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14 Aug 08:39

Orbital Speed

Orbital Speed

What if a spacecraft slowed down on re-entry to just a few miles per hour using rocket boosters like the Mars-sky-crane? Would it negate the need for a heat shield?

—Brian

Is it possible for a spacecraft to control its reentry in such a way that it avoids the atmospheric compression and thus would not require the expensive (and relatively fragile) heat shield on the outside?

—Christopher Mallow

Could a (small) rocket (with payload) be lifted to a high point in the atmosphere where it would only need a small rocket to get to escape velocity?

—Kenny Van de Maele

The answers to these questions all hinge on the same idea. It's an idea I've touched on in other articles, but today I want to focus on it specifically:

The reason it's hard to get to orbit isn't that space is high up.

It's hard to get to orbit because you have to go so fast.

Space isn't like this:

Space is like this:

Space is about 100 kilometers away. That's far away—I wouldn't want to climb a ladder to get there—but it isn't that far away. If you're in Sacramento, Seattle, Canberra, Kolkata, Hyderabad, Phnom Penh, Cairo, Beijing, central Japan, central Sri Lanka, or Portland, space is closer than the sea.

Getting to space[1]Specifically, low Earth orbit, which is where the International Space Station is and where the shuttles could go. is easy. It's not, like, something you could do in your car, but it's not a huge challenge. You could get a person to space with a small sounding rocket the size of a telephone pole. The X-15 aircraft reached space[2]The X-15 reached 100 km on two occasions, both when flown by Joe Walker. just by going fast and then steering up.[3]Make sure to remember to steer up and not down, or you will have a bad time.

But getting to space is easy. The problem is staying there.

Gravity in low Earth orbit is almost as strong as gravity on the surface. The Space Station hasn't escaped Earth's gravity at all; it's experiencing about 90% the pull that we feel on the surface.

To avoid falling back into the atmosphere, you have to go sideways really, really fast.

The speed you need to stay in orbit is about 8 kilometers per second.[4]It's a little less if you're in the higher region of low Earth orbit. Only a fraction of a rocket's energy is used to lift up out of the atmosphere; the vast majority of it is used to gain orbital (sideways) speed.

This leads us to the central problem of getting into orbit: Reaching orbital speed takes much more fuel than reaching orbital height. Getting a ship up to 8 km/s takes a lot of booster rockets. Reaching orbital speed is hard enough; reaching to orbital speed while carrying enough fuel to slow back down would be completely impractical.[5]This exponential increase is the central problem of rocketry: The fuel required to increase your speed by one km/s multiplies your weight by about 1.4. To get into orbit, you need to increase your speed to 8 km/s, which means you'll need a lot of fuel: $ 1.4\times1.4\times1.4\times1.4\times1.4\times1.4\times1.4\times1.4\approx 15$ times the original weight of your ship.

Using a rocket to slow down carries the same problem: Every 1 km/s decrease in speed multiplies your starting mass by that same factor of 1.4. If you want to slow all the way down to zero—and drop gently into the atmosphere—the fuel requirements multiply your weight by 15 again.

These outrageous fuel requirements are why every spacecraft entering an atmosphere has braked using a heat shield instead of rockets—slamming into the air is the most practical way to slow down. (And to answer Brian's question, the Curiosity rover was no exception to this; although it used small rockets to hover when it was near the surface, it first used air-braking to shed the majority of its speed.)

How fast is 8 km/s, anyway?

I think the reason for a lot of confusion about these issues is that when astronauts are in orbit, it doesn't seem like they're moving that fast; they look like they're drifting slowly over a blue marble.

But 8 km/s is blisteringly fast. When you look at the sky near sunset, you can sometimes see the ISS go past ... and then, 90 minutes later, see it go past again.[6]There are some good apps and online tools to help you spot the station, along with other neat satellites. My favorite is ISS Detector, but if you Google you can find lots of others. In those 90 minutes, it's circled the entire world.

