Robotic Space Plane Launches In Mystery Mission This Week 110
mpicpp writes: The United States Air Force's robotic X-37B space plane will carry a NASA experiment into orbit when it launches on its next mystery mission Wednesday. The liftoff will begin the reusable space plane's fourth mission, which is known as OTV-4 (short for Orbital Test Vehicle-4). Since it's classified it's not entirely clear what the space plane will be doing once it leaves Earth Wednesday. This has led to some speculation that the vehicle might be a weapon, but officials have repeatedly refuted that notion, saying X-37B flights simply test a variety of new technologies. The X-37B looks like a miniature version of NASA's now-retired space shuttle. The robotic, solar-powered space plane is about 29 feet long by 9.5 feet tall (8.8 by 2.9 meters), with a wingspan of 15 feet (4.6 meters) and a payload bay the size of a pickup-truck bed. Like the space shuttle, the X-37B launches vertically and lands horizontally, on a runway.
No Mystery (Score:4, Funny)
The Air Force has weaponized systemd and is launching satellites that can download it onto enemy computers at a moments' notice.
Re: (Score:3)
No wonder they all hate us. If someone infected my computer with that shit I'd launch a jihad.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Unless you're testing the aerodynamics and other flight capabilities of a reusable robotic lander.
But yeah, that's probably not it. That wouldn't be classified.
My guess? They're testing some kind of new spy tech.
Re: (Score:3)
By your logic, why have a Hubble telescope, or a Chandra X-Ray Observatory, when they could simply be attached to the ISS?
Re: (Score:2)
because they have to be rock steady, not attached to an object with people in it who keep moving around
Re: (Score:3)
Have to play Devil's Advocate here, but it could also be for development of defense AGAINST weapons. Think about it: China (and the US, I believe) has already blown a satellite in LEO out of the sky. The 60 Minutes piece on the weaponization of space (and especially AGAINST space) is not just over-hyped (for a change), but a real threat. If someone can make a weapon that can take out satellites in MEO (GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, Galileo, etc) and GEO (both geo-sync and sun-sync), there will be a real problem.
Re: (Score:2)
you know what they do on the ISS?
Well, they can't very well do weapons research on the ISS with the Russians up there.
"Oleg. Vat is 'pew pew pew' sound comink from American module?"
Re: (Score:3)
I guess you could read this
http://www.gizmodo.co.uk/2015/... [gizmodo.co.uk]
Or you could be a fucking retard. Or were you pre-emptively replying to retards? Then you're a retard.
Or were you trying to make fun of mpicpp? Because I could do that for you as well. I think information is more effective, but apparently you think that being an asshole or ignorant fuck on the internet is more effective. So now you're the target.
You're not helping.
EM drive? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
Well, close...
FTFA:
For example, the space plane is carrying a type of ion engine called a Hall thruster on OTV-4, Air Force officials said. [...] “A more efficient on-orbit thruster capability is huge,” Maj. Gen. Tom Masiello, commander of the Air Force Research Laboratory in Ohio, said in a statement. “Less fuel burn lowers the cost to get up there, plus it enhances spacecraft operational flexibility, survivability and longevity.”
I gotta admit, I'm curious why the NASA mission flying on there couldn't have been done on ISS...
Re: EM drive? (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe because NASA is a political football that isn't allowed to do really cutting edge stuff without subcontracting the work to 48 out of 50 states to secure funding from Congress, while secret military programs can do science with less bother. Some of the Area 51 programs involved in developing OXCART ended up ahead of schedule and under budget because keeping stuff confidential sheltered it from the usual MIC/appropriations morasd. Likewise SpaceX is now on the cutting edge of rocket recoverability because it's more capable of taking risks and less hamstrung by accounting oversight. Maybe covert projects like the X37b are simply easier organizationally and thus easier avenues to doing unconventional science like testing ion engines than is the civilian space program. Remember, Hubble became possible because of Keyhole, which worked out the materials science and engineering aspects in secret.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
One possibility is that DoD was planning to fly anyway and offered NASA some payload capacity because they were interested in the results of that program. There are almost always more experiments queued up than there is funding to run them, so people are always looking to scrounge unused capacity--especially for small experiments that aren't funded for their own vehicle. Capacity for long-duration missions on ISS is especially tight because of the recent launch failures.
