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Fri, 28 Dec 1990 02:16:13 -0500 (EST)
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Date: Fri, 28 Dec 1990 02:15:43 -0500 (EST)
Subject: SPACE Digest V12 #682
SPACE Digest Volume 12 : Issue 682
Today's Topics:
Usenet equivalent
Re: Galileo Update #2 - 12/07/90
Re: Interstellar travel
Re: Black Holes
Re: space news from Nov 5 AW&ST
Magellan Update - 12/12/90
Re: A human being in vacuum
Re: A human being in vacuum
Re: Galileo Update - 12/11/90
Re: 10th planet?
Galileo Update - 12/10/90
Astronaut Springer retires from NASA, Marine Corps (Forwarded)
Administrivia:
Submissions to the SPACE Digest/sci.space should be mailed to
space+@andrew.cmu.edu. Other mail, esp. [un]subscription notices,
should be sent to space-request+@andrew.cmu.edu, or, if urgent, to
Greg Titus (gbt@zia.cray.com) Compiler Group (Ada)
Cray Research, Inc. Santa Fe, NM
Opinions expressed herein (such as they are) are purely my own.
------------------------------
Date: 13 Dec 90 18:29:14 GMT
From: van-bc!ubc-cs!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!hellgate.utah.edu!caen!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!aplcen!sun4!jwm@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (James W. Meritt)
Subject: Re: Interstellar travel
In article <9012131704.AA08545@hermes.intel.com> thamilton@ch3.intel.com (Tony Hamilton, WF1-81, x48142) writes:
}Could anyone tell me what the latest designs are for interstellar starships?
There are a few. Their names start with "V"...
Unless, of course, you mean one for people...
Opinions expressed are solely those of the author, and do not necessarily
represent those opinions of this or any other organization. The facts,
however, simply are and do not "belong" to anyone.
jwm@sun4.jhuapl.edu or jwm@aplcen.apl.jhu.edu or meritt%aplvm.BITNET
------------------------------
Date: 12 Dec 90 19:50:33 GMT
From: sdd.hp.com!news.cs.indiana.edu!maytag!watmath!watdragon!watyew!jdnicoll@ucsd.edu (Brian or James)
Subject: Re: Black Holes
Forgive me if I've brought this up here before; I can't recall
if the previous times I've raised this question were all email.
Shouldn't relativistic effects prevent an outside observer
from seeing the collapsar form? I can see observing a 'really-quite-close-
to-being-a-collapsar object, but do we ever actually 'see' the event
horizon 'form' or does the collapse appear to an outside observer to
In article <1990Dec12.060448.20026@uokmax.ecn.uoknor.edu> rwmurphr@uokmax.ecn.uoknor.edu (Robert W Murphree) writes:
>Dear Ron Baalke or someone else in the know::i:
> i
>Has the high gain radio communication antenae deployed properly and is it in good good shape? Some of us have been waiting a year to see if it has. The mission depends on a high data rate for real time transmission of video data from 5 AUPlease send me
The High Gain Antenna will be unfurled in May 1991. The HGA is furled up
to begin with because it wasn't designed to withstand the thermal conditions
when fully deployed within 1 AU of the Sun. When the VEEGA trajectory was
developed, the spacecraft had to have additional thermal protection, which
included the HGA to be furled up until Galileo is permanently beyond the 1 AU
boundary. After the Earth gravity assist last Saturday, Galileo has dipped
slightly inside the Earth's orbit, so is still within 1 AU of the Sun. It
will cross the orbit on Earth on February 16, 1991, and from then on will
be at least 1 AU from the Sun for the remainder of its mission.