The ISS moves so quickly that if you fired a rifle bullet from one end of a football field,[7]Either kind. the International Space Station could cross the length of the field before the bullet traveled 10 yards.[8]This type of play is legal in Australian rules football.

Let's imagine what it would look like if you were speed-walking across the Earth's surface at 8 km/s.

To get a better sense of the pace at which you're traveling, let's use the beat of a song to mark the passage of time.[9]Using song beats to help measure the passage of time is a technique also used in CPR training, where the song "Stayin' Alive" is used to . suppose you started playing the 1988 song by The Proclaimers, I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles). That song is about 131.9 beats per minute, so imagine that with every beat of the song, you move forward more than two miles.

In the time it took to sing the first line of the chorus, you could walk from the Statue of Liberty all the way to the Bronx:

It would take you about two lines of the chorus (16 beats of the song) to cross the English Channel between London and France.

The song's length leads to an odd coincidence. The interval between the start and the end of I'm Gonna Be is 3 minutes and 30 seconds,[10]Based on timing from the official Youtube video and the ISS is moving is 7.66 km/s.

This means that if an astronaut on the ISS listens to I'm Gonna Be, in the time between the first beat of the song and the final lines ...

... they will have traveled just about exactly 1,000 miles.

12 Aug 15:18

coolchicksfromhistory: Ecaterina Teodoroiu (1894-1917) Art by...

by joanna-molloy




coolchicksfromhistory:

Ecaterina Teodoroiu (1894-1917)

Art by Mary Feitz (tumblr)

Romania entered World War I in 1916 and Ecaterina Teodoroiu joined the scouts as a nurse.  Within a few months she felt called to join the fighting and became the first female combat soldier in Romanian history.

Ecaterina served as a solider for less than a year.  During that time she saved a strategic bridge on the Jiu River, escaped from the Germans as a POW, rose to the rank of Second Lieutenant, and earned the Military Virtue Medal after being wounded in battle.  On September 3, 1917, Ecaterina was killed in a hail of machine gun fire during the Battle of Mărăşeşti.  Some say her last words were “Forward, men, I’m still with you!”

12 Aug 06:02

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12 Aug 04:00

The White Fortress by Scott Speck



The White Fortress by Scott Speck

12 Aug 04:00

NBC News buys smartphone video streaming company in bet on user-generated footage

by Jeff Blagdon

In a bet on user-generated content, NBC News has acquired a startup called Stringwire in what the New York Times is calling an acqui-hire. The company’s founder, Phil Groman, developed software to enable real-time sharing of smartphone video, which chief NBC News digital content officer Vivian Schiller believes is going to be the next generation of news coverage. "Wherever you see a swarm of eyewitnesses on Twitter, that’s the sweet spot for Stringwire," she said.


NBC wants its cameras on the ground as quickly as possible

The software uses the emerging WebRTC standard for transmitting real-time voice and video data over the web. It's currently in private beta, but the Times writes that NBC could simply ask people tweeting from a news event to click a link that launches the Stringwire web app, obviating the need to install any specialized software. If the footage was particularly compelling, NBC would then be in a position to air it live. In cases like the manhunt following the Boston bombing and the Tahrir Square clashes in Cairo, Twitter was often the first source of breaking news, and NBC wants its cameras on the ground as quickly as possible.

As user-generated content continues to grow as a share of total news footage, it’s natural for networks to explore ways to capitalize on it, and Schiller mentioned that Stringwire had "great commercial opportunities," hinting that it could license the technology to other news organizations.

