<another long-winded
anecdote>
I was born "under the rising sign
of Sputnik" in 1957 (S1 & S2 went up late that year). I was
just about 1 year old when Explorer 1 and then Vanguard 1 went up
in early 1958. Vanguard 1, 2, 3 are still up there, being in an
unusually high orbit for the time. The crowdsource Moonwatch
project was already developing and was used to try to track/find
Vanguard, but the first siting of an artificial satellite was of
Sputnik. Ham radio folks were tracking the radio signals, but
visual siting (telescope or binoculars) was much trickier.
Some here were born early enough to have been young adults at
that time and probably have first-hand memories of these events,
and perhaps even attempting their own observations? My first
experience with direct satellite observation was *probably* when
the Echo "satelloons"
were up. At roughly 100' diameter with a deliberately
reflective surface (passive microwave relays), they were
apparently highly visible to the naked eye. We've come a long way baby! </anecdote> <speculation> We (humans collectively) now have
something approaching 10,000 satellites or fragments in
orbit... one man's "trash" is another man's "treasure" of
course. I haven't heard Musk announce a SpaceX "Salvage
Operation" yet, but at some point, that seems like a viable
business, given the expense of launch... the materials in
derelict satellites would seem to be valuable once a method for
"recycling" those materials could be developed. I believe we
are still in the early stages of a "radiation" of design-species
in satellites, not having settled on any specific body plan and
functional conceit... some might eventually depend on a modest
amount of "foraging" once in orbit? Delta-V is clearly the most valuable resource which for all but
solar/mag-sail propulsion depends on reaction mass... which
suggests turning "big ones into little ones" with space junk
(grapefruit to bus-sized objects) into streams of (ionized)
particles as small as individual molecules. Variations on
"tether" and "sail" technology also may be good uses of captured
"space junk". A big challenge to all this is the orbital
mechanics sophistication to use less DeltaV matching orbits to
"catch" junk than is gained by capturing it. Oh yeh... and
still do something actually useful besides just wander around
eating and pooping things. <speculation>
On 5/27/19 10:09 AM, Owen Densmore
wrote:
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Daniel Suarez’s latest book, Delta-V, is great read - lots about the junk in orbit, the futility of Mars, and the viability of asteroid mining. Even has a Musk type ‘hero’. dve west On Mon, May 27, 2019, at 9:12 PM, Steven A Smith wrote:
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Dave - Thanks for the reference. I was literally *dreaming* in orbital
mechanics for several months last summer. I'm not sure what that
was about except maybe being a 21st generation variation on the
running, swimming, skipping, swinging, careening, flying dreams
that were common in my childhood. Hope things are going well over there in the shadow of windmills... - Steve
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I saw no satellites last night. It was still light at 9PM and there were some clouds passing.
calsky.com has fixed the links on their front page to the leading and trailing satellites. -- rec -- ============================================================ FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College to unsubscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com archives back to 2003: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/ FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ by Dr. Strangelove |
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