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Date: Sun, 23 Jun 91 03:09:26 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #688
SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 688
Today's Topics:
Re: INFO: Clandestine Mars Observer Launch?
Re: Fred Vote Thursday
Re: INFO: Clandestine Mars Observer Launch??
Re: Microgravity?
earth's day
Re: Microgravity?
Re: INFO: More on Hoagland's Mars - ParaNet File
Re: Shuttle & Launch Policies (Was: Re: More on Freedom Vote)
Re: Microgravity?
Re: Self-sustaining infrastructures
earth's day
Re: Self-sustaining infrastructures
Re: More on Freedom Vote
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In article <13150@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>, hrubin@pop.stat.purdue.edu (Herman Rubin) writes:
> In article <406.284B619D@nss.FIDONET.ORG>, freed@nss.FIDONET.ORG (Bev Freed) writes:
.....................
> > A 710-meter shaft set deep into the Earth forms the centerpiece of a
> > new microgravity experimentation facility which will open in July.
> > The center is expected to make a significant contribution to
> > biotechnology, metallurgy, ceramics, and other space related
> > research.
..................
> I must be missing something. How do we get microgravity at this depth?
> The formula I recall would have the gravitational force there approximately
> .9999 g.
Not a problem. You put the experiment in a high density streamlined
container and you DROP it 710 meters. During the fall you get
microgravity. At the end you get macrogravity. :-)
Bob P.
--
Bob Pendleton, speaking only for myself.
bpendlet@dsd.es.com or decwrl!esunix!bpendlet or hellgate!esunix!bpendlet
Tools, not rules.
------------------------------
Date: 4 Jun 91 16:52:38 GMT
From: cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!aplcen!boingo.med.jhu.edu!haven.umd.edu!ni.umd.edu!sayshell.umd.edu!louie@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (Louis A. Mamakos)
Subject: Re: INFO: More on Hoagland's Mars - ParaNet File
In article <1991Jun2.221810.26133@bilver.uucp> dona@bilver.uucp (Don Allen) writes:
>
>The following text comes from the ParaNet UFO echo.
>ParaNet File Number:
>Reprinted from Air & Space Smithsonian, June/July 1991.
>
> FACE OFF
>
>In 1976 the Viking I orbiter, flying some 1,100 miles above Mars,
>photographed a region called Cydonia. Close inspection of one
>frame revealed what looked like a human face gazing soulfully
Doesn't this direct reprint of a column from Air and Space magazine
sort of voilate the acceptable use criteria for copyrighted materials?