12 Aug 03:44

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12 Aug 03:43

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12 Aug 02:35

Snowden's father gets Russian visa - Sydney Morning Herald


Sydney Morning Herald

Snowden's father gets Russian visa
Sydney Morning Herald
Washington: Edward J. Snowden's father and the family's lawyer said on Sunday that they had obtained visas to visit the former intelligence contractor in Russia and indicated that they would encourage him to return to the United States to face federal charges ...
Snowden's father gets visa, to leave for Russia 'soon'Reuters
Snowden leaks force Obama's handMSNBC
US Lawmakers Blast Russia on Snowden, Other MattersVoice of America
USA TODAY -New York Daily News -MiamiHerald.com
all 107 news articles »
12 Aug 02:17

Birth father of adopted American Indian child arrested - Reuters


ABC News

Birth father of adopted American Indian child arrested
Reuters
By Harriet McLeod. CHARLESTON, South Carolina | Mon Aug 12, 2013 4:58pm EDT. CHARLESTON, South Carolina (Reuters) - The biological father at the center of a U.S. Supreme Court custody dispute over the rights of children with Native American ...
Father in adoption dispute refuses extraditionUSA TODAY
Authorities working to bring girl, father to SCAlbany Times Union
'Baby Veronica' dad released from custody after turning self inToday.com
Watertown Daily Times -HLNtv.com -DesMoinesRegister.com
all 137 news articles »
12 Aug 02:10

Those Mac Pros are going to be expensive

firehose

"I’d be very surprised to see the new Mac Pro’s entry price below $3,500, and for a CPU that makes the Mac Pro barrier worth crossing, I think we’re talking $5,000 and up."

Oh and hey--don't forget that it'll run Mavericks, which is not supporting a lot of your legacy software. I'm looking at you, every TV editor in the City of Los Angeles!

Here’s AnandTech’s reported price list of the Xeon E5-2600 V2 CPUs that the new Mac Pro will use.

What’s interesting about the high-end models is that Intel is clearly hitting huge thermal-efficiency walls. As the number of cores goes up, the highest clock speed goes down to keep within a usable TDP (the CPU’s highest sustained amount of power drawn and heat generated under maximum load).

Many applications still only max out one or two cores effectively, so for most usage, a higher clock speed is better than more cores if you can’t have both. But for highly parallelizable tasks, such as video processing, 3D rendering, and scientific research, it’s interesting how little difference there is in the “total” raw GHz (cores × GHz) available in these high-end CPUs.

Cores Clock “Total” GHz Est. Price $/GHz
8 3.3 GHz 26.4 $2,321 $88
81 3.4 GHz 27.2 $2,414 $89
102 2.8 GHz 28.0 $1,944 $69
10 3.0 GHz 30.0 $2,356 $79
12 2.7 GHz 32.4 $2,950 $91

(Granted, “total” GHz is a terrible metric to use for most usage, and there are other factors that complicate performance of multicore systems beyond a simple sum of all cores’ speeds. This is merely a quick way to estimate the performance under heavy parallel loads before we can actually benchmark these CPUs.)

And for all of those applications that don’t parallelize well (hi, Adobe and LAME!), the higher-core, lower-clocked, more-expensive CPUs will probably perform worse than the cheaper, fewer-core, higher-clocked ones.

How much Turbo Boost makes a difference remains to be seen. While it can be a big jump on consumer CPUs, high-end Xeons typically haven’t seen a huge gain from it because they’re already running so close to TDP walls.

But no matter which CPU you choose, these new Mac Pros are looking like they’re going to be pretty expensive if you want a good amount of CPU power. Typically, the outgoing Mac Pro has been priced at about $2000 plus the CPU cost (or more), with the entry CPU being a few hundred bucks (and really not worth buying), and that’s without the dual high-powered workstation GPUs that the new Mac Pro will apparently have standard.

But the new Xeon E5 V2 line hardly has any low-cost options. Even a relatively weak (by Mac Pro standards) 6-core, 2.4 GHz CPU is $701, and anything faster is over $1,000.

I’d be very surprised to see the new Mac Pro’s entry price below $3,500, and for a CPU that makes the Mac Pro barrier worth crossing, I think we’re talking $5,000 and up.


  1. The E5-2687W V2’s TDP is 150W. It may not be worth accommodating the possibility of this thermal load in the new Mac Pro since all of the other high-end CPUs are 130W, so I don’t expect this CPU to be available in the Mac Pro. (But if it is, it might end up being the fastest option for most applications.) 

