MITRA MANDAL GLOBAL NEWS

Manchester bombing suspect identified

Authentic news,No fake news.

Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
The Post Most
Most popular right now
 
 
Most Read
Manchester bombing suspect identified, U.S. official says; Islamic State claims responsibility
U.S. officials said Salman Abedi carried out the suicide blast that killed at least 22 people, including many teenagers, leaving a concert.
By Griff Witte  •  Read more »
CIA director warned Russian security service chief about interference in election
John Brennan said he told the head of the FSB that Russia’s actions would cause severe damage to relations with U.S.
By Greg Miller  •  Read more »
 
Trump asked intelligence chiefs to push back against FBI collusion probe after Comey revealed its existence
The director of national intelligence and the NSA director refused because they believed the requests were inappropriate.
By Adam Entous  •  Read more »
 
Wonkblog •  Analysis
How Trump’s budget helps the rich at the expense of the poor
His budget would reduce the resources available to the poor, while cutting taxes on the rich.
By Max Ehrenfreund  •  Read more »
 

 
Trump budget seeks huge cuts to science and medical research and disease prevention
The budget is released early, and shows Trump wants big cuts to NIH, CDC and FDA.
By Joel Achenbach  •  Read more »
 
The Plum Line •  Opinion
The walls are closing in
Will Senate Republicans do all they can to learn the truth about Michael Flynn? Here's a key test.
By Greg Sargent  •  Read more »
 
Arts and Entertainment •  Perspective
On her first official trip, Melania Trump is dressed for control and containment
How the first lady opted for clothes as armor instead of fashion diplomacy.
By Robin Givhan  •  Read more »
 
Trump proposes dramatic changes to federal government, slashing safety net programs that affect up to a fifth of Americans
President Trump proposed dramatic changes to the role of the federal government, issuing a budget plan that culls or eliminates programs that the White House says are a waste of money or create too much dependency.
By Damian Paletta  •  Read more »
 
Perspective
Trump’s budget is so cruel a Russian propaganda outfit set the White House straight
A reporter with Russia’s Sputnik pointed out that the proposal would cut off benefits from American citizens who are the children of immigrants.
By Dana Milbank  •  Read more »
 
 
Also Popular in Politics
 
Sinkhole forms in front of Mar-a-Lago; metaphors pour in
"Is it the swamp draining?" and other jokes flooded the Internet.
By Amy B Wang  •  Read more »
•  Analysis | Trump called terrorists ‘losers’ — the same insult he has thrown at CNN, Ted Cruz and many others
•  Analysis | Republican redistricting is taking a beating in the courts (again)
•  Analysis | Sean Hannity just gave the game away
•  What Trump’s budget cuts from the social safety net
 
Also Popular in Opinions
 
I was at the Ariana Grande concert where a bomb exploded. Here’s what happened.
Fear, panic and chaos at the Manchester Arena.
By Joe Ryan  •  Read more »
•  GOP voting changes are getting pulverized
•  I study the psychology of adolescent bullies. Trump makes perfect sense to me.
•  Trump escalates the war on women
•  The definitive book about the Trump administration was written in 1951
 
Also Popular in National
 
An Alaska man tried to take his life. But the bullet passed through him and killed his girlfriend.
Authorities believe the bullet passed through him and struck his girlfriend as she reached over to stop him from pulling the trigger.
By Samantha Schmidt  •  Read more »
•  Texas bathroom bill could expose secrets of transgender kids
•  Ape that lived in Europe 7 million years ago could be human ancestor, controversial study suggests
•  Just one alcoholic drink a day increases risk of breast cancer, study says
•  A sea lion yanked a girl into the water. Officials blamed her parents for ‘reckless behavior.’


Also Popular in World
•  Analysis | The huge contrast between Obama’s and Trump’s visits to Israel’s Holocaust memorial
•  Palestinians welcome Trump’s talk of peace but offer lessons in two-state demands
•  Venezuela’s paradox: People are hungry, but farmers can’t feed them
•  Justice Department ethics experts clear Mueller to lead Russia probe
•  Coats declines to comment on Post report that Trump asked him to deny evidence of collusion with Russia
 
Also Popular in Business
•  Perspective | Larry Summers: Trump’s budget is simply ludicrous
•  Trump’s budget proposal slashes spending by $3.6 trillion over 10 years
•  Google now knows when its users go to the store and buy stuff
•  Analysis | Trump to poor Americans: Get to work or lose your benefits
•  Trump seeks to sell off half of the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
 
