Re: WHAT'S NEW Robert L. Park Friday, 16 Mar 07 Washington, DC
- From: mmeron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Fri, 23 Mar 2007 06:48:45 GMT
In article <3o6cd4-hmm.ln1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, The Ghost In The Machine <ewill@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
In sci.physics, mmeron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mmeron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote
on Thu, 22 Mar 2007 04:04:57 GMT
<JfnMh.17$25.104@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
In article <ep69d4-pjf.ln1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, The Ghost In The Machine <ewill@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
In sci.physics, mmeron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxIt is certainly not clear to me and I see no evidence that it is clear
<mmeron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote
on Thu, 22 Mar 2007 01:24:58 GMT
<KVkMh.13$25.69@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
In article <1174525991.021333.222320@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, "Eric Gisse" <jowr.pi@xxxxxxxxx> writes:
On Mar 21, 12:29 pm, Sam Wormley <sworml...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Hmm, the idea has merit:-)
[...]
2. NASA BUDGET: NO ROOM FOR THE ALPHA MAGNETIC SPECTROMETER.
Yesterday, Bart Gordon (D-TN), chair of the House S&T Committee,
noted that the budget reality bears little resemblance to the
"rosy projections" offered by the Administration when the
President announced his "Vision for Space Exploration" three
years ago. Don't scrap the vision - kill the science. One
casualty is the $1.5 billion Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer that was
scheduled to go to the ISS on a 2008 shuttle flight. Griffin now
says there's no room for the AMS on the shuttle because every
flight is crammed with hardware to finish the ISS. It wouldn't
do to drop an unfinished ISS into the ocean. The AMS was
designed to search for antimatter. Nobel prize winner Sam Ting
of MIT, made the case for AMS personally to Dan Goldin. It was
cited repeatedly by NASA to show that the ISS would do basic
sciencehttp://bobpark.physics.umd.edu/WN98/wn061298.html.
Deorbit the ISS onto the VLB containing the shuttles. Two birds, one
stone.
What is the ISS even *FOR* anymore? Not even enough room to stuff onWhat do you mean "anymore"? The ISS always had the same purpose, to
an experiment designed specifically to work on the ISS...
keep the shuttle alive. And the shuttle is there to keep the ISS
alive. Perfect symbiosis.
The shuttle is scheduled to die in 2010, IINM. What will replace it
is not clear to me yet.
to NASA. One cannot come with a decent design absent a well defined
mission.
A well-defined mission? From our erstwhile President?
Surely you jest... :-)
Much as it pains me to burst your political bubbles, NASA had no well
defined mission since the end of the Apollo project. That's 7
Administrations, quite bipartisan. Note that "continue with general
space research" is not a well defined mission.
Mati Meron | "When you argue with a fool,
meron@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | chances are he is doing just the same"
.
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