  2. The E5-2680 V2’s TDP is only 115W, which might mean less fan noise under load in the Mac Pro. And it looks like it’s going to be a solid performer at a lower price than the other chart-toppers. But it’s still nearly $2,000. 

12 Aug 02:07

triumph - Kyattou Ninden Teyandee aka Samurai Pizza Cats  (Tecmo...



triumph - Kyattou Ninden Teyandee aka Samurai Pizza Cats 

(Tecmo - Famicom - 1991) 

requested by gurinka

12 Aug 02:02

Bitcoin developers say critical Android flaw leaves digital wallets vulnerable to theft

by Ellis Hamburger
firehose

shared to delight Overbey

In a blog post the developers of Bitcoin have announced the discovery of a critical weakness in Android that leaves Bitcoin wallet apps subject to theft. The vulnerability affects every Bitcoin wallet app, including popular options like Bitcoin Wallet, blockchain.info wallet, BitcoinSpinner and Mycelium Wallet.

The developers say that the vulnerability lies in Android's ability to generate secure strings of random numbers, which help keep your Bitcoins safe. Exchange front-end services like Mt. Gox and Coinbase are unaffected, since their private keys are not generated on-device. The developers strongly urge anyone who has generated a wallet using an Android app to generate a new address with a proven reliable random number generator, and to then send all the money in your wallet back to yourself.

In the meantime, a thread on BitcoinTalk.org seems to indicate that updates for the affected apps are already in the works.

12 Aug 02:01

BioShock Infinite Burial at Sea DLC stars Elizabeth, dressed to impress

by Jessica Conditt
firehose

"Irrational provides an image of Elizabeth in five angles, ostensibly so cosplayers can start planning their sewing equipment accordingly."

mini Elizabeth's new classy underwater threads
BioShock Infinite's Burial at Sea DLC is a noir nostalgia trip to Rapture, the city in the ocean featured in BioShock 1 and 2, and Elizabeth's outfit gets an update befitting the new theme. Irrational provides an image of Elizabeth in five angles, ostensibly so cosplayers can start planning their sewing equipment accordingly. Get a (much) closer look here. There's no word on if we'll get a sneak peek of Booker's new threads, too.

Burial at Sea is in two episodes, both set in Rapture two years before it falls to ruin. The first episode stars Infinite protagonist Booker Dewitt, and the second stars Elizabeth. Players will get new plasmids and vigors, new weapons, dimensional tears, Big Daddies and skylines - and, of course, a new perspective on Rapture.

Episodes one and two are $15 each, with a release date on its way.

JoystiqBioShock Infinite Burial at Sea DLC stars Elizabeth, dressed to impress originally appeared on Joystiq on Sun, 11 Aug 2013 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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12 Aug 01:59

Microsoft Is Working On a Cloud Operating System For the US Government

by timothy
SmartAboutThings writes "It seems that Microsoft is relying even more on the opportunities provided by the cloud technology. The Redmond behemoth is preparing to come up with a cloud operating system that is specially meant for government purposes. Government agencies already use two of Microsoft's basic cloud products: Windows Azure and Windows Server. But now it seems that Microsoft is working on a modified version of its somewhat new Cloud OS that could bear the name "Fairfax", Compared to Windows Azure, "Fairfax" cloud operating system would provide enhanced security, relying on physical servers on site at government locations. Given the fact that CEO Steve Ballmer is striving to make Microsoft much more than a powerful software giant, such a project makes sense, especially because it would help in their lobby activities."

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12 Aug 01:59

These Abandoned Tanks Are Rusting Mementoes of the Wars of the Past

by Vincze Miklós

These Abandoned Tanks Are Rusting Mementoes of the Wars of the PastSwords may be driven into ploughshares when they've finished their fighting, but tanks are often left to rust, in graveyards of military vehicles or on the battlefields where they fell.

Read more...


