* * * * *
A Day in Space
[That small building? Four shuttle launch assemblies could fit in that small
building …] [1] [2]
Ah, the Kennedy Space Center [3]!
Nothing here is small, which makes photography somewhat vexing.
That picture above? The full image [4] I have is actually two pictures
stitched together, and is just a small sample of a much larger panorama [5]
of the Kennedy Space Center.
Even this picture of the business end of the solid rocket boosters and
external fuel tank:
[Some very expensive Roman Candles] [6]
required three pictures.
As a consequence, I don't have many pictures of actual rockets. Oddly enough,
the shuttle chase planes (pictured here in front of a full-scale mock-up of
the Space Shuttle [7]):
[One (1) Space Shuttle Chase Plane] [8]
>
are small. They're tiny little things.
[I think my car is bigger than that plane] [9]
Weird.
Anyway, the Kennedy Space Center.
Why is it in Florida, of all places?
On the NASA (National Air and Space Administration) Up Close Tour [10], three
reasons were given, but I suspect the fourth one was also a consideration:
1. Florida is close to the equator, and by launching eastward, rockets gain
an additional 900mph (miles per hour) boost, which, given that over 90%
of the mass of a rocket is fuel, can help.
2. And while Hawaii is closer yet to the equator, and surrounded by even
more water, Florida has the advantage of
2. 1. being attached to the rest of the United States, thus making it
cheaper to ship men and equipment than out to Hawaii;
2. 2. Cape Canaveral was already a missile testing site and
2. 3. it was already a state at the time, unlike Hawaii.
3. Launches out towards the east go over the Atlantic Ocean, which isn't
inhabited by anything that votes in politicians. If something goes
wrong, wreckage isn't spread across a thousand miles of population
centers.
4. It was cheap land with not a lot of neighbors who would complain (I
suspect this had something to do with making Cape Canaveral a missile
testing site). Remember, this was back before A/C (Air Conditioning) was
ubuiquitous here in Florida, and you either had to be insane, or forced,
to live here year round.
Now, that little building in the top picture? It's the not-so-little Vehicle
Assembly Building (VAB—NASA just loves their TLA (Three Letter Acronym)s), 52
stories tall and covers the area of your typical baseball field.
[It's probably the largest building without windows] [11]
The grey pillars on the left hand side are doors that open up and allow the
fully assembled rocket to be rolled out to the launch pad. The Saturn V [12]
had only 6′ of clearance when the doors were fully opened; the doors only
need to open half way for the Space Shuttle to clear. There are actually two
doors on either side of the building, enough for four rockets to be assembled
at once. Nowadays, only two of the bays are used.
The rockets are rolled out on a large vehicle (this building in the middle of
this divided highway [13]? That's not a building but the vehicle used to move
rockets—like I said, nothing but the planes are small) that moves at a speedy
½mph.
And speaking of the Saturn V, The Space Center has one on display:
[It just keeps going and going and going …] [14]
363′ high. 6.7 million pounds of mass sitting fully fueled on the launch pad.
7.6 million pounds of thrust. One of the displays around the Saturn V
mentioned that 91% of the mass of the Saturn V was fuel, compared to the 4%
mass fuel of a Corvette (favorite car of the astronauts), which prompted a
rather unfortunate thought: the Saturn V is the ultimate symbol of our
disposable society. Only 3.7% of the mass of the Saturn V returns back to
Earth intact (unfortunate because getting off this planet is so darned
difficult—and because I think the Saturn V is one of the most beautiful
rockets ever designed).
[Lots and lots of blinken lights at the Apollo 8 Mission Control] [15]
[16]
[IBM must have been a sponsor] [17]
[18]
After the NASA Up Close Tour, Bunny and I headed off to the Shuttle Launch
Simulation Facility [19], a new exhibit at the Space Center. From what I
understand, the astronauts that have been on this simulation have felt it to
be better than the simulations they were trained on (as far as a Space
Shuttle launch is concerned) and having been on it, it's rather good.
[It's only five minutes, but it's a bumpy five minutes] [20]
The “conceit” of the ride (if you will) is that you are one of perhaps three
dozen passengers going up in the Space Shuttle. You enter a large pod, sit
down and strap in. The pod is then rotated into a vertical position (and yes,
it is) and “loaded” into the Space Shuttle. A few moments later the launch
sequence is initiated (they kind of skip the whole “waiting for hours” and
get right to the “sheer minutes of terror”). I'm not sure how they actually
pulled off the 3G (Gravities) of accelleration, but I think they did a decent
job of it.
After a few minutes of being in a heavily vibrating vertical position, the
“accelleration” stops and you can feel yourself tugging up against the straps
(“freefall”). Again, it's quite well done.
After that, there wasn't much time left to much else, as the Space Center was
closing for the day.
[1]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/VAB-notsowide.jpg
[2]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/VAB-wide.jpg
[3]
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/kennedy/home/
[4]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/VAB-wide.jpg
[5]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panorama
[6]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/shuttle.launch.assembly.jpg
[7]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Shuttle
[8]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/chase-plane-1.jpg
[9]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/chase-plane-2.jpg
[10]
http://www.kennedyspacecenter.com/visitKSC/NASAtours/upclose.asp
[11]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/VAB.jpg
[12]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_V
[13]
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&ll=28.62283,-80.620862&spn=0.001606,0.002755&t=h&z=19
[14]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/saturn-v.jpg
[15]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/thumb.mission-control-1.jpg
[16]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/mission-control-1.jpg
[17]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/thumb.mission-control-2.jpg
[18]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/mission-control-2.jpg
[19]
http://www.kennedyspacecenter.com/visitKSC/attractions/SLEpage/
[20]
gopher://gopher.conman.org/IPhlog:2008/03/15/simulator.jpg
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