Saturday, January 23, 2010

Cool Pictures of the Day: Terraforming Mars


Ever since I wrote a report on the idea in high school, I've been fascinated by the idea of terraforming the planet Mars to make it available for human settlement. I think given the fragility of our planet and the (thus far undiscovered) absence of other intelligent life, it is essential that mankind expand into the cosmos, and Mars is the logical starting point. The process would not be easy, taking hundreds if not thousands of years, but I believe it could and must eventually be done in order to provide humanity with a second home and a stepping stone to further colonization. Here I have included some pictures I found of various interpretations of what an earth-like Mars would look like.




























Friday, January 22, 2010

Great Tune of the Day: Birds of Paradise

This is a very pretty little song by a group called Peter, Sue and Marc I just discovered today. Yes, the video is incredibly cheesy, but just ignore that! It was 1980!

This song became a reprise hit in Slovakia in 2006 when it was played at a memorial service for 42 military personnel who had been killed in an crash. Seen in that context, I think it was very appropriate.

Interesting Video: Free Namibia

This is an old documentary (1970s?) that I ran across on YouTube discussing the situation in South West Africa (Now Namibia), a former German colony that was under South African administration until its independence in 1990. I've always found Namibia a fascinating country, and it's one of my top destinations that I want to visit.



Under-Appreciated Cinema: Wes Craven's "Chiller"


Anyone that knows me knows that as a rule, I hate horror movies. However, one of the few exceptions to that rule is a little-known Wes Craven film from 1985 called "Chiller."

The synopsis of the film is as follows:

Corporate exec Miles Creighton dies, and is cryogenically frozen in the hopes that he can be revived. 10 years later, the procedure is a success, and Miles returns--without his soul.

Sound creepy? You bet it is. I remember watching this movie as a kid by myself one night. I'm pretty sure I'm still suffering from PTSD as a result. But it's not the kind of movie that scarred me for life like "Pet Sematery" or "Arachnophobia." It's interesting scary... not "I need to change my pants" scary.

Right now you can watch the entire film on YouTube. But just watch this clip (preferably with the lights on) and I guarantee you will be hooked.

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Diva du Jour: Bette Davis

What can I say? Bette Davis is probably the greatest actress ever to grace the silver screen. Her reputation is legendary. Her much-talked about rivalry with Joan Crawford is the thing myths are made of. The sheer weight of her brilliant talent is written on every role that I have ever seen her play. Over the course of her career, Davis played a Southern belle, a spinster sister, a has-been child actor eclipsed by her sister's career, an ugly duckling-turned beautiful swan, and performed the role of England's Queen Elizabeth I twice, just to name a few of her more prominent roles.

Additionally, she won two Academy Awards for Best Actress, was the first person ever to get ten nominations for the same, and was the first female President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Through it all, she maintained a thoroughly professional demeanor, putting her entire self into her roles. So dedicated was Davis to her career that she often said that it resulted in the failure of all of her marriages. But overall, it is doubtful Bette Davis would have changed a thing. She showed us what true grace, talent, drive, and hard work, not to mention those eyes, could achieve.


Forgotten Realms: The Duchy of Burgundy







The Duchy of Burgundy (in French Bourgogne) was a semi-independent fief of the French crown that sat astride the much-disputed territory between France and the states of Germany and the Holy Roman Empire. During the Middle Ages it managed to acquire power and territory that ranked it with the great states of Europe at the time. Several attempts were made at consolidating the territories into a unitary kingdom, but they never quite worked out. Burgundy was incredibly influential in the art and fashion of the age, including being the source of the hennin, the conical hat that fairy tale princesses are stereotypically depicted in.




During the Hundred Years War, the Burgundians were allied with England against France, and were responsible for the capture of the great female warrior Joan of Arc in 1430. This time period marked the apogee of Burgundian power, however. Later in the century, however, a succession crisis in the ducal family led to a lack of heirs, and the territories of the once-mighty duchy were subsumed into the surrounding French and German lands. Disputes over the disposition of the Burgundian lands continued until the 20th century, leading to countless wars directly and as an underlying cause of others.