    


12 Aug 01:59

Inside the Decision To Shut Down Silent Mail

by timothy
Trailrunner7 writes with this snippet from ThreatPost:: "Silent Circle's decision to shut down its Silent Mail email service may have come quickly yesterday, and the timing of the announcement admittedly was prompted by Lavabit's decision to suspend operations hours before. But the seeds for this decision may have been sown long before Edward Snowden, who reportedly used Lavabit as a secure email provider, was a household name and NSA warrants for customer data were known costs of doing business. ... 'When we saw the Lavabit announcement, the thing we were worrying about had happened, and it had happened to somebody else. It was very difficult to not think I'm next,' Callas said. 'I had been discussing with Phil [founder and PGP developer Phil Zimmerman] over dinner the night before, should we be doing this and what the timing should be. I was looking at it from point that I want to be a responsible service provider and not leave users in a lurch. [The Lavabit announcement] told me I have to start moving on it now.'"

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12 Aug 01:36

Amy Poehler, Neil Patrick Harris, Bill Hader, and Many More Announced For New Pixar Movies

A lot's been going down at Disney's D23 Expo. First there was the announcement of Finding Dory's voice cast (ohai Diane Keaton!). Then we found out Tom Hiddleston will be playing Captain Hook. And now two more Pixar movies have actors attached: The Good Dinosaur (Pixar does dinosaurs, yesssss), and Inside Out, which takes place inside the head of a young girl. Head behind the cut for more info on both films and whose voices you'll be hearing when you go see them.
12 Aug 01:36

Oh My Glob, Taiwan Has an Adventure Time Train

Cartoon Network took over one of Taiwan High Speed Rail's trains, festooning both the inside and outside with characters from Adventure Time, The Powerpuff Girls, and more. There's also a pretty nifty video on the making of the train, the YouTube description for which reads: "Jake the dog also features on an on-board post-box, and passengers are encouraged to mail postcards to their friends and families, plus their favorite websites, onboard." OK, I might have added a few words in there. (images by THSRC, via Tumblr)
12 Aug 01:36

The Universe Sees That We Want a Wonder Woman Movie, Gives Us a Chicken Soup for the Soul Movie Instead

firehose

lololololololol

And it's even being released by Warner Bros., which owns DC Entertainment, which in turn has not been making progress toward a Wonder Woman movie for some time now. I know that, strictly speaking, a Wonder Woman movie and this upcoming Chicken Soup for the Soul movie have nothing at all to do with one another. But it kind of feels like the Cinema Gods are playing a trick on everyone who wants Princess Diana to get to the big screen. Or maybe we all did something really bad in a past life.

12 Aug 01:35

Watch the Debut Episode of Burka Avenger, Pakistan’s First Animated Female Superhero Show [VIDEO]

firehose

"He taught me the ancient art of Takht Kabbadi: the art of fighting with books, pens, and advanced acrobatics." 22m:27s. Feels like a close spiritual cousin to Beyond Good & Evil.
attn: saucie, goats; the goat gets damseled though.

A few weeks ago we told you about Burka Avenger, Pakistan's first animated TV show to feature a female superhero. Well now we have the first episode, where teacher Jiya —a.k.a. the Burka Avenger—uses books, pens, and martial arts to keep bumbling baddies from shutting down her city's girls school and depriving its students of their right to education. What do you think? (Thanks, anonymous tipster!) Are you following The Mary Sue on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, & Google +?
12 Aug 01:27

Robbers used special effects masks to disguise themselves as white

by Lauren Davis

Robbers used special effects masks to disguise themselves as white

How convincing can practical special effects be in real life? A trio of black men wore masks purchased from a special effects company while committing a robbery in order to make witnesses believe they were white—and it actually worked.

Read more...


