The Zero Room

"Inside the TARDIS there are an awful lot of rooms - libraries, gardens, swimming pools, and even a cricket pavilion. Plus two control rooms, a boot cupboard, a very large costume wardrobe and a pink Zero Room."

Friday, November 12, 2004

Of cabbages and kings

Chandira posted a thingy on Thrace, which set me to thinking of the ancient Mediterranean in general, which led of course to King Arthur. Makes sense, no? I'd seen a program on King Arthur and his possible non-Britannic origins, and for some reason Chandira's post reminded me of that program. I googled King Arthur and came up with Scythia, not Thrace.

Anyway, to make a long story short, there are connections between the Scythians and the Hungarians, so I very well may have one tiny drop of Scythian blood in me too, which is supremely cool.

I love genealogy, and love research, and worship history itself ;) so all of this is just plain fun, on a dark and dreary day when I desperately need something fun...

Cosmos-1

This is from BBC NEWS Science/Nature Solar sail craft gets launch date

Solar sail craft gets launch date

The spacecraft uses photons from the Sun to propel itThe world's first spacecraft to use a solar sail for propulsion is set to be launched from a submerged Russian submarine on 1 March next year.

Cosmos-1 has been built by space advocacy group The Planetary Society and will deploy eight triangular sail blades once it is in space.

Photons from sunlight will push on the spacecraft sails to propel it on the first controlled solar sail flight.

Some hope solar sails will one day help humans travel to the stars.

The US, European, Japanese and Russian space agencies also have solar sail programmes in the offing.

The entire spacecraft has reportedly been completed for under $4m (£2.1m).

Missile launch

Cosmos-1 will be launched into space aboard a modified Volna intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) from a submarine in the Barents Sea. Typically, the Volna does not have enough thrust to reach orbit.

But the missile used for Cosmos-1 will have an added rocket engine (kick stage) of a type used to de-orbit satellites.

The kick-stage engine will provide the additional thrust required to get Cosmos-1 into orbit.
Although 1 March is slated as the earliest date for a launch attempt, the mission has a launch period extending from 1 March to 7 April 2005. Ultimately, the launch date will be determined by the Russian Navy.

A Russian Navy missile has been modified to launch Cosmos-1

"This whole venture is audacious and risky," said Bruce Murray, co-founder of The Planetary Society with astronomer Carl Sagan and space scientist Louis Friedman.

"It is a testament to the inspiring nature of space exploration and to the desire of people everywhere to be part of the adventure of great projects."

Solar sails reflect light particles, or photons, from the Sun, gaining momentum in the opposite direction to propel spacecraft forward.

Several days to perhaps a week of checkout is likely - to make sure the spacecraft systems are in good health - before the blades are positioned. The controlled flight might then occur in the second week after launch.

Because solar sails continue accelerating, they could reach distant targets in amazing times.
Sunlight would become too weak beyond the realms of Jupiter but one theory for interstellar travel is to direct lasers at the sails.

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