Re: (Score:2)
You realize that NASA has absolutely nothing to do with this mission, right?
Space Drone (Score:1)
The military aren't going to sit around and wait. They are looking for a delivery vehicle that can act as a drone.
http://news.discovery.com/spac... [discovery.com]
where it states in 2012 it completed a 224 day mission, terming it 'drone'.
With China's attempt in weaponizing space, the US military are being foresighted.
Ramming speed?
Re: (Score:1)
I believe I read somewhere that the space shuttle had a specific design requirement of 1000 NM cross-track steering on reentry, and this was because the Air Force wanted to use the space shuttle to launch from Vandenberg into polar orbit, grab a Chinese or Russian satellite, then deorbit, reenter, and land back at Vandenberg without completing a full orbit. I suspect the Air Force is still interested in this mission profile, and this is one of the things this vehicle is built for. That said, they seem to
Re: (Score:2)
I've always been curious why there haven't been battlefield "disposable" drones that could be launched from a high altitude bomber, controlled by units in the field, fire a couple of guided missiles and then be delivered as a weapon itself on a target.
Re: (Score:2)
Because that's basically a missile that launches missiles. You'd just use waste payload capacity for duplicate launch mechanism (one of the bomber, another on the missile). Just launch/drop the missiles/bombs directly from the bomber.
Re: (Score:2)
I would recast it as a plane that launches projectiles but becomes a bomb at the end of its mission.
I think the advantage it would have would be in local (company or battalion level) control and targeting. Combat situations are loose and fluid and there's more than a little complexity involved in having ground troops ID a target, relay this to forward air controllers, relay it to a pilot and have the right target get hit and still be the right target.
In some circumstances you can do this with IR designatio
Re: (Score:2)
Yo dawg, I heard you like bombs...
Re:Space weapons (Score:5, Informative)
Space weapons aren't illegal. You just can't have orbital weapon platforms for weapons of mass destruction (think nukes).
It's perfectly legal for any country to send up a satellite that could attack other satellites or space stations. It's even fine to put one up there that uses conventional warheads or kinetic weapons against targets on earth.
It's also perfectly legal to put up weapon platforms that are capable of launching nukes from space - it's just not legal to arm them with actual warheads.
The reason we don't do much of any of that is because a) we have no reason to attack anyone in space (yet), b) we can shoot down satellites from earth just fine, and c) we can attack other places on earth more efficiently and with less cost without orbital platforms.
Re: (Score:2)
May the force be with you.
Re: (Score:2)
If I were the US military, I would look at space weapons. Sure they aren't legal, but Soviet Russia wasn't supposed to build biological or chemical weapons, and yet they did. They were supposed to limit nuclear weapons according to the treaty, and they never did. They weren't supposed to invade Georgia, and they did. They weren't supposed to invade Ukraine, and they did. They keep claiming "its not our guys" and yet there are at least 250 known trained Russian special forces in Ukraine. They have captured many with their Russian passports and identity cards. Putin keeps on ratcheting up the military, sending destroyers to peace conferences, using the Russian air force to "probe" other countries air space. If other countries did it to Russia, Putin would call it a provocation to war. Trust but verify is the word. But you can't trust Putin, and there is no verify, so you get another arms race, started by Putin.
The solution to these things is to kill or diminish the power of putin. The Space Arms race is different.
Of course major powers all have satellite killers. Nobody in their right mind wants to use them because they make space unusable. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
But if there's a way between major powers, the world is pretty much fucked anyway.
What's up with that motor? (Score:4, Interesting)
Okay, I know it's probably the least important thing about the craft, but still...
Why are they using such an ancient, decrepit-ass rocket motor? The AR2-3 is incredibly old - it dates back to a Gemini-era trainer, basically a modded F-104 that NASA used for early tests and training for spaceflight. It was made back when rocket chemistry was still in the "even the experts don't know much" stage, so it burned jet fuel and high-test peroxide (90%+ H2O2 in H2O).