Cool Picture of the Day: Geisha Girl

Geisha (芸者?), Geiko (芸子?) or Geigi (芸妓?) are traditional, female Japanese entertainers whose skills include performing various Japanese arts such as classical music and dance.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Remembrance: King Louis XVI of France




His Most Christian Majesty Louis XVI of France was executed 217 years ago today by guillotine at the hands of the fanatical revolutionary government. Louis was a good, decent, and pious man. However he had an incredible lack of confidence and had not been prepared to rule as he had been a younger son. The death of his father and older brother thrust him into the direct line of succession. France under his grandfather, Louis XV had been bankrupted by excessive spending and the loss of the Seven Years' War to Great Britian.

It is difficult to see how anyone could have effectively and peacefully led France out of its economic and social troubles. For all his goodness, Louis XVI was not the man for his time. The intense unpopularity of his misunderstood wife, Marie Antoinette of Austria, contributed to a decline in popularity of the monarchy. When the French Revolution broke out in 1789, Louis lacked the backbone to take control of the situation and restore order and put his kingdom's affairs in order.

Brought to Paris as a virtual prisoner, Louis was forced to accede to a British-style constitutional monarchy in 1791. However the revolution only became more violent, and following a disastrous escape attempt, Louis and his family were placed under arrest. The revolutionary leaders stripped him of his title and declared France to be a republic. Louis was placed on trial for his alleged "crimes" and was unsurprisingly found guilty. Louis was executed by guillotine on January 21, 1793. His last words were:

I die innocent of all the crimes laid to my charge; I Pardon those who have occasioned my death; and I pray to God that the blood you are going to shed may never be visited on France.

The spiritual power attributed to anointed kings was still very much in evidence, however, as the crowd surged towards the scaffold to attempt to bathe their handkerchiefs in the consecrated blood of their dead monarch.


Tomb of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette at Saint Denis Cathedral in Paris.


Death and Funeral Music for Louis XVI by Paul Wranitzky

Portrait of Power: Pope Saint Fabian




FABIANUS
Pope (236-250), the extraordinary circumstances of whose election is related by Eusebius (Church History VI.29). After the death of Anterus he had come to Rome, with some others, from his farm and was in the city when the new election began. While the names of several illustrious and noble persons were being considered, a dove suddenly descended upon the head of Fabian, of whom no one had even thought. To the assembled brethren the sight recalled the Gospel scene of the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Saviour of mankind, and so, divinely inspired, as it were, they chose Fabian with joyous unanimity and placed him in the Chair of Peter. During his reign of fourteen years there was a lull in the storm of persecution. Little is known of his pontificate. The "Liber Pontificalis" says that he divided Rome into seven districts, each supervised by a deacon, and appointed seven subdeacons, to collect, in conjunction with other notaries, the "acta" of the martyrs, i.e. the reports of the court-proceedings on the occasion of their trials (cf. Eus., VI, 43). There is a tradition that he instituted the four minor orders. Under him considerable work was done in the catacombs. He caused the body of Pope St. Pontianus to be exhumed, in Sardinia, and transferred to the catacomb of St. Callistus at Rome. Later accounts, more or less trustworthy, attribute to him the consecration (245) of seven bishops as missionaries to Gaul, among them St. Denys of Paris (Greg. of Tours, Hist. Francor., I, 28, 31). St. Cyprian mentions (Ep., 59) the condemnation by Fabian for heresy of a certain Privatus (Bishop of Lambaesa) in Africa. The famous Origen did not hesitate to defend, before Fabian, the orthodoxy of his teaching (Eusebius, Church History VI.34). Fabian died a martyr (20 Jan., 250) at the beginning of the Decian persecution, and was buried in the Crypt of the Popes in the catacomb of St. Callistus, where in recent times (1850) De Rossi discovered his Greek epitaph (Roma Sotterranea II, 59): "Fabian, bishop and martyr." The decretals ascribed to him in Pseudo-Isidore are apocryphal.

