[HCRA] More on the space suite..
Rick Lindquist, N1RL
n1rl at earthlink.net
Tue Jan 31 16:15:53 EST 2006
Glad to see this getting some great "general news media" coverage.
Thanks for sharing, Jim.
73, Rick N1RL
-----Original Message-----
From: hcra-bounces at mailman.qth.net [mailto:hcra-bounces at mailman.qth.net]
On Behalf Of Jim Harrington
Sent: Saturday, January 28, 2006 12:39 PM
To: HCRA
Subject: [HCRA] More on the space suite..
______________________________________________
-------Hampden County Radio Association-------
-----------e-mail list (reflector)-------------
______________________________________________
Hi All,
Picked this up on the net..
Jim KB1JVF
Gimmick in the Heavens: An Orbiting Spacesuit With Transmitter
By JOHN SCHWARTZ
Published: January 28, 2006
<http://www.nytimes.com/2006/01/28/science/28suit.html?_r=1>
In what might resemble a horrifying moment in a science fiction film,
astronauts aboard the International Space Station will toss an empty
spacesuit overboard next week.
The Russian suit will carry three batteries and a ham radio transmitter
and antenna. Amateur radio operators on Earth will be able to listen
to its transmissions over several days until the batteries fail.
The space station has long had a bond with earthbound amateur radio
operators, and there is a ham rig on the station to communicate with
them.
The idea of turning a suit into a satellite came from the Russians,
NASA officials said.
In a few weeks, the orbit of the suit (designated SuitSat-1) will decay,
and the suit will burn up as it falls into the atmosphere. Kwatsi
Alibaruho,
a NASA flight director who spoke yesterday at a news conference in
Houston,
said, "No part of the suit is expected to survive re-entry."
The suit will be released during a spacewalk on Feb. 3 in which the
astronauts,
William S. McArthur Jr. of the United States and Col. Valery I. Tokarev
of the
Russian Air Force, will also repair a moving platform that carries the
station's robot arm.
In December, a safety device designed to cut snagged cables cut one of
two control lines
to the platform; NASA is studying why the accident occurred. The
spacewalkers will
install a bolt that will keep the second line from being cut until a
more
complete repair can be carried out.
"It's very important that we repair this," said Kirk Shireman,
the deputy space station program manager.
Anyone with a ham radio or police scanner that picks up the
FM frequency 145.990 MHz can listen to the spacesuit's transmissions.
NASA has put a computer program online at
http://science.nasa.gov/RealTime/JPass/25/JPass.asp to help people
figure out
when the suit will be traveling overhead.
The suit will be unpressurized, but the astronauts have stuffed it full
of discarded clothing so
that it should retain a somewhat human shape. Sensors will monitor the
suit's
temperature and battery power, which will be transmitted along with a
message in five languages.
The message (which is not "heeeeeellllllppp!") will include an image and
secret
words for student listeners to decipher.
Evans F. Mitchell
KD4EFM / AFA2TH FL; USAF MARS
WCF Section ARRL Member
ARRL WCF SECTION WEBSITE
http://www.arrlwcf.org
http://www.polkemcomm.org
kd4efm _ at _ hotmail ,com
kd4efm at arrl dot net
------Hampden County Radio Association-------
An ARRL Special Services Club for over 50 years
------------http://www.hcra.org------------
________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe from the list please visit:
http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/hcra
Address any comments to:
-Jim, KK1W - jmullen at rockys.com
_______________________________________________
HCRA mailing list
HCRA at mailman.qth.net
http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/hcra
More information about the HCRA
mailing list