Not entirely on topic, but I thought a few here might like to pour one out to Kepler.
https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?feature=7272
A great job well done.
Thanks for the head's up, hopefully it hits a streaming service I'm subscribed to soon.Check your local listings: National Geographic's documentary Mars: Inside SpaceX is now airing.
Thanks for the head's up, hopefully it hits a streaming service I'm subscribed to soon.
https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/11/nasa-plans-invasive-review-of-spacex-after-musk-smoked-weed/
LOL, i guess they need to give Boeing some time to recover, although the gap widens by the day.
https://arstechnica.com/science/2018/11/nasa-plans-invasive-review-of-spacex-after-musk-smoked-weed/
LOL, i guess they need to give Boeing some time to recover, although the gap widens by the day.
Panding to the evangelical senators I guess. Bet it disappears once DM-1 has gone up.
According the Chris from NSF, Boeing seems to be pretty stuck.
Nice. Whats the plan for the mission? Just into orbit and back down?
EDIt: oh no, dock with ISS for a few weeks then re-enter. Apparently that capsule will be used for an in flight abort test later on.
Missed the catch, but very quickly picked them up from the water. Elon reckons they can hose em down and fly em again.
Missed the catch, but very quickly picked them up from the water. Elon reckons they can hose em down and fly em again.
The exact same conditions apply tomorrow evening this year too :) - If you have a visible pass of the station after 18:30 UTC then you should be able to see Dragon pass over too.If you live in Europe and the skies are clear tomorrow night, you might be able to see Dragon fly across the sky after the launch.
Go here: https://spotthestation.nasa.gov/sightings/ and put your city in to find out where the ISS pass will be in your sky.
Man, I wanted to see the onboard of it crashing into the water.