Banners of Yesterday: Federation of South Arabia

The Federation of South Arabia (Arabic: اتحاد الجنوب العربي Ittihad al-Janūb al-‘arabī) was an organization of states under British protection in what would become South Yemen. It was formed on 4 April 1962 from the 15 protected states of the Federation of Arab Emirates of the South. On 18 January 1963 it was merged with the crown colony of Aden. In June 1964, the Upper Aulaqi Sultanate was added for a total of 17 states. A team was sent to the 1966 Commonwealth Games in Kingston, Jamaica. The Federation was abolished when it gained independence along with the Protectorate of South Arabia as the People's Republic of South Yemen on 30 November 1967.

Source: Wikipedia

I'm really not sure why, but this is one of my favorite flags.


Must See Video: Earth and its Moon.

View of Earth's Moon passing in front of the planet as seen from the Deep Impact Probe in May 2008.

Cool Picture of the Day: The South Pole

Flags of the signatories of the Antarctic Treaty around the ceremonial South Pole in Antarctica.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Cool Picture of the Day: Solar Eclipse from Orbit




Shadow of the moon above Turkey and Cyprus, seen from the ISS during a 2006 total solar eclipse.

Source: Wikipedia

Monday, January 18, 2010

Great Tune of The Day: The White Cliffs of Dover


A great World War II song by Dame Vera Lynn.

MLK Day Special


This is a re-posting of my column on Politics is Power.



Today as the nation commemorates Martin Luther King Day, we can look back with pride at how far we have come in the quest for that "more perfect union" the Constitution calls for. At the same time, we can see just how far we have left to go. While racial equality continues to make strides, if unevenly at times, we must not forget that other forms of discrimination continue to exist.

I make no secret of my very strong opinion that President Obama has abandoned the support pledged in his presidential campaign to gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender (GLBT) voters. Whether this is due to political expediency, cowardice, or simple ignorance of the problems GLBT people face, I am not in a position to know. I do know however that gay people continue to be treated as second-class citizens in the eyes of the law and for much of society.

Across our great republic, many of the gains that GLBT people have made in recent years are being rolled back. While federal hate crimes protection was passed last year, it had to be ensconced in a defense appropriations bill in order for it to receive enough votes to pass in Congress. The military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" (DADT) policy, which the President pledged to overturn, remains in force a year into his presidency. DADT stipulates that if a member of the armed forces is discovered to be gay, they are automatically discharged. Instead of a repeal, there is now serious consideration of implementing a "separate but equal" system in which GLBT service members would be forced to use separate facilities from straight soldiers. Does this sound familiar? Elsewhere, Legally enacted marriage rights in California, Maine, and elsewhere have been withdrawn at the hands of vicious and hateful campaigns. The travesty of having a majority of people vote to withdraw the rights of a minority has become a reality in this nation. I cannot think of another time in American history that such a thing has been so calculatingly directed at a group of people.

I cannot help but wonder how history would have turned out had civil rights for black people been left up to a vote of the people of Mississippi or Arkansas or Alabama in, say, 1955. What would race relations look like today if Martin Luther King had accepted the argument that GLBT people face so frequently: "Now is not the time"? Somehow I doubt our society would have been able to make as much progress as it has (though I agree there are still many miles to go).

Straight people need to understand that sexual orientation, like race, is largely an inborn trait, as the vast majority of scientists and psychologists agree today. Trying to suppress it or change it leads to untold psychological suffering and heartbreak, often leading people who undergo "change" programs to attempt suicide. If discrimination because of one's race is supposed to be unacceptable in our society today, why should a group of people (generally estimated to be around 10% of men and 5% of women) who happen to be attracted to someone of their own gender be treated differently?