Jet fuel is not good for rockets - basically, the restrictions on what compounds can be present is fine for jet engines, but leads to horrible problems with rockets. There's a specific petroleum-product blend designed for rockets, called RP-1, which clamps down on things like sulfur compounds or alkenes that love to gum up the works. This rocket was originally used on a jet fighter and shared fuel with it, so that was understandable... but the USAF recertified the engine for modern JP-8 instead of the old JP-4. So they already went through the effort of making it work with a new but similar fuel. Unless the X-37 hides a jet engine on itself somewhere, I don't see why they couldn't have used RP-1 instead.
Further, rocket science moved away from peroxide for a reason - it's dangerous. It will explode for basically any reason - peroxide decomposes exothermically, so once it starts reverting to H2O + O2, it's nearly impossible to stop. And it reacts with tankage surprisingly often. Oh, and it does horrible things to your specific impulse, which really hurts you on a last-stage engine like this one.
Honestly, using the engine at all is a weird choice. Sure, maybe they had some laying around... from the sixties... but that's like putting an F-104 engine in a prototype aircraft, it just doesn't seem right when other off-the-shelf systems work better. An AJ-10 would have worked beautifully. An RL10 might not have fit the aero package (hydrogen is a bulky fuel), but would have given them some impressive dV if they wanted it. Aestus would be a perfect match as well, if they didn't mind outsourcing to the Euros. Even Kestrel would work (although it first flew around the same time as this, so understandable not to use it). Point is, they had options, and being the Air Force, they could easily have just had an engine custom-made for it if they so wanted.
So what are the implications? All I can think of is a) they don't care how badly the rocket performs, b) they probably aren't going to keep that engine in whatever "production" version they build, or c) they have some other reason to use peroxide or JP8. Maybe peroxide is also their monoprop for RCS? That isn't really worth it though, particularly when UDMH works better as RCS and in the main motor.
Re: What's up with that motor? (Score:1)
They're not using the AR 2-3. That was part of the original specs from before DARPA took over the program. It's confirmed to use hydrazine now, but the actual engine is uncomfirmed. See http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/x-37.htm [skyrocket.de]
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What's up with that motor? (Score:5, Interesting)
There is some speculation that the AR2-3 may not be the engine used in current flights (see other replies to you post).
However, the AR2-3 is human rated. The X-37 is nominally unmanned, but hey the missions are classified, and because Halo Orbital Drop Shock Troopers. Of course some of the alternative engines you mentioned have been used on stages of previous manned flights and are thus presumably man-rated as well.
I did some Binging on the AR2-3 and found a NASA/Rocketdyne/OSC presentation [hydrogen-peroxide.us] that looks to be drafted around 2000.
Here that seem to make the case high test peroxide (HTP) technologies are the way of the future for upper stage propulsion:
Hydrogen peroxide was selected over liquid oxygen because it is dense, storable, capable of tolerating months in orbit, and meets safety restrictions for being part of the payload in the Space Shuttle.
Of course the Shuttle aspect is no longer a factor, but the other factors still seem to be in play.
Further into the paper, the USFE 10k peroxide motor is mentioned as a project to develop new HTP technologies. These technologies would be used for future HTP-based upper stages. They even have a goal of over 100 uses of an engine before it has to be removed for overhaul. Is that a lot in the world of rockets? As this paper was drafted around 2000 I would guess that the X-37 is using something a bit different that the bog-standard AR2-3 or has moved away from HTP technologies altogether.
Now to say that rocket science has moved away from HTP is not quite true. I don't think there are any big HTP engines used in lower stages. However, the Bloodhound SSC is using a HTP hybrid motor [bloodhoundssc.com] they are designing.
There is also research in to using HTP [slashdot.org] as a monopropellant [esa.int] for thrusters using a catalytic bed. I suppose the advantage here is that you have HTP as your oxidizer for an upper stage and then it can be used for maneuvering once on orbit. Similar, as you mentioned, to UDMH.
Take a look at the Introduction from the ESA paper referenced above. They cite several reasons why HTP is desirable and advantageous. Cost and safety being paramount. They also mention that Soyuz has been using HTP in its maneuvering systems for over 40 years. I think that HTP safety concerns have been effectively mitigated from the "explode because you looked at it funny" era.
