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A sad ending to a great beginning

19 posts
  1. McCallum David K
    McCallum David K avatar
    7/5/2011 8:07 AM
    In 1961 JFk gave one of his more inspiring speeches of all time (and he gave many I must add). He told the American people we were going to the moon. We would reach for the stars and beyond. At that time America had all of 16 minutes in space and it was owned by the Soviet Union at that time. They had done much more than we had but he challenged America and the American people accepted the challenge. They put their arms around our fledging space program and NASA. It became a trememdous sense of pride for our nation. We are the only people to ever walk on the moon..........we have accomphlished what others still dream of. Captain Gene Cernan was the last man to take a step on the moon, perhaps our greateat astronaut and without doubt the biggest proponent of the space program.

    Every American child born from say the late 1960's or 1970 has simply known Americans have walked on the moon. It was a given............no big deal........we did it first and have been the only ones to do it. But sadly on July 8th of this year should the last space shuttle blast off as scheduled it will end. From that historic speech by JFK NASA became a shining example of whats great about the USA............and now sadly it becomes a Muslim outreach program. Not exactly what John F. Kennedy has planned for it.



  2. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
  3. Melvin Waldron
    Melvin Waldron avatar
    43 posts
    7/5/2011 3:07 PM
    McCallum said: and now sadly it becomes a Muslim outreach program. Not exactly what John F. Kennedy has planned for it.


    David, not sure what you mean by your comment about a Muslim outreach program.

    I do agree what great things the space program provided our nation, and I believe a need to continue somewhat, but at what cost? We can't pay for things now. Of course what was the tax rates back then? We had plenty of revenue to fund it. I'm sure the tea party is not for such government programs as the space program. Just my opinion.

    Mel

    Melvin H. Waldron III, CGCS, Horton Smith Golf Course, City of Springfield/Greene County MO

  4. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    7/5/2011 3:07 PM
    As an interesting side note, the scientist who invented the Saturn V booster was also a Nazi War Hero. That was our Nazi Outreach Program! (Wernher von Braun)



  5. Keith Pegg
    Keith Pegg avatar
    0 posts
    7/5/2011 3:07 PM
    In 1958, President Eisenhower signed the Space Act, officially creating the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. From the beginning, the purpose for the new branch extended beyond space ships and moon boots. The law stipulated that its research and advancements should benefit all people, and in its 50-year history, NASA has certainly fulfilled that role. Although most people today will never set foot on the moon, everyone likely comes in contact with a NASA by-product every day. Partnering with various research teams and companies, NASA continues to spawn a vast array of new technologies and products that have improved our daily lives. Each year since 1976, NASA has published a list of every commercialized technology and product linked to its research. Here are some highlights that we as a society use in our lives everyday...

    1) Memory Foam The open cell polyurethane-silicon plastic was created for use in NASA aircraft seats to lessen impact during landings. The plastic has a unique property that allows it to evenly distribute the weight and pressure on top of it, which provides shock absorbency. Even after being compressed to 10 percent of its size, the memory foam will return to its original shape. Some private and commercial planes now feature the foam in seats as well. But the uses of the plastic foam extend beyond the skies. Its weight distribution and temperature sensitivity play important roles for severely disabled or bedridden people. Doctors can customize the foam to support patients while reducing the pressure on certain parts of the body to ward off bedsores. Other commercial uses include padding for motorcycle seats, custom body molds for dressmaking and protection for racecar drivers.

    2) Water Filters Water is the essential ingredient to human survival. Since people cannot live without wate r, the ability to convert contaminated water to pure water is an incredibly important scientific achievement. Astronauts needed a way. Astronauts needed a way to cleanse water they take up into space, since bacteria and sickness would be highly problematic. Water filter technology had existed since the early 1950s, but NASA wanted to know how to clean water in more extreme situations and keep it clean for longer periods of time. If you look at a water filter, you can usually detect small chunks of charcoal inside of them. Sometimes, when you first use a water filter, you'll even notice tiny black flecks from those chunks. This charcoal is specially activated and contains silver ions that neutralize pathogens in the water. Along with killing bacteria in the water, the filters also prevent further bacterial growth. Companies have borrowed from this same technology to bring us the water filter syst