Gay people don't want to overturn society or destroy the family. They don't want to corrupt and recruit your children. They don't want to destroy religion. They don't want to force unwilling religious groups to marry them or change their faith. Most simply just want to be left alone like everyone else and able to live their lives free from fear; fear of discrimination, fear of gay bashing, fear of losing their jobs, fear of being denied the right to be with their partners or their children because their relationship has no legal recognition.

Today, over forty years after King's assassination, his dream of racial equality is still in the process of being achieved. But people are still being prejudged and discriminated against for traits that they were born with and have no real control over. Such legalistic double standards are
SO last millennium.

Postscript:
MLK never really addressed GLBT rights, since they only first became a true national issue the year after his death with the Stonewall Riots of 1969, which is seen as the founding of the modern gay rights movement. However, his widow the late Coretta Scott King became a strong advocate for GLBT equality. I leave you today with some quotes by Mrs. King on the subject.

"Homophobia is like racism and anti-Semitism and other forms of bigotry in that it seeks to dehumanize a large group of people, to deny their humanity, their dignity and personhood... This sets the stage for further repression and violence that spread all too easily to victimize the next minority group."

"I still hear people say that I should not be talking about the rights of lesbian and gay people. ... But I hasten to remind them that Martin Luther King Jr. said, 'Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.' I appeal to everyone who believes in Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream, to make room at the table of brotherhood and sisterhood for lesbian and gay people."

"Gay and lesbian people have families, and their families should have legal protection, whether by marriage or civil union. A constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriages is a form of gay bashing and it would do nothing at all to protect traditional marriage."

Great Tune of the Day: Dress You Up

A Madonna classic I just rediscovered tonight.


And an awesome remix by out and proud former Savage Garden frontman Darren Hayes.

This Day in History: Proclamation of the German Empire

On January 18, 1871 the princes and generals of Prussia and the German states gathered in the famous Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles outside Paris to proclaim the Prussian King Wilhelm as first emperor of a newly unified Germany. This proclamation was in the wake of Prussia's stunning defeat of France during the Franco-Prussian War. French Emperor Napoleon III was actually captured during the Battle of Sedan, leading to the complete collapse of the French war effort. The war, the Prussian victory, and the creation of Germany was the brainchild of the Prussian Minister President, later German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck (center, in white).

The Hall of Mirrors would later be the scene of the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in 1919 which punished a humbled and defeated Germany for its role in the First World War.

The Physics of Space Battles





Special thanks to my very dear friend Naylor for sharing this article. It's one of the most interesting space articles I've read recently. The original posting is from Gizmodo.com.

Joseph Shoer is a Ph.D. candidate in aerospace engineering, studying how modular spacecraft could be assembled, and hoping that they will be the telescopes and human exploration vehicles of the future, and not for crushing the dreams of Martian colonists.

I had a discussion recently with friends about the various depictions of space combat in science fiction movies, TV shows, and books. We have the fighter-plane engagements of Star Wars, the subdued, two-dimensional naval combat in Star Trek, the Newtonian planes of Battlestar Galactica, the staggeringly furious energy exchanges of the combat wasps in Peter Hamilton's books, and the use of antimatter rocket engines themselves as weapons in other sci-fi. But suppose we get out there, go terraform Mars, and the Martian colonists actually revolt. Or suppose we encounter hostile aliens. How would space combat actually go?

First, let me point out something that Ender's Game got right and something it got wrong. What it got right is the essentially three-dimensional nature of space combat, and how that would be fundamentally different from land, sea, and air combat. In principle, yes, your enemy could come at you from any direction at all. In practice, though, the Buggers are going to do no such thing. At least, not until someone invents an FTL drive, and we can actually pop our battle fleets into existence anywhere near our enemies. The marauding space fleets are going to be governed by orbit dynamics – not just of their own ships in orbit around planets and suns, but those planets' orbits. For the same reason that we have Space Shuttle launch delays, we'll be able to tell exactly what trajectories our enemies could take between planets: the launch window. At any given point in time, there are only so many routes from here to Mars that will leave our imperialist forces enough fuel and energy to put down the colonists' revolt. So, it would actually make sense to build space defense platforms in certain orbits, to point high-power radar-reflection surveillance satellites at certain empty reaches of space, or even to mine parts of the void. It also means that strategy is not as hopeless when we finally get to the Bugger homeworld: the enemy ships will be concentrated into certain orbits, leaving some avenues of attack guarded and some open. (Of course, once our ships maneuver towards those unguarded orbits, they will be easily observed – and potentially countered.)
Now, Let's Talk Technology