Also Popular in Technology
•  Google now knows when its users go to the store and buy stuff
•  Twitter co-founder: I’m sorry if we made Trump’s presidency possible
•  Analysis | Why Facebook’s censorship problem may not get any better any time soon
•  New Zealand space launch has nation reaching for the stars
•  Computer beats Chinese champion in ancient board game of go
 
Also Popular in Lifestyle
•  Why the Onion released a fake, 700-page ‘leak’ from the Trump administration
•  What Stephen Colbert really thinks about Donald Trump
•  Perspective | The Seth Rich lie, and how the corrosion of reality should worry every American
•  Perspective | Carolyn Hax: You’re not pregnant yet, so do more breathing and less pushing
•  Roger Ailes’s teenage son vows to go after his dad’s accusers — ‘and hell is coming with me’
 
Also Popular in Entertainment
•  Dina Merrill, actress and philanthropist of aristocratic poise, dies at 93
•  Dina Merrill, heiress and actress, dead at 93

The Mars Project! Von Braun’s Ideas for a Mars Mission. Collaboration with Vintage Space

Authentic news,No fake news.


Fraser Cain द्वारा
Did you know that it’s been almost 45 years since humans walked on the surface of the Moon? Of course you do. Anyone who loves space exploration obsesses about the last Apollo landings, and counts the passing years of sadness.
Sure, SpaceX, Blue Origins and the new NASA Space Launch Systems rocket offer a tantalizing future in space. But 45 years. Ouch, so much lost time.
What would happen if we could go back in time? What amazing and insane plans did NASA have to continue exploring the Solar System? What alternative future could we have now, 45 years later?
In order to answer this question, I’ve teamed up with my space historian friend, Amy Shira Teitel, who runs the Vintage Space blog and YouTube Channel. We’ve decided to look at two groups of missions that never happened.
In her part, Amy talks about the Apollo Applications Program; NASA’s original plans before the human exploration of the Moon was shut down. More Apollo missions, the beginnings of a lunar base, and even a human flyby of Venus.
In my half of the series, I look at Werner Von Braun’s insanely ambitious plans to send a human mission to Mars. Put it together with Amy's episode and you can imagine a space exploration future with all the ambition of the Kerbal Space Program.
Keep mind here that we’re not going to constrain ourselves with the pesky laws of physics, and the reality of finances. These ideas were cool, and considered by NASA engineers, but they weren’t necessarily the best ideas, or even feasible.
So, 2 parts, tackle them in any order you like. My part begins right now.
Werner Von Braun, of course, was the architect for NASA’s human spaceflight efforts during the space race. It was under Von Braun’s guidance that NASA developed the various flight hardware for the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions including the massive Saturn V rocket, which eventually put a human crew of astronauts on the Moon and safely returned them back to Earth.
Wernher von Braun. Credit: NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center
Von Braun was originally a German rocket scientist, pivotal to the Nazi “rocket team”, which developed the ballistic V-2 rockets. These unmanned rockets could carry a 1-tonne payload 800 kilometers away. They were developed in 1942, and by 1944 they were being used in war against Allied targets.
By the end of the war, Von Braun coordinated his surrender to the Allies as well as 500 of his engineers, including their equipment and plans for future rockets. In “Operation Paperclip”, the German scientists were captured and transferred to the White Sands Proving Ground in New Mexico, where they would begin working on the US rocket efforts.
Von Braun and others standing in front a V-2 rocket engine at White Sands. Credit: U.S. Army/ Ordway Collection/Space Rocket Center
Before the work really took off, though, Von Braun had a couple of years of relative downtime, and in 1947 and 1948, he wrote a science fiction novel about the human exploration of Mars.
The novel itself was never published, because it was terrible, but it also contained a detailed appendix containing all the calculations, mission parameters, hardware designs to carry out this mission to Mars.
The Mars Project
In 1952, this appendix was published in Germany as “Das Marsproject”, or “The Mars Project”. And an English version was published a few years later. Collier’s Weekly Magazine did an 8-part special on the Mars Project in 1952, captivating the world’s imagination.
Here’s the plan: In the Mars Project, Von Braun envisioned a vast armada of spaceships that would make the journey from Earth to Mars. They would send a total of 10 giant spaceships, each of which would weigh about 4,000 tonnes.
Just for comparison, a fully loaded Saturn V rocket could carry about 140 tonnes of payload into Low Earth Orbit. In other words, they’d need a LOT of rockets. Von Braun estimated that 950 three-stage rockets should be enough to get everything into orbit.
Ships being assembled in orbit. Credit: Collier’s