As for performance it seems that HTP is as good as some other technologies, but it's no dog either and it seems to be a good fit for the X-37 or other small stages. Quote from the ESA paper:
The propulsive performance of hydrogen peroxide monopropellant rockets is about 20% lower than hydrazine, but the volume specific impulse achievable with 90% H2O2 is higher than most other propellants due to its high density. This is particularly useful for systems with significant aerodynamic drag losses and/or stringent volume constraints. With respect to bi-propellant and hybrid rocket engines, hydrogen peroxide yields a specific impulse comparable to other liquid oxidizers like dinitrogen tetroxide, nitric acid and even liquid oxygen..
It seems that HTP has many uses and rocket science has not moved away from HTP, indeed, it is being actively researched. It may or may not be used on the X-37 right now. It may or may be used on the X-37 in the future. With further attention to cost, safety, and, increasingly, environmental impact, HTP seems to be coming for you...
Re: (Score:1)
ironic (Score:2)
Simple question (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You can tell where the centre of *mass* is just by looking at it? Cool, wish I could do that.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Does the thruster operate only in a vacuum ?
What does that have to do with anything? Besides absolutely nothing?
Re:Simple question (Score:4, Informative)
So to answer the actual question "It works by turning the engine a little bit to compensate".
Will the Cannae Drive Be Aboard? (Score:2)
It would be a wonderful opportunity to send one up, to see if it actually generates thrust without fuel (in a relatively gravity free environment where it would be most useful).
http://www.gizmag.com/cannae-r... [gizmag.com]
Although that's a lot of trouble to test the Cannae Drive: just suspend it from a rope, throw the current to it, and see if it deflects from the vertical. (A simple antigravity drive test suggested half a century ago by some well-known science fiction writer.)
Other payloads on the same launch (Score:1)
Re:Republicans and their unhealthy space obscessio (Score:5, Insightful)
I hate to feed the trolls, but:
1) This is US Military, not NASA
2) The NASA budget is $18.4 billion or about 0.5% of budget
3) Dividing $18B amongst the population of 319M will give everyone $56. Not a good basic income.
4) NASA does some really great stuff that benefits every american citizen immensely. Like your 10 day weather forecasts? LIke your GPS navigation. Thank NASA.
5) There is nothing wrong with a good test platform. Where else are you going to get long endurance recoverable space data for classified purposes? Not the international space station to be sure.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
And you're adding to the discussion exactly how? People are allowed to, you know, express their opinions and stuff.
Re:Republicans and their unhealthy space obscessio (Score:5, Informative)
4) NASA does some really great stuff that benefits every american citizen immensely. Like your 10 day weather forecasts? LIke your GPS navigation. Thank NASA.
NASA does do some really great stuff that benefits every american citizen immensely, but your examples are horrible.
Weather forecasts are handled by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA - I love that acronym for a weather agency!), who operate their own birds (though a few were launched by NASA).
GPS is built, launched, and operated by the U.S. Air Force. NASA has literally nothing to do with GPS.
Re: (Score:2)
Examples that NASA has something to do with (maybe not directly): the microwave, 0-G ball pen, tennis shes, freeze dried ice cream.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Negative on the space pen ( 0-G ball pen ). That was private industry but the myth of NASA creating it continues to thrive.
Re: (Score:2)
Tennis shes? Pretty sure women were playing tennis long before NASA came along....
Re:Republicans and their unhealthy space obscessio (Score:4, Interesting)
NASA had nothing to do with the microwave oven. Diathermy (therapeatic heating of human tissue by radio waves) was being used in 1930. Westinghouse demonstrated cooking food using short waves in the 1933 Worlds Fair. The cavity magnetron was perfected early in WW2. Percy Spencer noticed a candy bar in his pocket melting when he was working close to an operating radar in 1945. He experimented with heating food in a metal box fed from a magnetron the same year; Raytheon filing a patent for it. Raytheon built he first "Radarange" in 1947. A public vending machine was producing hot dogs in Grand Central Terminal in 1947.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
NASA invented pussy? Man, is there anything awesome those guys didn't think up?!