First, pending a major development in propulsion technology, combat spacecraft would likely get around the same way the Apollo spacecraft went to the Moon and back: with orbit changes effected by discrete main-engine burns. The only other major option is a propulsion system like ion engines or solar sails, which produce a very low amount of thrust over a very long time. However, the greater speed from burning a chemical, nuclear, or antimatter rocket in a single maneuver is likely a better tactical option. One implication of rocket propulsion is that there will be relatively long periods during which Newtonian physics govern the motions of dogfighting spacecraft, punctuated by relatively short periods of maneuvering. Another is that combat in orbit would be very different from combat in "deep space," which is what you probably think of as how space combat should be – where a spacecraft thrusts one way, and then keeps going that way forever. No, around a planet, the tactical advantage in a battle would be determined by orbit dynamics: which ship is in a lower (and faster) orbit than which; who has a circular orbit and who has gone for an ellipse; relative rendezvous trajectories that look like winding spirals rather than straight lines.

Second, there are only a few ways to maneuver the attitude of a spacecraft around – to point it in a new direction. The fast ways to do that are to fire an off-center thruster or to tilt a gyroscope around to generate a torque. Attitude maneuvers would be critical to point the main engine of a space fighter to set up for a burn, or to point the weapons systems at an enemy. Either way, concealing the attitude maneuvers of the space fighter would be important to gain a tactical advantage. So I think gyroscopes ("CMGs," in the spacecraft lingo) would be a better way to go – they could invisibly live entirely within the space fighter hull, and wouldn't need to be mounted on any long booms (which would increase the radar, visible, and physical cross-section of the fighter) to get the most torque on the craft. With some big CMGs, a spacecraft could flip end-for-end in a matter of seconds or less. If you come upon a starfighter with some big, spherical bulbs near the midsection, they are probably whopping big CMGs and the thing will be able to point its guns at you wherever you go. To mitigate some of the directionality of things like weapons fire and thruster burns, space fighters would probably have weapons and engines mounted at various points around their hull; but a culture interested in efficiently mass-producing space warships would probably be concerned about manufacturing so many precision parts for a relatively fragile vessel, and the craft would likely only have one main engine rather than, say, four equal tetrahedral engines.
How About Weapons?

We have to consider just how you might damage a spacecraft to put it out of action.

Explosions are basically a waste of energy in space. On the ground, these are devastating because of the shock wave that goes along with them. But in the vacuum of space, an explosion just creates some tenuous, expanding gases that would be easily dissipated by a hull. No, to damage spacecraft systems, you can't hit them with gas unless it's really, really concentrated and energetic. So unless you want to just wait till your enemy is close enough that you can point your engines at him, the best bets for ranged weapons are kinetic impactors and radiation.