    3) Scratch-resistant LensesIf you drop a pair of eyeglasses on the ground, the lenses probably won't break. That's because in 1972, the Food and Drug Administration began requiring manufacturers to use plastic rather than glass to make lenses. Plastics are cheaper to use, better at absorbing ultraviolet radiation, lighter and not prone to shattering. Nevertheless, they also had an Achilles heel. Uncoated plastics tend to scratch easily, and scuffed lenses could impair someone's sight. Because of dirt and particles found in space environments, NASA needed a special coating to protect space equipment, particularly astronaut helmet visors. Recognizing an opportunity, the Foster-Grant sunglasses manufacturer licensed the NASA technology for its products. The special plastics coating made its sunglasses ten times more scratch-resistant than uncoated plastics.

    4) Cordless Tools When you're sucking up bits of dirt or crumbs around the house with a handheld cordless vacuum, you are actually using the same technology that astronauts used on the moon. Although Black & Decker had already invented the first battery-powered tools in 1961 [source: NASA], the NASA-related research helped refine the technology that led to lightweight, cordless medical instruments, hand-held vacuum cleaners and other tools. In the mid-1960s, to prepare for the Apollo missions to the moon, NASA needed a tool that astronauts could use to obtain samples of rocks and soil. The drill had to be lightweight, compact and powerful enough to dig deep into the surface of the moon. Since rigging up a cord to a drill in outer space would be a difficult feat, NASA and Black & Decker invented a battery-powered, magnet-motor drill. Working in the context of a limited space environment, Black & Decker developed a computer program for the tool that reduced the amount of power expended during use to maxim

    5) Adjustable Smoke DetectorWhere there's smoke, there's fire. NASA engineers knew that simple fact when they were designing Skylab in the 1970s. Skylab was the first U.S. space station, and the astronauts would need to know if a fire had started or if noxious gases were loose in the vehicle. Teaming up with Honeywell Corporation, NASA invented the first adjustable smoke detector with different sensitivity levels to prevent false alarms. The first one to hit the consumer market is called the ionization smoke detector. That essentially means that it uses a radioactive element called americium-241 to spot smoke or harmful gasses. When clean air particles of oxygen and nitrogen move through smoke detectors, the americium-241 ionizes them, which creates an electrical current. If foreign smoke particles enter the smoke detector, it disrupts that interaction, triggering the alarm.

    6) Shoe Insoles When Neil Armstrong famously spoke of "one giant leap for mankind," he probably didn't foresee the literal connotation it would come to have. Today's athletic shoes have borrowed the technology of the moon boots that first took that leap. The space suit designed for the Apollo missions included specially-made boots that put a spring in astronaut's steps while providing ventilation. Athletic shoe companies have taken this technology and adopted it to construct better shoes that lessen the impact on your feet and legs. For instance, in the mid-1980s, shoe company KangaROOS USA applied the principles and materials in moon boots to a new line of athletic shoes. With help from NASA, KangaROOS patented a Dynacoil three-dimensional polyurethane foam fabric that distributes the force on your feet that happens when you walk or run. By coiling the fibres within the fabric, the KangaROOS absorb the energy from your foot hitting the ground, rebounding it back to your feet.

    7) Long-distance Telecommunications The ability to carry on long-distance telephone conversations did not happen overnight. It doesn't link back to one specific NASA invention -- improved telecommunication took place over decades of work. Before humans were sent into space, NASA built satellites that could communicate with people on the ground about what outer space was like. Using similar satellite technology, around 200 communication satellites orbit the globe each day. These satellites send and receive messages that allow us to call our friends in Beijing when we're in Boston. NASA monitors the locations and health of many of these satellites to ensure that we can continue to talk to people around the corner or overseas.

