Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Thursday, December 27, 2012

Mission Writing. News and Views. The Imaginarium

Hello Troops,

Writing good stories is the greatest challenge facing anyone who wants to build their own simulator or Space Center.  Regular science fiction, the kind you find published in paperback, won't work; neither will science fiction movie scripts.  These stories are all character driven - meaning the plot of the story is moved forward and explained through the interaction of the characters.  That doesn't work at the Space Center.  Our stories cannot be character driven because of the interactive nature of the mission itself.    

Space Center stories focus on the three elements of literature:  Man against Man,  Man against Nature and Man against himself.  Necessary story information is sent out by computer onto the simulator's work stations or main viewer instead of through major characters.  The story slows or even stops if that information isn't seen and understood by the crew.  We've developed ways to get around a distracted crew, but those detours must be thought out before the mission is told and written into a mission script.

As we prepare new stories for our simulators, I'd like our staff, volunteers and Flight Directors to use accurate information regarding nearby stars and the new planets being discovered orbiting them.  The following diagram, taken from Space.com,  shows what the Kepler telescope has discovered to date:



I'm directing our stories use nearby stars and planets for their settings (whenever possible) or at least include them in the fabric of their missions;  places for resupply for instance.

Mr. W.


News and Views

A commentary on the Starship Enterprise's interior design in the upcoming movie.  



 Well,… JJ is at it again, in this latest Star Trek trailer, which gives us a good look at a good example of what should avoid when designing interior spaces for film.

A. Unexplainable odd corners & junctions. B. Angles that are awkwardly close to being the same but really aren’t. C. Angles that don’t actually relate to one another, ie. curves against angles against perpendiculars. D. More ...of the same… peaked archways between a flat overhead and flat door header. E. Wall-tops that tuck behind some ceiling pieces and then overlap them. F. Rectangles with curved corners that relate to no other form in the scene. G. With thirty separate ceiling lights in this shot, why are these other glaring lights needed? Are they only there to provide an excuse for even more senseless lens flares? H. Ankle-level sharply pointed corners that again relate to nothing else in the scene, except (occasionally) a pointed wall corner above? With the baseboard undercut, you know there has to be a lot of people with damaged ankles & shins hobbling around these corridors. I. The odd overhead recesses? Do they seem to have a purpose? Does a spaceship have room for decorative details that high? J. Graphics that are way too high to read. A deck that is made from one continuous piece and is so slippery that gum won’t stick to it, not to mention shoes. L. Control panels that are just under six feet off the deck. Is everyone aboard tall enough to reach these?

I’m just sayin’…..


Andrew Probert
  

Engineer petitions White House to conduct a feasibility study on building the Starship Enterprise

We have within our technological reach the ability to build the 1st generation of the USS Enterprise. It ends up that this ship's inspiring form is quite functional. This will be Earth's first gigawatt-class interplanetary spaceship with artificial gravity.   Read On

The Interior Sounds of the Spacestation

If you've ever wondered what it's like to live on a hunk of metal orbiting the Earth at hundreds of miles an hour, Col. Chris Hadfield has an answer for you.  Read On

Will 2013 Bring the Discovery of the First True Earth Like Planet?

The first truly Earth-like alien planet is likely to be spotted next year, an epic discovery that would cause humanity to reassess its place in the universe.  Read On


Rocket and Spaceflight Updates

Ebb and Flow, the twin GRAIL satellites over the Moon.

SpaceX made further progress on its Grasshopper rocket program on December 17. In a 29-second flight, the 10-story tall Grasshopper rocket (a Falcon 9 first stage with Merlin engine) made a 40 meter flight up, then hovered, and then landed safely in the upright position! Watch the cool video on Parabolic Arc's website here:  http://www.parabolicarc.com/2012/12/23/spacexs-grasshopper-flies-to-40-meters/

CBC/Canada has a good article on the docking of Soyuz TMA-07M at the ISS.  Crewmember Chris Hadfield, a Canadian astronaut, will become the Expedition 35 commander in March:  http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2012/12/21/tech-hadfield-space-station.html

CollectSace published a nice article about the end of the GRAIL mission over the Moon. The twin satellites Ebb and Flow made a planned crash into the lunar surface on December 17. Information about their incredible mission here:  http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-121712a.html

A new LANDSAT satellite is on its way to the Vandenberg AFB in California for an upcoming flight.  http://spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av035/arrival.html  The LANDSAT 5 satellite will be decommissioned in a few more months.

Mark Daymont
Space Center Educator


The Imaginarium: 
The Troubadour's Celebration of all things Creative and Imaginative.


Have you noticed that people in general are naturally drawn to the people in their social circles who have warm hearts, fun personalities and are slow to judge?  
There is something to be learned from that.


Creativity: A
This jacket was sorely needed during my time on the driveway with shovel in hand.



A fireman's Christmas decorations.
Imagination: A


Imagination: A
I've said it once, I'll say it again.  I'd go out of my way to shop at store like this.



American money in true living color.


The Weasley's home in gingerbread.


A different way to tie a tie. 
I'm trying to learn.
I'll let you know how it goes.


This is what reading can do for you.