A kinetic impactor is basically just a slug that goes really fast and hits the enemy fighter, tearing through the hull, damaging delicate systems with vibrations, throwing gyroscopes out of alignment so that they spin into their enclosures and explode into shards, puncturing tanks of fuel and other consumables, or directly killing the pilot and crew. You know…bullets. But it sounds much more technical and science-fictiony to say "mass driver" or "kinetic lance" or something of the sort. Of course, the simplest way to implement this sort of weapon in space is just as some kind of machine gun or cannon. Those will work in space (ask the Soviets, they tested a cannon on their first Salyut space station), and the shells will do plenty of damage if they hit anything. However, space is filled mostly with empty space, and hitting the enemy ships might be a challenge. Furthermore, if the impactors are too large, the enemy could counter them by firing their own point-defense slugs and knocking the shells out of line. Therefore, I contend that the most effective kinetic space weapons would be either flak shells or actively thrusting, guided missiles. The flak shells would explode into a hail of fragmented shards, able to tear through un-armored systems of many craft at once without the shell directly hitting its target, or able to strike a target even after it tries to evade with a last-minute engine burn. The missiles would be a bit different from the missiles we are used to on Earth, which must continuously thrust to sustain flight. In space, such a weapon would rapidly exhaust its fuel and simply become a dummy shell. No, a space missile would either be fired as an unguided projectile and power up its engine after drifting most of the way to its target, or it would fire its engine in sporadic, short bursts. A definite downside to kinetic weapons on a starfighter is that they would impart momentum to the fighter or change its mass properties. Very large cannons or missiles might therefore be impractical, unless the fighter can quickly compensate for what is essentially a large rocket firing. Even that compensation might give the enemy just the window he needs…

Radiation-based weapons that burn out the electronics of a spacecraft sound exotic, but are still potentially achievable. This would be the attraction of nuclear weapons in space: not the explosion, which would affect just about nothing, but the burst of energetic particles and the ensuing electromagnetic storm. Still, such a burst would have to be either pretty close to the target vessel to scramble its systems, or it would have to be made directional in some way, to focus the gamma-ray and zinging-proton blast. But while we're talking about focused energy weapons, lets just go with a tool that we already use to cut sheet metal on Earth: lasers. In space, laser light will travel almost forever without dissipating from diffraction. Given a large enough power supply, lasers could be used at range to slice up enemy warships. The key phrase there, though, is "given a large enough power supply." Power is hard to come by in the space business. So, expect space laser weapons to take one of three forms: small lasers designed not to destroy, but to blind and confuse enemy sensors; medium-sized lasers that would be fired infrequently and aimed to melt specific vulnerable points on enemy space fighters, like antennae, gimbals, and maneuvering thrusters; and large lasers pumped by the discharge from a large capacitor or similar energy storage device to cut a physical slice into the enemy craft wherever they hit. Such a large weapon would likely only be fired at the very beginning of a battle, because the commander of a ship with such a weapon would not want to keep his capacitor charged when it might unexpectedly blow its energy all at once once he's in the thick of things.

Deflector shields like those in fiction are not possible at present, but it would still make sense to armor combat spacecraft to a limited extent. The spaceframes of the fighters would likely be designed solely for the space environment; the actual ships would be launched within the payload fairings of a rocket or assembled in space. If launched from the ground, armor must be minimized to reduce the launch weight of the spacecraft. But if built and launched in space, it would make sense to plate over vital systems of the vehicle. Thick armor would prevent flak or small lasers from piercing delicate components, and might mitigate a direct strike from a kinetic impactor or heavy cutting laser. However, the more heavily armored and massive a space fighter is, the more thrust it will take to maneuver in orbit and the more energy it will take to spin in place. (Here's where computer games get space combat all wrong: the mass of a huge space cruiser would not place an upper limit on the speed of a vehicle, but it would reduce the acceleration a given engine could produce compared to the same engine on a less massive vehicle.)

I'm assuming that we'd have some intrepid members of the United Earth Space Force crewing these combat vessels. Or, at least, crewing some of them – robotic drone fighters would be a tremendous boon to space soldiers, but the communication lag between planets and vessels in orbit would make the split-second judgments of humans necessary at times. (Until we perfect AIs… but if we're giving them the space fighters from the beginning, we deserve the robot uprising we'll get.) The crews will hardly be sitting around nice conference-room command bridges with no seat belts; nor will they be standing upright in slate-gray console pits with glowing glass displays all over. It's not even a good idea for them to have windows, which would be vulnerable to flak and could give the crew an intense sense of disorientation as the spacecraft maneuvers, and could give them tremendous trouble adapting to rapid changes in light levels as the ship rotates near a planet or star. No, they should be strapped into secure couches and centrally located in the most protected part of the spacecraft. They should also be in full pressure suits, and the interior cabin of the spacecraft should already be evacuated – to prevent fires, or any secondary damage if all the atmosphere rushes out a hull breach. This also reduces the need for escape pods. Camera views from the exterior of the ship and graphical representations of the tactical situation would then be projected directly onto helmet faceplates.