    8) Safety Grooving Carving a groove into concrete may not sound like much of an innovation, but it certainly keeps us safe on the roads. Also called safety grooving, this simple, yet lifesaving, process inserts long, shallow channels into pavement on runways and roads. These indentions in the concrete divert excess water from the surface to reduce the amount of water between tires and the runway or road. This increases the friction between wheels and concrete, improving vehicle safety. Safety grooving was first experimented with at NASA's Langely Research Center in the 1960s as a way to improve safety for aircraft taking off on wet runways. Once people realized how well it worked, transportation engineers began applying the same techniques to highways. According to NASA, safety grooving has reduced highway accidents by 85 percent. Cars hydroplane when water between tires and the road actually separates the two from each other.

    9) Ear Thermometer, which developed the first ear thermometers, saw a need to reduce the amount of time nurses spend taking temperatures. With around one billion temperature readings taken in hospitals in the United States each year and a shortage of nurses, the company set out to shave off the precious minutes otherwise required to watch mercury rise. Diatek took advantage of NASA's previous advancements in measuring the temperature of stars with infrared technology. Together with NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab, the company invented an infrared sensor that serves as the thermometer. Aural thermometers with these infrared sensors take your temperature by measuring the amount of energy your eardrum gives off into the ear canal. Since the eardrum is inside our bodies, it acts as an accurate sensor for the energy, or heat, inside of our bodies that increases when we get sick. Hospital models can perform a temperature reading in less than two seconds.

    10) Invisible Braces Many teenagers cringe at the prospect of braces. Getting one's teeth in order used to mean enduring a mouth full of metal, but not so anymore. Invisible braces hit the market in 1987, and now there are multiple brands. Invisible braces are made of translucent polycrystalline alumina (TPA). A company called Ceradyne developed TPA in conjunction with NASA Advanced Ceramics Research to protect the infrared antennae of heat-seeking missile trackers. In the meantime, another company, Unitek, was working on a new design for dental braces -- a design that would be more aesthetically pleasing and would not have the shiny metallic factor. It discovered that TPA would be strong enough to withstand use and is translucent, making it a prime material for invisible braces. Because of their instant popularity, invisible braces are one of the most successful products in the orthodontic industry.

    And so much more.



  6. Jason Baker
    Jason Baker avatar
    12 posts
    7/6/2011 9:07 AM
    And Tang! Do not forget Tang! Thanks NASA!



  7. McCallum David K
    McCallum David K avatar
    7/6/2011 10:07 AM
    Without question the space progam and NASA created a great sense of national pride in what America can do when it sets it's mind to doing it.



  8. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    7/6/2011 10:07 AM
    Devise new safer vehicles to carry large payloads and smaller missions headed to the moon, asteroids and mars, does not sound like the end to me.



  9. McCallum David K
    McCallum David K avatar
    7/8/2011 9:07 AM
    Yes it seems that our next fiight after the last launch of the shuttle will be as guest of the Russians. Not as a crew member, merely sitting in the back of the bus. Over a dozen shuttle pilots have either been re-asigned to other duties or have moved on to the private sector. Not much need for pilots if simply sending up unmanned rockets. In the speech Gene Cernan gave July the 4th he mentioned the average age of the talent in mission control during Appollo 13 thr 17 was 26 yrs of age. The new group of brainy young scientist working for NASA now do not want to go design cars or computers or some other gaget......they want to send more men into to space.

    I hope todays launch goes as scheduled weather permitting as it will carry the last large load ( 10,000lbs) of supplies to the space station. Something the Russians can't come close to doing.



  10. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    7/15/2011 9:07 PM
    [youtube">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y8qWeSTZWHw[/youtube">



  11. McCallum David K
    McCallum David K avatar
    7/21/2011 6:07 AM
    An end to an era came today with the landing of space shuttle Atlantis early this morning. Never fail to be amazed at seeing those machines both blast off into space and see how graceful they are upon their return landing. Unfortunately roughly 10,000 pink slips came back with the shuttle as it braked to its final stop on the tarmac. Bet the Chinese and Russians both had a chuckle this moring at our expense. Our best and most techinically savvy can now go design video games for 14 yo minds of mush.