All the ships would be assembled in orbit, and 70 crewmembers would take to their stations for an epic journey. They’d blast their rockets and carry out a Mars Hohmann transfer, which would take them 8 months to make the journey from Earth to Mars.
The flotilla consisted of 7 orbiters, huge spheres that would travel to Mars, go into orbit and then return back to Earth. It also consisted of 3 glider landers, which would enter the Martian atmosphere and stay on Mars.
Once they reached the Red Planet, they would use powerful telescopes to scan the Martian landscape and search for safe and scientifically interesting landing spots. The first landing would happen at one of the planet’s polar caps, which Von Braun figured was the only guaranteed flat surface for a landing.
A rocket-powered glider descending towards Mars. Credit: Collier’s
At this point, it’s important to note that Von Braun assumed that the Martian atmosphere was about as thick as Earth’s. He figured you could use huge winged gliders to aerobrake into the atmosphere and land safely on the surface.
He was wrong. The atmosphere on Mars is actually only 1% as thick as Earth’s, and these gliders would never work. Newer missions, like SpaceX’s Red Dragon and Interplanetary Transport Ship will use rockets to make a powered landing.
I think if Von Braun knew this, he could have modified his plans to still make the whole thing work.
Landed at the polar cap. Credit: Collier’s
Once the first expedition landed at one of the polar caps, they’d make a 6,400 kilometer journey across the harsh Martian landscape to the first base camp location, and build a landing strip. Then two more gliders would detach from the flotilla and bring the majority of the explorers to the base camp. A skeleton crew would remain in orbit.
Once again, I think it’s important to note that Von Braun didn’t truly understand how awful the surface of Mars really is. The almost non-existent atmosphere and extreme cold would require much more sophisticated gear than he had planned for. But still, you’ve got to admire his ambition.
Preparing the gliders for rocket-powered ascent. Credit: Collier’s
With the Mars explorer team on the ground, their first task was to turn their glider-landers into rockets again. They would stand them up and get them prepped to blast off from the surface of Mars when their mission was over.
The Martian explorers would set up an inflatable habitat, and then spend the next 400 days surveying the area. Geologists would investigate the landscape, studying the composition of the rocks. Botanists would study the hardy Martian plant life, and seeing what kinds of Earth plants would grow.
Zoologists would study the local animals, and help figure out what was dangerous and what was safe to eat. Archeologists would search the region for evidence of ancient Martian civilizations, and study the vast canal network seen from Earth by astronomers. Perhaps they’d even meet the hardy Martians that built those canals, struggling to survive to this day.
Once again, in the 1940s, we thought Mars would be like the Earth, just more of a desert. There’d be plants and animals, and maybe even people adapted to the hardy environment. With our modern knowledge, this sounds quaint today. The most brutal desert on Earth is a paradise compared to the nicest place on Mars. Von Braun did the best he could with the best science of the time.
Finally, at the end of their 400 days on Mars, the astronauts would blast off from the surface of Mars, meet up with the orbiting crew, and the entire flotilla would make the return journey to Earth using the minimum-fuel Mars-Earth transfer trajectory.
The planned trajectories to and from Mars. Credit: Collier’s
Although Von Braun got a lot of things wrong about his Martian mission plan, such as the thickness of the atmosphere and habitability of Mars, he got a lot of things right.
He anticipated a mission plan that required the least amount of fuel, by assembling pieces in orbit, using the Hohmann transfer trajectory, exploring Mars for 400 days to match up Earth and Mars orbits. He developed the concept of using orbiters, detachable landing craft and ascent vehicles, used by the Apollo Moon missions.
The missions never happened, obviously, but Von Braun’s ideas served as the backbone for all future human Mars mission plans.
I’d like to give a massive thanks to the space historian David S.F. Portree. He wrote an amazing book called Humans to Mars, which details 50 years of NASA plans to send humans to the Red Planet, including a fantastic synopsis of the Mars Project.
I asked David about how Von Braun’s ideas influenced human spaceflight, he said it was his...
“... reliance on a conjunction-class long-stay mission lasting 400 days. That was gutsy - in the 1960s, NASA and contractor planners generally stuck with opposition-class short-stay missions. In recent years we've seen more emphasis on the conjunction-class mission mode, sometimes with a relatively short period on Mars but lots of time in orbit, other times with almost the whole mission spent on the surface.”
Fraser Cain | मई 22, 2017 को 5:45 अपराह्न | टैग्स: FeaturedMercury missions | URL: http://wp.me/p1CHIY-zig

Mitra-mandal Privacy Policy

This privacy policy has been compiled to better serve those who are concerned with how their  'Personally Identifiable Inform...