roseembolism: (fhqwagads)
I always find myself in the position of saying the equivalent of "Your plan to cheaply reach the South Pole is neat, but I think you really should start heavier clothing than bathing suits, and there's no trees there for you to chop down for firewood".

And for some reason they call me a naysayer.
roseembolism: (Default)
Happy Birthday [info]deirdremoon! My dear friend, may this coming year be a wonder for you.


Happy Birthday Spuntnik! Our first tentative step into space. Worth remembering as the dawn of a new age, and a new frontier.

Say...I don't suppose you've considered "Spuntnik" as a child's name, have you?
roseembolism: (Default)
Now this is an air show that I could really see myself attending. Because as you know, all those spaceships that they used in movies? Well they really had to build 'em, as life-sized, flying props. And after being restored by collectors, here they are. 

If only, if only....

Sci-Fi Airshow Guided Tour

Sci-Fi Airshow Home Page

And some random pics:





roseembolism: (Default)
(Courtesy of Astronomy Picture of the Day (and thanks for a reminder by James Nicoll)

40 years ago today Apoll 8 reached lunar orbit, becoming the first manned spacecraft to leave Earth's gravitational field, and orbit around another celestial body. While they were there, the astronauts became the first people to see the far side of the moon, and the first people to see Earth from orbit around another celestial body. While they were there, they took pictures such as this:





Oddly enough, this flight helped the environmental movement; the image of the earth rising above the dead surface of the moon, "a vast, lonely, forbidding expanse of nothing", was a graphic example of the smallness of Earth and the fragility of life on it, and was taken as an icon for Earth Day.

It's strange that we had to go to another world to see Earth as a whole, but the sentiments of the Apollo 8 crew in their Christmas broadcast are to my mind a perfect for the season, beacause of the larger unity they imply

"And from the crew of Apollo 8, we close with good night, good luck, and a Merry Christmas to all of you, all of you on the good Earth".

roseembolism: (Nakedscience)

It's a deorbiting Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle!  Specifically, it's a Jules Verne ATV being de-orbited after a successful run to the International Space Station, and burning up in the atmosphere.

This film doesn't start off all that spectacular, but keep watching: it gets better.  Also, don't be sad or distressed; this is actually a space project that worked, and worked well.  It's a sign of hope, actually.



roseembolism: (Getoutta)
Courtesy of some guy off the internet, we have something rare and deliriously odd here. It's a 1924 animated propaganda film where a brave cosmonaut liberates Mars.  It's really a surreal mish mash of Flash Gordon style SF, crude animation at the level of Monty Python (and equally as raunchy), and heavy-handed Stalinesque propaganda. 

It really has to be seen to be believed.



roseembolism: (Nakedscience)
I can't believe that Google didn't have a cute logo to commemorate this.

I can vaguely remember the moon landings- in fact, seeing Neil Armstrong stepping out on the moon is really, my earliest memory.  Even back then, I remembered how important it was.  It may have been the most important date in the history of space exploration, a sobering, and somewhat sad thought.

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