  12. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    7/21/2011 7:07 AM
    McCallum said: An end to an era came today with the landing of space shuttle Atlantis early this morning. Never fail to be amazed at seeing those machines both blast off into space and see how graceful they are upon their return landing. Unfortunately roughly 10,000 pink slips came back with the shuttle as it braked to its final stop on the tarmac. Bet the Chinese and Russians both had a chuckle this moring at our expense. Our best and most techinically savvy can now go design video games for 14 yo minds of mush.


    The negativity from the right never ceases to amaze and at the same time nauseate me.



  13. Melvin Waldron
    Melvin Waldron avatar
    43 posts
    7/21/2011 9:07 AM
    Scott, I don't think David was being negative, and he is correct. But the funny thing most of those in congress all these years on both sides of the aisle helped keep NASA afloat and on missions, probably through National pride and the jobs that were scattered throughout their districts all over the county. I believe the Tea Party crowd would have really put the clamps to NASA to more power they get, since NASA consist of all those "Government Workers and Government is too Big" stuff in their bs.

    While we try to solve our dept problem, I'm sure NASA was and is contributing to it, but as all programs need to be put onto the table and prioritized and scrutinized for the value they bring to the nation and the economy. I believe in my opinion that is why NASA was releasing some of the everyday items that they contributed to society to show money wasn't just be shot out into space.

    Mel

    Melvin H. Waldron III, CGCS, Horton Smith Golf Course, City of Springfield/Greene County MO

  14. Steve Nelson
    Steve Nelson avatar
    0 posts
    7/21/2011 10:07 AM
    I gotta defend DMAC here too. The layoffs are real. Literally thousands of jobs gone- roughly 3,500 in Florida alone. These are high tech, high paying jobs not likely to be replaced in kind any time soon. I'm not in favor of abandoning the project in entirety. Too much useful research and technology has come from the space program. Last time I checked, there was still a manned space station out there, I assume those folks want to come home sometime. Is this now a Russian only operation?



  15. McCallum David K
    McCallum David K avatar
    7/21/2011 12:07 PM
    No I heard today we will continue to work with the space station and be the biggest funder of it (of course) but we will hitch a ride with the Russkies to do it. Now the Chinese are planning manned space flights and also a future space station (I think 2020 or so) and will do both on our dime.

    Sorry Scott hope my causing your nausea didn't cost you your Denny's grandslam breakfast. If losing that many high tech jobs and talent that will disappear is negative then so be it. Call your president and complain about it.



  16. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    7/21/2011 1:07 PM
    My family relocated to Florida with GE in 1962 to support the space program. Many of our friends were also with GE. The same loss of jobs occurred starting in the early 70's with the end of the Apollo Program and the recession we had then. Many of my friend's parents lost their jobs, one, a rocket scientist from Albania committed suicide. He was managing a car wash at the time. Our next door neighbor was an engineer and he opened a Maico Body Shop. My father ended up demonstrating a tank simulator that GE was building. As a kid I went to every launch. I remember the cape going from heyday to bust in those days. The shuttle was great, but American space exploration is not over. We currently have a satellite in orbit around an asteroid and we are launching a satellite to Jupiter next month. Orlando is growing and doing well. It is 40 minutes away from the cape. I think these people will find better things to do than turn youngsters brains to mush.



  17. McCallum David K
    McCallum David K avatar
    7/22/2011 10:07 AM
    Sure hope you didn;t watch the mainstream evening news yesterday.......very negative and depressing. Definitely nausating . Interviewing NASA employees expecting pink slips as early as today as well as all the mom and pop business owners that depend on NASA for a living as well. And then the capper........the price tag for a ride to the space station with the Russians.................$60,000,000 per passenger. Wow and no onboard movie even!
    But hey maybe by 2015 we can fly commerical and not depend on the government to do it.



  18. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    8/1/2011 8:08 AM
    http://dawn.jpl.nasa.gov/

    Conservatives are sad. I mean "ION PROPULSION" how cool is that!



  19. Wahlin Scott B
    Wahlin Scott B avatar
    8/5/2011 7:08 PM
    http://www.contracostatimes.com/california/ci_18625904

    Life completely sucks in America, just ask a conservative.



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