwent flight training, in part, on the T-34 Mentor. He earned his wings in 1956 and served as a fighter pilot with the 84th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron at Hamilton Air Force Base in California and the 57th Fighter-Interceptor Squadron in Iceland.
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Feeling his chances of walking the moon were low, Anders left NASA in 1969 to become the executive secretary of the National Aeronautics and Space Council. In 1973, he was appointed to the five-member Atomic Energy Commission, where he led all nuclear and non-nuclear power research and development. He was also named the U.S. chairman of the technology exchange program for nuclear fission and fusion power with the Soviet Union.

With the loss of Frank Borman last November, and Bill Anders now, Jim Lovell is the only surviving member of the Apollo 8 crew.

Bill Anders 1964 photo, holding models of the Gemini capsule and the Agena target vehicle that the Gemini crews would eventually use to learn the docking skills necessary for the Apollo program. NASA photo.



8 comments:

  1. He died enjoying himself.
    We'll miss ya, Bill.

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  2. I hope this isn't too off topic, but this video about a hypothetical Starship landing on Mars brought tears to my eyes:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=piVwHO4esPg

    As for Gen. Anders, godspeed...(Salute!)

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    Replies
    1. Nah, that's a great video. Feel free any time.

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    2. Appreciate you for the wonderful link, lot of good stuff.

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  3. Amazing, looks like they light engines as booster breaks speed of sound. More amazing, if booster is plummeting at 760mph, is the power of Raptor that all that mass slows to landing velocity in about 5-6 seconds. Can it be calculated how many peak G's booster experiences?

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  4. Dollars to donuts they attempt a booster catch, because stage zero is actually stage three in a way, regardless of that if they can not make reliable safe booster catches they need to know ASAP. Stage Zero is everything. Unless they try Falcon style landing legs. But that defeats the holistic SpaceShip concept, of quick reliable turn-around, which is their ideal and purpose of SpaceShip to begin with. Might it best to find out soonest then? Looks to be less some nuances, they have stage Zero lined out very well. What remains is the catch.
    I think they catch on the first try. And its a courage call wether to attempt or not, because those guys are really sharp, they know it must be accomplished no if or buts to it, and they got their ducks lined up and squared away. Big balls. Really Big Balls.

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    1. The saying where I grew up was "balls the size of water towers."

      My thing about landing without legs is constantly wondering how that works without the tower. Even to set down on a poured concrete pad, aren't legs necessary? It seems the tower catch can only be good for Starship as a transoceanic, hypersonic airliner.

      I dearly want to live long enough to see Starships land on Mars.

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  5. Rumors are that the military is interested in point-to-point transport, which would mean a Starship would need legs.

    Maybe Musk is waiting for the Army to pony up cash for that development?

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