Unexpected Facetime Call

Unexpected Facetime Call

Unexpected Facetime Call

More Posts from Flo-was-here and Others

8 years ago
Ironpool Costume Is Crazy Cool

Ironpool Costume Is Crazy Cool

8 years ago
Do I Smell Popcorn?

Do I Smell Popcorn?

8 years ago
#NoFucksSpidey #Marvel #CreatingMore #Funny #MemeHumor

#NoFucksSpidey #Marvel #CreatingMore #Funny #MemeHumor

8 years ago
Now This Is A Good Headline

Now This Is A Good Headline

8 years ago
Japanese Are Working On Developing Technology To Transmit Electricity Wirelessly. Their Goal Is To Transmit

Japanese are working on developing technology to transmit electricity wirelessly. Their goal is to transmit energy from orbiting solar panels to Earth by 2030. They have successfully transmitted 10 kW of energy 500 meters away. source

image via truedemocracyparty

8 years ago
Sorting Algorithms

Sorting Algorithms

8 years ago
Some Teachers Don’t Mess Around

Some Teachers Don’t Mess Around

8 years ago

Splish, Splash, Orion Takes a Bath

The Orion spacecraft is a capsule built to take humans farther than they’ve ever gone before, to deep space and eventually Mars. But before astronauts travel inside this new vehicle, we have to perform tests to ensure their safety.

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One of these tests that we’ll talk about today simulates an ocean splashdown. Water impact testing helps us evaluate how Orion may behave when landing under its parachutes in different wind conditions and wave heights. The spacecraft has been undergoing a series of these tests at our Langley Research Center’s Hydro Impact Basin…which is our fancy way of saying pool.

image

The test capsule, coupled with the heat shield from Orion’s first spaceflight, swung like a pendulum into Langley’s 20-foot-deep basin on Aug. 25.

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Inside the capsule were two test dummies – one representing a 105-pound woman and the other, a 220-pound man — each wearing spacesuits equipped with sensors. These sensors will provide critical data that will help us understand the forces crew members could experience when they splash down in the ocean.

This specific drop was the ninth in a series of 10 tests taking place at Langley’s Landing and Impact Research Facility. It was designed to simulate one of the Orion spacecraft’s most stressful landing scenarios, a case where one of the capsule’s three main parachutes fails to deploy. That would cause Orion to approach its planned water landing faster than normal and at an undesirable angle.

Under ideal conditions, the Orion capsule would slice into the water of the Pacific Ocean traveling about 17 miles per hour. This test had it hitting the pool at about 20 mph, and in a lateral orientation. Instead of being pushed down into their seats, astronauts in this scenario would splashdown to the side.

With this test’s success and one final drop in this series scheduled for mid-September, researchers have accumulated a lot of important information.

To find out more, visit nasa.gov or follow @nasaorion​ on Tumblr, Twitter and Facebook.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

8 years ago
Started Coding Through This Book! All About Ad Coding

Started coding through this book! All about ad coding

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flo-was-here - flo was here, but will he come back?
flo was here, but will he come back?

You are free to choose, but you are not free from the consequence of your choice. - a Universal Paradox

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