I attended the May 12 meeting not really expecting much, but the program was excellent, both informative and amusing. The speaker was Andrew Greenberg, and the subject was the Oregon Satellite Project and STEM Education. Specifically he taught us a thing of two about space, orbits and nanosatellites. I wanted to share just a few factoids that I got from him with you.
Andrew is adjunct faculty at PSU and helps students build rockets and satellites, in addition to his day job He had recently done an OMSI science pub about the same subject, so he was well prepared and practiced. The OreSat mission is to use an actual satellite project to bring STEM (Science, Tech, Engineering and Math) to all Oregon high schools and to study cirrus clouds.
The Von Karman line is an arbitrary line dividing outer space from not space. It is 100km above the surface of the earth. Some balloons fly at 30km above the earth. Cirrus clouds are the highest clouds and they are about 12km up.
There are three main layers of orbits, labelled LEO (low earth orbit), MEO (medium), and GEO (geostationary earth orbit). Geostationary satellites have to be highest up and go the fastest to maintain their position relative to the surface of the planet. Satellites cruise at around 200km from the earth, and they have to go really fast (8km/second or 17,500 miles per hour) to keep from falling back to the earth.
NASA has a research satellite that was just launched May 5 this year. It's the InSight mission and it intends to land on the surface of Mars. The rocket that launched InSight also launched the first two CubeSats, which are small satellites that can be designed individually then connected together. The high schoolers in Oregon are designing their own CubeSat, which NASA will launch! They didn't expect to get awarded the opportunity to launch the satellite when they applied, but NASA called their bluff and now they're working on it. All the software is open source. The 2U (two unit) CubeSats from Oregon will get "hucked" from the space station into its orbit. It will stay aloft for 6-12 months, or maybe longer if they get lucky.
The OreSat is scheduled to be deployed in fall 2019. For the sake of the high schoolers, he's calling the OreSat a "400km selfie stick", because each time it flies over Oregon the high schoolers will be able to receive a packet of information from it, including a picture of their location.
Then Andrew explained what he means when he says "Space Sucks". Quite literally it sucks because it is a vacuum. It speeds up the outgassing from any material that can, challenges welders to prevent leaks, and makes it tricky to keep anything at a reasonable temperature because it gets cold on the dark side and screaming hot in the sun. The radiation from space does harm to transistors. Solar cells are only ~30% efficient meaning it's not easy to power systems on satellites, and if they fail, they have to reboot without a mechanic coming to fix them. "Watchdog systems" monitor the functions of the satellite and attempt to make things right before there is a system failure.
He also mentioned Planet Lab Doves, which are privately owned satellites that basically remap the earth's surface every day. Exciting stuff.
Anyway, this talk was just a taste of what is happening. Satellite technology is moving fast and the very first satellite put into orbit by anyone in the state of Oregon will be built by high school and college kids. That's a fun way to approach STEM education.
There is no poverty so great as that of the prosperous, no wrechedness so dismal as affluence. Wealth is poison. There is no misery to compare with that which exists where technology has been a total success. --Thomas Merton, Catholic monk
Medicine is "like working in an auto repair shop," writes veteran internist Brendan Reilly. "You listen to what the car owner says; you ask him some questions; you listen carefully to his answers; and then you look under the hood. People today think medicine is all about technology -- DNA tests and MRI scans and robotic surgery. But it isn't. There's an age-old, tried-and-true method to clinical medicine, and there's nothing mysterious or high-tech about it. It's grunt work.... If you shortcut the grunt work you'll screw up the job."
Being a geek is all about being honest about what you enjoy and not being afraid to demonstrated that affection. It means never having to play it cool about how much you like something. It's basically a license to proudly emote on a somewhat childish level rather than behave like a supposed adult. Being a geek is extremely liberating. --Simon Pegg
I'm between an iphone and a cheap prepaid phone. I now have an LG. I could live without texting though it is cool. My finances are uncertain, so it is tempting to live on the cheap to sustain. On the other hand, it is tempting to get the tools that are likely to make me most successful, and the iphone could be one of those tools. What say you? ( notes on what you guys say will accumulateCollapse )
This is about how search engines such as google and networking sites such as facebook select for us what we will see based on what we have clicked on before. It appears to me that this limits our exposure to novel ideas, and funnels us into thought tunnels, ie dogma. Interestingly, I receive political ads from every direction, perhaps because I have found good candidates on all sides. I click both ways. On many spectrums. I wonder what google and facebook are NOT showing me.
I felt some loneliness the first week I was here. But now, no. I have enough acquaintances to not feel lonely. The landlady, Marie, speaks English and her bf is American. And her niece, Emma, also…
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