I have a Facebook friend who experienced someone else's random act of kindness.
The lady in front of him in the line at Starbucks paid for his drink.
We may not be able to do 26 acts of kindness, but we can at least do one or two.
Let me know how it goes.


Perfect seating at for the third wheel at a fast food restaurant.



A creative way to deal with too many presents  and not enough Christmas gift wrapping paper.



From a conservative website.
Imagination: A


Gravity dice.


A Real Narnia Wardrobe



 A lawyer's Christmas Card



A watch I'd like to own.
Imagination: A


Just in case you've got one laying about the place.

 
From the side of a cotton candy container.


Creative Advertising for UHU Superglue.


A circuit board cake.

Wednesday, December 26, 2012

The Odyssey's Removal. Space and Science News


Hello Troops
Work continues at the Space Center on the removal of the Odyssey and electrical repairs and additions to the Phoenix, Magellan and Galileo.




Two large dumpsters sit outside the Voyager's back entrance for the demolished Odyssey.  It is sad to see the Odyssey removed.  I know several of The Troubadour's readers regarded the Odyssey as their favorite ship.   

The Odyssey's removal will allow us to access the Briefing Room and Phoenix.   Soon the Center will reopen on a limited basisWe hope to take one class per day on field trips.  The committee hasn't decided on what its recommendation will be for after school and Saturday private missions.  

The electricans are moving electrical plugs in the Magellan's control room.  They have work to do under the Magellan's risers as well.  The Phoenix control room will be getting several new banks of electrical outlets along with new LED lights to illuminate the Phoenix bridgeVery cool indeed.  The Galileo is getting new wiring for its plugs and lighting.  Jon Parker and Matt Ricks spent the best part of last Saturday removing the Galileo's wall panels for electrical access.  

Thank you for your continued support.   

Mr. W.   

In the News

A light which can be molded into virtually any shepe, from a tube, to a point to an entire wall. It takes up about the same amount of energy as an LED, but puts out as much light as a fluorescent. It doesn't hum like a fluorescent, and it puts out light similar in color to the Sun's rather than the bluish light of LEDs.  Perhaps the future of home lightning.   Read On

Astrobiologists have been worried for quite some time now that the Martian surface has been contaminated with microbes originating from Earth.  Read On

Right now people are living in a Mars Colony.  Read On

China gets set to grow veggies on Mars, and start the first Deep Space brand of the Communist Party.
Read On

The 13 best apps every owner of an iPad or iPad mini should own.  Just in time for your post Christmas boredom.  Read On

Have you ever wondered whether all this--you, your life, the universe--is just a sophisticated computer simulation? Martin Savage, a physicist at the University of Washington, thinks we can't discount the idea. In fact, he and two colleagues (Silas Beane and Zohreh Davoudi) published a paper in November 2012 exploring the possibility.  Read On 

The most extreme space discoveries of 2012.  Astronomical discoveries in 2012 have reshaped what we know about the universe and pushed some instruments to the very limits of their observing power.  Read On

A sun-like star in our solar system's backyard may host five planets, including one perhaps capable of supporting life as we know it, a new study reports.  Read On


Monday, December 24, 2012

Merry Christmas and the Imaginarium.


Merry Christmas Troops!

What a day of snow.  I'm glad it happened on Christmas Eve and not Christmas Day.  I had a bit of trouble navigating the roads with my rear wheel drive Battlestar (Lincoln Town Car); I did a complete a half donut on a neighborhood street trying to get home from WalMart at 8:30 A.M.   Next time I won't leave my home until I've fully charged the Battlestar's phaser banks so I can use them to melt the ice and snow off the roads in front of me as I drive.

I noticed the workman were hard at it at 7:00 A.M. at the school.  They told me they had Christmas Eve off.   I guess their boss cracked the whip.  They are serious about getting the Magellan, Galileo and Phoenix up and running as soon as possible.  Knowing that makes Christmas a bit brighter, doesn't it?

What better way to end the day than to take a nice stroll through the Imaginarium.  I'll leave you to it.  I've got a family Christmas Eve party at my sisters.  Its one of those white elephant gift exchange things.  You know what I'm talking about.  By the time the exchange is over, half the family won't be speaking to the other half until its time to get together again on July 4th!  I stay out of the arguments over who got what and how many times that certain gift actually changed hands.  I trade for the least desirable gift, fill a bowl with caramel corn and sit back and watch the fireworks.

Happy Holiday!
Mr. W.    






The perfect Christmas Tree for the poor starving university student.


Imagination: A


I think some of my students already own this book based on their performance!


Creativity: A




A company will create a stuffed animal based on your child's drawing.
Brilliantly Creative!


There's a story in this picture. 
Don't know what yet, but there is one.



I wonder if you could get a degree in this?

 


Wonder who mom and dad love the most?
 

Creative
 

Needed.
Creative
 

A hotel in Finland built to watch the Northern Lights.

 



Great Job Ogden.
 


Santa is ready for all  of this to end.

Detailed Christmas Card.
 

Christmas in Greece.
 

Imagination: A

 

Fruit Art.
Creative!
 

Fancy Dress Party as classic newspaper cartoon characters.
 












Creative Advertising.
Imagination: A
 

Somebody will become a billionaire if they can invent this.