M
MeteorWayne
Guest
BTW, depending on developments over the next few weeks it may be a moot point. It's certainly possible the mission will be cancelled for lack of funding.
Kansan52":2ifiimkf said:I'm surprised that no one pointed out that the American antisatellite test was done to minimize any space debris load......
Bill_Wright":2kqc0pzk said:MeteorWayne wrote: "Bill, you should expend some effort understanding the difference between the L1 (closer to the sun), L2 (away from the sun, L3 (oppisite the sun) and L4 and L5, where the trojans reside. They have different levels of stability, and different populations of objects that stay there. To suggest that L2 is as populated as the L4 or L5 points shows you need to do some more basic research."
Well, MW, I disagree. That is like saying that since you didn't spell check your reply it has no validity. I identified the position correctly and indicated I didn't care to look up the number. Never did I suggest that the population of these points were even closely identical, simply that the odds of finding dust there was larger than in regions of space that did not have these particular properties. And other than water vapor (unlikely to find much of that in space), dust is cruel to infrared observations. Since you have already pronounced JWST dead in a previous reply in this thread why don't we drop it. We have SOFIA to get some IR data and when they sell whatever they have built of the JWST on eBay or a scrap yard I just hope I get a chance to bid on it. I know of at least one place on Earth that will allow it to take better pictures than my 40 year old (about) Celestron.
Bill_Wright":3nm1xewy said:MeteorWayne wrote: "Bill, you should expend some effort understanding the difference between the L1 (closer to the sun), L2 (away from the sun, L3 (oppisite the sun) and L4 and L5, where the trojans reside. They have different levels of stability, and different populations of objects that stay there. To suggest that L2 is as populated as the L4 or L5 points shows you need to do some more basic research."
Well, MW, I disagree. That is like saying that since you didn't spell check your reply it has no validity. I identified the position correctly and indicated I didn't care to look up the number. Never did I suggest that the population of these points were even closely identical, simply that the odds of finding dust there was larger than in regions of space that did not have these particular properties. And other than water vapor (unlikely to find much of that in space), dust is cruel to infrared observations. Since you have already pronounced JWST dead in a previous reply in this thread why don't we drop it. We have SOFIA to get some IR data and when they sell whatever they have built of the JWST on eBay or a scrap yard I just hope I get a chance to bid on it. I know of at least one place on Earth that will allow it to take better pictures than my 40 year old (about) Celestron.
I can see some members here pulling their hair out at this point! :lol:wxgeek":1biou1gr said:...I can imagine the L points as little dust clouds....
Bill_Wright":3ep452iv said:Hi:
I think we might be getting ready to make a big mistake. We have spent a lot of money building this scope and plan to launch it into one of the Lagrangian Points, I think the one with the Earth between it and the Sun. Nobody has done a survey of these points near Earth to ascertain how full of rocks and dust they might be. I think there are similar areas called Trojans around Jupiter that are known to have big rocks and can be assumed to have particles right down to the size of tiny dust.
Now just recently a survey of Antarctica done by the Australians and Americans turned up a plateau in "Australian Territory" that is considered to have "seeing" pretty close to that of the HST. Why don't we put the Webb scope there and test it out until we insure that there will be no problems in its intended "parking spot"? We would learn many lessons about operating in harsh environments (this is one of the coldest spots on Earth), minimize risks in making a mistake, get some awfully good science done, and save a ton of money as the folks who work in Antarctica tend to do so for the love of the place, not money. If it turns out that the concern is unfounded, then we just pick up the scope, call it an extended ground test, and launch it to L1 (or 2, 3, 40 - whatever). I'm sure that some politicos could put a real positive spin on this so nobody but us would be the wiser.
Bill
Bill_Wright":njjn9xdm said:Hi --
Some of you seem to be confused and think this scope should be placed in the 'outback'. Please read this Wiki post:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian ... _Territory
frodo1008":35ealwen said:For my own case, I am not saying that we should not be taking whatever chances it will take to do this. What I am saying however, is that NASA needs to be very, very careful to make sure this works perfectly the first time it is deployed!
Just as a single ship human mission to Mars must also be perfect. There will be NO Apollo 13 type of rescue for a crew that is tens of millions of miles from the Earth!
For either type of mission, there will be absolutely NO margin for error!
And that IS the TRUTH!!!!
Bill_Wright":2pnd5em6 said:Hi --
Some of you seem to be confused and think this scope should be placed in the 'outback'. Please read this Wiki post:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian ... _Territory
Some of you may not have read this article:
http://spaceinfo.com.au/antarctica20090902.html
There have been some ridiculous replies to this thread, including one that said the scope would collapse under its own weight here on Earth. Here is a clue: it was or is being built here on Earth, so if it won't collapse during the build process it is unlikely to spontaneously collapse when finished. Actually, it is built to withstand a launch with multiple G forces so it just isn't that delicate. Now during launch it will be packed up a bit, then will have to self-deploy on station. That process has always proved tricky (read about Skylab), so having a few folks around might make it easier. Others have pointed out that the JWST doesn't have a mount. Well, they build mounts for much larger instruments, so this is obviously not an insurmountable problem.