Saturday, June 18, 2016

The New USS Voyager Gets its Warp (Jump) Core. Watch the Video and be Amazed. Space News. The Imaginarium.

The New USS Voyager is Fitted With an Outland Corporation Jump (Warp) Engine

David Kyle Herring, Isaac Ostler, and an Outland Corporation Jump Core Specialist check the seals

     An Outland Corporation jump core, sealed with an ACME brace, is usually the last large piece of equipment installed on a Farpoint Starship. A week or two of extensive tests follows instillation when technicians check seals, rings, washers, gadgets, and doodads. The ship will be cleared for space trials if everything checks out and the ship's chief engineer signs the A973-83 form in addition to checking the "Accepted" box on form GD4435 along with initialling payment authorization to the Outland Corporation. 

Monitoring the flow of antimatter through the magnetic field
David Kyle Herring stood in for Tex, the first Voyager's chief engineer.  Tex has been on extended leave for the past four years. Where he's been and what he's been up to is anybody's guess. Some say he signed on as a chief engineer with a privateer running questionable goods in the Orion Belt. Someone claims to have seen him in a run down shipstop on the Outer Rim.  Another less reliable source claims he found religion and dedicated himself to monastic life with the Silent Order of St. Swivel; supposedly living with his brothers of faith in a humble thatched hut deep in the Red Forest of Swindon.  

The claimant says that's Tex behind the curtain in the upper window

No one believes Tex would let someone else chief engineer a ship called Voyager. We're all expecting him to walk onto the bridge before launch acting as if nothing had happened. 

The Troubadour's reporter filmed some of the installation for you to watch and appreciate. The complexities involved in such delicate engineering require us to warn you NOT to try this at home!



Space News
By Mark Daymont
spacerubble.blogpspot.com

Space Station Departures and Change of Command



Change of Command Ceremony: Front (L-R): Malenchenko, Kopra, and Peake. Back Row (L-R): Williams, Ovchinin, and Skripochka. Credit NASA TV.

The last two weeks have seen a couple of farewells. Most recently, on Friday morning June 17, Commander Tim Kopra of Expedition 47 turned over command of the International Space Station to astronaut Jeff Williams. Then the Expedition 47 crew prepared to board and undock from the station.


Soyuz TMA-19M docked at the Russian Rassvet module.

In the returning Soyuz spacecraft TMA-19M, Russian cosmonaut Yuri Malenchenko assumed spacecraft command with astronauts Peake and Kopra acting as flight engineers. The three crew have been on the ISS for 186 days. For astronaut Tim Peake, it marks the end of a significant mission as he has been the first British Astronaut with the European Space Agency to stay aboard the station.


The Soyuz undocks from the Rassvet module.

The hatch was closed at 10:34 p.m. Eastern , and undocking took place about 3 hours later.


The Soyuz slowly backs away from the station to avoid contaminating the station with exhaust particles during the de-orbit burn.

At about 4:20 a.m. Eastern, the crew fired the engines for the de-orbit burn and the spacecraft descended through the atmosphere. After separating the scientific and service modules, the crew capsule entered the atmosphere and landed a little after 4 am Eastern in Kazakhstan.

Back on Earth after 186 days.

Yuri Malenchenko now becomes the spacefarer with the second most time in space, at 828 days (first is Genady Pedalka). This was Kopra's second flight, bringing him to 244 days, and the completion of Peake's first mission for 186.
There was a another departure from the station a little while ago. This one was done by remote control.  




View of Cygnus from the ISS. The deployed solar panels are nicely symmetric.

On Tuesday June 14, astronauts used the robotic arm to undock and separate the Cygnus cargo spacecraft from the station. It arrived back in March of this year, and once all equipment and supplies were unloaded, the astronauts began filling it with waste, garbage, and unwanted equipment. The Cygnus, nicknamed Rick Husband after a NASA Astronaut, will de-orbit and burn up over the Pacific on June 22. Before that, though, The Rick Husband had a couple of assignments. First, on Tuesday, a special fire experiment was conducted in the craft by remote control from the ground. The purpose was to study how flames work in zero-gravity. This experiment was much larger than the ones performed on the ISS, and were safely done on the craft, separated from the ISS by the vacuum of space. Much more safe! The second item was to release 5 small Cube-Sat satellites into orbit on June 15. 

The Imaginarium




  
















          

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