Now, for the final word, let's say the United Earth Space Force defeats the Martian rebels in orbit. What do we do to hit them on the ground? Well, strategic weapons from space are easy: kinetic impactors again. You chuck big ol' spears, aerodynamically shaped so they stay on target and don't burn up in the atmosphere, onto ground targets and watch gravitational potential energy turn into kinetic energy and excavate you a brand-new crater. At some point, though, the imperialist Earthlings probably want to take over the existing infrastructure on Mars. Time to get out the Space Marines!

It's not terribly expensive or difficult, comparatively speaking, to get people from orbit down to a planet surface. You fall. This is the purpose of a space capsule. What's really, really, prohibitively difficult is getting them back up again. So, the victorious orbital forces would have to bring in a transport ship chock full of Space Marines and drop them all at once in little capsules (little because they can only be so big for the atmosphere to effectively brake them, and because you don't want all your Marines perishing in some unfortunate incident). Some orbital forces would remain in place to threaten the ground with bombardment and give the Marines a bit more muscle, but really, the ground-pounders are going to have to be pretty self-sufficient. If they ever want to come back up, they would have to build and/or fuel their own ascent vehicle. (This is the problem facing any NASA Mars efforts, too: getting back up through the Martian atmosphere is much harder than any of the lunar ascents were.)
What Would Combat Spacecraft End Up Looking Like?

There are good arguments to have both large and small spacecraft in the Earth forces. A big spacecraft could have a lot more armor to keep its systems and crew safe, more room for large fuel tanks and electrical power supplies, and larger mass to resist impulses from cannon recoil. However, a smaller craft would be less visible to radar, more maneuverable, and could achieve higher accelerations for constant engine thrust. As with just about any military force, the role of the craft would be tailored to the tactical operations required, so the Space Force would probably include several sizes of craft.

Enemies could come at your ship from any direction in space, which means that you would want to react, strike, and counterattack in any direction. So, you would either have to mount weaponry all around your starfighter, put the weapons on gimbals so that they could rapidly point in any direction, or make the fighter maneuverable enough that it could rapidly point in any direction. Gimbals would be a bad option, because they would introduce points of increased vulnerability, unless they could be very well-armored. I conclude that the big ships would have many weapons, pointed in many directions; the small ships would have a few weapons, with the main weapon systems pointed in one direction.

Maneuverability (angular acceleration) you could achieve with gyroscopes, or by mounting engines or thrusters away from your fighter's center of mass. For the highest levels of maneuverability, the spacecraft should be close to spherical and these engines should be as off-center as possible, which might mean putting thrusters on long booms or struts. The problem with this kind of Firefly-like engine layout is that it becomes very vulnerable. If a fighter can achieve high maneuverability with gyros, those are probably the best option.

So, I think the small fighter craft would be nearly spherical, with a single main engine and a few guns or missiles facing generally forward. They would have gyroscopes and fuel tanks in their shielded centers. It would make sense to build their outer hulls in a faceted manner, to reduce their radar cross-section. Basically, picture a bigger, armored version of the lunar module. The larger warships would also probably be nearly spherical, with a small cluster of main engines facing generally backward and a few smaller engines facing forward or sideways for maneuvering. Cannons, lasers, and missile ports would face outward in many directions. On a large enough space cruiser, it would even be a good idea to put docking ports for the small fighters, so that the fighters don't have to carry as many consumables on board.

I think it's time to sketch some pictures and write some stories!
Space-Wide Peace

I certainly hope we don't get into any space wars. Human nature being what it is, though, and given how scarce a lot of resources really are on the scale of a solar system or a galaxy, I don't think it's out of the question. I would like to think that when we start colonizing other worlds, we will be sufficiently enlightened to do so from on board the Ship of the Imagination, and not as futuristic conquistadores. Still, the part of me that loves science fiction has fun with these thought experiments.