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Republicans and their unhealthy space obscessio (Score:5, Informative)
Weather forecasts are handled by National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA - I love that acronym for a weather agency!), who operate their own birds (though a few were launched by NASA).
NASA provides the design, launch, and project management for the NOAA satellites up until they are in orbit at which point the operations is turned over to NOAA. The last system they tried to launch with a reduced role for NASA was NPOESS--which was a complete failure. (Not all of which was NOAA's fault, it was a horrible idea that tried to merge NOAA & DOD requirements, but the reality is that there was no more appetite for NOAA to try to take on tasks that were being handled well by NASA and the successor project, JPSS, returned to the historic model of NASA program management driven by NOAA requirements.)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
4) NASA does some really great stuff that benefits every american citizen immensely. Like your 10 day weather forecasts? LIke your GPS navigation. Thank NASA.
Ah, no:
Weather? That's NOAA, not NASA. Yes, 4 letters and starts with "N" and they both do stuff in space, but that's about the limit of similarity. Oh, and the US DOD has their own weather bureau as well--what better way to waste lots of money than duplicating the functions of a "civilian" agency?
GPS? That's the US Air Force, just like the X-37B, not NASA. The fact that the US Military Industrial Complex controls GPS is one of the driving reasons behind Galileo (and, to some extent, other GNSS's), des
Re: (Score:3)
Weather? That's NOAA, not NASA. Yes, 4 letters and starts with "N" and they both do stuff in space, but that's about the limit of similarity. Oh, and the US DOD has their own weather bureau as well--what better way to waste lots of money than duplicating the functions of a "civilian" agency?
NASA designs, builds, and launches the NOAA satellites. NOAA manages the satellites once they're in orbit and is responsible for the data collection and analysis. NASA does support the operations. DoD flubbed their most
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I think you dramatically underestimate how hard it is to manage such projects. Other people have done the same, and the result was NPOESS. NASA isn't great at it, but there's only contrary evidence that NOAA is better at it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You do also realize that the sensors on the NOAA satellites are the output of NASA R&D, right? Yeah, NOAA (in collaboration with researchers at NASA & other institutions) developed and runs the models. But the input for the models comes from sensors on satellites which would not exist without the NASA space research mission. Is it possible that such systems could have been developed in an alternate reality without NASA? Sure, but also maybe not. Could future developments be made without NASA? Maybe,
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Rarely does NASA invent the basic technology behind the sensor these days. Usually the hard part is making it work reliably in space and then *doing something useful with the data*. Right now there's a NASA research effort for detecting lightning with space-based sensors. Making that work *in daylight* was hard, but it's working pretty well now. A few years down the road that technology should be added to a NOAA platform, because the lightning frequency information is very valuable in predicting tornado act
Re: (Score:2)
5) There is nothing wrong with a good test platform.
Really? Now imagine what the posts on this article would be like if this was a Russian or a Chinese 'test platform'. It would be panic all over the place and 'invasion of our air space' etcetera. But somehow it's okay for the US to have secret military 'test platforms'.
Re:Republicans and their unhealthy space obscessio (Score:4, Insightful)
Are you sure that would be the reaction? I don't believe that to be the case, after all Russia and China have both had military test platforms in space. Russia even weaponized at least one of their space stations.
Re: (Score:2)
Why is the room so quiet?
Re: (Score:1)
They're only doing this to find people that can spell
There, FTFY
Re: (Score:1)
... find people WHO can spell
Re: (Score:2)
"Would you prefer waking at dawn, donning your animal fur, and taking your spear to go hunting for that day's food?"
I predict this lifestyle hitting California soon. Several of the big Hollywood stars and at least one Slate columnist will take the lead.
Re: (Score:2)
So now we're blaming the Republicans for being pro-science as well as being anti-science?
Re: (Score:1)
He's just an asshole.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You should have paid closer attention. Your "reward" will be 70 very ugly virgins riddled with various diseases who will constantly be fighting with each other, and who will always be jealous of each other. Plus they will have only one hobby - nagging at you. Have fun with your paradise, my friend.
Your sarcasm only makes sense if you think GP was serious. I hope that is not the case.