    


12 Aug 01:27

Beauty Supplies in JFK Suspicious Package - Wall Street Journal


Chicago Tribune

Beauty Supplies in JFK Suspicious Package
Wall Street Journal
A suspicious package that sickened two employees at John F. Kennedy International Airport on Sunday was determined to contain beauty supplies, the Federal Bureau of Investigation said. FBI hazardous-materials teams responded to the airport post office in ...
Package of Beauty Supplies Triggers Police, FBI Response at JFKNBC New York
Workers at JFK report package made them illUSA TODAY
FBI: Beauty Supplies in Package at JFK AirportABC News
CNN -New York Daily News -Newsday
all 48 news articles »
12 Aug 01:26

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firehose

hey Overbey



12 Aug 01:25

Monday is Minecraft day. Is everybody happy? You bet your life we are!

by clive

Just another Manic Mineday.

Raspberry Pi Mineday is upon us and there’s just time before Liz comes back and kicks me off for messing about to get in a few posts about one of my pet subjects — learning through play. In this case, learning through playing Minecraft. Hurrah!  I can sometimes be found playing the Xbox version in a darkened room, rocking gently and mumbling, “Why dig when you can code? Why … dig … when … you …. can … CODE?” Indeed. The Pi version is where it’s all happening.

Hands up who, the moment they saw this, thought, “Rude words! Let’s write rude words!” Shame on you.

I wasn’t going to post anything from Martin O’Hanlon, he has done far too much fantastic stuff in Raspberry Pi Minecraft — hide and seek; 3D-model creator; a working canon etc etc — and if we are not careful with our praises he will withdraw into that land through a kitchen cupboard, Narnia like, and spend the rest of his days riding about on the second hand of a huge clock. But then a Tweet was twote and Martin couldn’t resist:

I was at Young Rewired State‘s (YRS) festival of code this weekend, mentoring a group of young coders from BBC Birmingham, when I saw a tweet from Raspberry Pi about it being Minecraft day on Monday, so I thought, I’m surrounded by coders, we have a weekend ahead of us, we must be able to create something…

Martin’s Python script turns Tweets into chunky airwords in the Minecraft world. It’s a lovely example of interfacing the Web with the Raspberry Pi and a great example to start the day. And if you’ve never seen Martin’s Raspberry Pi Minecraft stuff before, or you have installed Minecraft on your Pi and are not sure where to start, you simply must visit his site Stuff about code, where he has oodles of Pi-related projects and tutorials as well as the Minecraft goodies. It’s one of our favourite Raspberry Pi sites. Thanks Martin!

More Raspberry Pi Minecraft will be coming up at random intervals. In the meantime, if you haven’t already done so, install it on your Pi! And if you have done anything inspiring, amazing or outrageous on Pi Minecraft please let us know (today only!) on blog@raspberrypi.org.

12 Aug 01:25

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12 Aug 01:24

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12 Aug 01:24

nevver: The Serengeti Lion and the Robot

12 Aug 01:23

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12 Aug 01:13

The Empiric

by Lovely Package
firehose

via saucie

Designed by Hired Guns | Country: Canada

“Hired Guns Creative provided the product naming, branding, and packaging design for The Empiric, a gin from Arbutus Distillery, Vancouver Island’s newest craft distillery.

Cloaked in midnight black, ever-present, seldom seen, The Empiric resides amid the twisted cedars of temperate West Coast rain forests. Ruled by ritual, The Empiric gathers strength from the spirits, invoking darkness to expose light. A bearer of natural magic and harbinger of deeply shrouded secrets, The Empiric is a menacing beauty, bringing clarity only to those who are truly worthy. Decades of knowledge and practice collide, exploding into a spirit that tastes like no other, an ethereal blend of the finest West Coast herbs and botanicals.

Darkness Will Bring Light.”

12 Aug 01:13

Drink Burdock Blood Bitters to settle your stomach, calm your...

firehose

via saucie



Drink Burdock Blood Bitters to settle your stomach, calm your nerves, restore youthful vigor — and maybe get a little bit tipsy. These bitters, like many tonics of the time, contained up to 20 percent alcohol.

(via Booze Restores Vigor, 9 Of 10 Charlatans Agree : Shots - Health News : NPR)