Reprinted with permission from Joseph Shoer. Photo by TG Daily


The author of this post can be contacted at tips@gizmodo.com

Cool Picture of the Day: Cherenkov Radiation


Cherenkov radiation (also spelled Cerenkov or Čerenkov) is electromagnetic radiation emitted when acharged particle (such as an electron) passes through an insulator at a constant speed greater than the speed of light in that medium. The characteristic blue glow of nuclear reactors is due to Cherenkov radiation. It is named after Russian scientist Pavel Alekseyevich Cherenkov, the 1958 Nobel Prize winner who was the first to characterise it rigorously.[1] - Source: Wikipedia



For A Good Cause: Episcopal Relief and Development


From the ER-D Website:


"Truly I tell you, just as you did it to one of the least of these who are members of my family, you did it to me." — Matthew 25:40 (NRSV, extracted from our mandate 25:37-40)

Episcopal Relief & Development is the international relief and development agency of the Episcopal Church of the United States, guided by the Episcopal Church’s principles of compassion, dignity and generosity as we work to heal a hurting world.


This is the international relief arm of the Episcopal Church. My church, St. John's Episcopal Church, is donating its loose offerings this week to ER-D to help in the rescue and rebuilding efforts in Haiti following the devastating earthquake there. What little I am able to give I gave to them for that reason. I hope everyone will help contribute financially what they are able to assist. Every little bit helps.


Great Tune of the Day

My BFF Erin turned me on to a new (to me) group called Thievery Corporation. The Washington, DC based group specializes in a fusion of acid jazz, reggae, and other musical styles. The result is an extremely smooth and "chill" sound that I find simultaneously stimulating and relaxing. I've got a new Pandora station built around them and I haven't disliked anything I've heard so far. Two thumbs up!

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Notable National Anthem: Hawai'i Pono'i


Hawaiʻi Ponoʻī is the state song and former national anthem of Hawaiʻi. The words were written in 1874 by King David Kalākaua with music composed by Captain Henri Berger, then the king's royal bandmaster. Hawaiʻi Ponoʻī was one of the national anthems of the Republic of Hawaiʻi and the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi, having replaced Liliuokalani's compostition He Mele Lahui Hawaii. It was the adopted song of the Territory of Hawaiʻi before becoming the state symbol by an act of the Hawaiʻi State Legislature in 1967. The melody is reminiscent of God Save the Queen and the Prussian Hymne, Heil dir im Siegerkranz. In the Hawaiian language, Hawaiʻi ponoʻī means "Hawaiʻi's own".

Hawaiʻi ponoʻī,Hawaiʻi's own true sons,
Nānā i kou mōʻī,Be loyal to your king,
Ka lani aliʻi,Your country's liege and lord
Ke aliʻi.The chief.
Hawaiʻi ponoʻī,Hawaiʻi's own true sons,
Nānā i nā aliʻi,Look to your chiefs,
Nā pua muli kou,The children after you,
Nā pōkiʻi.The young.
Hawaiʻi ponoʻī,Hawaiʻi's own true sons,
E ka lahui ē,People of loyal heart,
ʻO kou hana nuiThe only duty lies
E ui ē.List and abide.
Hui:Chorus:
Makua lani ē,Father above us all,
Kamehameha ē,Kamehameha e,
Na kāua e pale,Who guarded in the war,
Me ka ihe.With his spear.

Great Tune of the Day


Antonio Vivaldi - Concerto for bassoon in E Minor (RV 484)


A great song for cool, rainy weather.

Cool Picture of the Day

Earth's Moon behind Rio de Janeiro's famous Cristo Redentor Statue

Source: Sonaboa.com

Columbia, South Carolina Current Weather

Current Time and Date in Columbia, South Carolina, United States of America

Carl Sagan's Pale Blue Dot Speech