I look forward to Elysia's space updates every week. Never boring and always exciting. Thank you everyone at nasaspaceflight for all the work that is put into these weekly updates. 😊
SUNI 'The Hydra' Williams. Girl, get a banana clip on your hair. Get that shyte under control. DO SOMETHING! But you won't. Your mates don't seem to say anything about your whacko 'free the hair' policy, but I will.
I still can't get my head around the fact that Starliner is INCAPABLE of automated undock and return without a software update that takes 4 WEEKS to perform.
Thank you for the update. I would like add I had the pleasure of visiting the Intrepid Museum last week and found it extremely interesting especially the space related exhibitions.
Man you really nailed the news cycle in that opening....it's not just space news, but damn near any paper or discovery that sounds amazing ( whether it's still preliminary or in review or even just in discussion ) that the news gets a wiff of always seems to get blown up outta all proportion and hyped then when it turns out that the media seriously overstated things people act like it's Nasa or the scientists or the universities or whatevers fault....then the cycle starts all over again. Ridiculous
@@BoroBootBoy dude they need a LOT of data. why do you think they do so many tests when actually making a rocket? theres more data they need then "Hm yep that's not wokring"
Thank you for another space news update! RE: Sunni & Butch, I think they will come down on starliner. However, more interesting would be a starliner/dragon rendezvous test before using dragon down.
So by the end of the month we should have a Starliner decision, launch of Polaris Dawn, and the arrival of Blue Origin's landing barge. The Everyday Astronaut got a great tour of BO's Cape factory with part 2 of the launch area promised. Really puts BO in a different light.
I really like your videos - it's nice to see the variety of things that are happening around the world concerning space. Just a small point of feedback though, maybe consider taking the music volume down some while you guys are talking. There's a lot of points in the video where it was kind of distracting to listen to you talk and have the music playing. Not a huge deal or anything, but I would suggest maybe about half of what it was set at? Anyways thanks for the video!
My guess is leaning towards Crewdragon given how much footdraging they have done in the decition - It signals that they are prephering alternate options rather than focus on the main option. They could also anounce it as way to give existing crew longer flight time while giving team time to further test the Starliners thrusters without aded risk to said crew.
Here is a quick reference for Russian words used in space :) Vostok = East Zvezda = Star Soyuz = Union Molniya = Lightning Progress = Progress Mir = Peace (also: World)
Boeing is putting the two crew members at an extra risk due to their company’s self preservation. That being said, I believe that variable puts them on Dragon for the return. Send the flawed capsule home crew less and if things go well, “great”. If the capsule has a rud, then they made a good decision and although will lead to major rethinking of program, to lose the crew would doom Boeing’s space reputation.
Here's my theory... mount Olympus blew out the majority of the deep crust, and the ocean water flowed in cooling its mantle and slowed down the core, and Mars lost its atmosphere.
Drilling down to the depth required to extract water from that speculative lake several kilometers under the surface of Mars would be a Major undertaking! Don't want to be a killjoy or Debbie Downer type, but yeah, good luck with that.
Exactly. Drilling down that deep is one hell of a challenge - even here on Earth. On Mars?... yeah, good luck with that. (at least, with our current technology)
Lets congratulate Soyuz and progress 89 for providing much needed fresh supplies to Starliner crew Sunita Williams & Butch Wilmore in the mission brief, Russia showing compassion to the US astronauts.
Great T-shirt Elysia! I hope Boeing is sending Butch & Sunni new underwear, they've been wearing the same ones for along time now & washing clothes in space has got ta' VERY challenging....Just Sayin'!!! The Dragon Polar Orbit mission sounds GREAT, I hope we get ta' see it soon. NSF ROCKS........
Even on earth we know most of water penetrate into the crust and if we force all water move back to surface the sea water will raise at least 200m. So the question is do those rocky planets we see are actually liquid cover billions years in the past before all liquid move to underground.
I just found a 1999 zinc plated copper penny ! I have no clue how this exists but its def real ! Also wierd it weighs 2.51 ! I can also see on the edge the copper center ! Which isnt much ! Just puttn that out there if its a first !
The senior designers for Boeing, the ones who made the decision to discard the thrusters so they cannot be examined after failing, should be ordered to fly on a Boeing Starliner to the ISS and to do a spacewalk in their Boeing spacesuits to inspect the thrusters. If *they* do not trust the products they designed then why should NASA?
Are the new Mars seismic analysis results promising or disappointing. Of course they are scientifically exciting if valid but looking purely at the practicality of Musk's Mars colonisation dreams I found the statement at time index approx. 2:00 discouraging - "but for depths up to 8 km the data is not consistent with either a dry crust or an ice-filled crust". It's the last few words of that that concern me. If the modelling is correct then does that mean that to get to even water ice (as opposed to liquid water) any humans on Mars will need to drill at least 8km down to get to it? I think a few people were hoping that water ice was going to be more accessible than that because 8+ km drilling where all equipment needs to be shipped from Earth is going to be a very major undertaking let alone getting 20km down to get to liquid water. Or am I being too pessimistic?
Boeing thought they'd just get it right by look, whereas threatening the life of experienced astronautas. So irresponsable. It brings light to how much important and imponent spacex is for the market.
I live along the st johns River that is tidal. We built a dock 1.5 foot above the average sea level in 1985. This dock only goes underwater during hurricanes and never during any other time of the year. Land may be sinking but seas are not rising.
when i think of marswater i think of like really thick, barely moist and probably extremely salty mud 2 km underground. like thats not gonna help anyone!
They should use Crew Dragon 9 return option but they will end up returning on Starliner due to financial reasons. Rather than using the lower risk option they will appease Boeing who already lost a $billion having to fix problems & do an extra test flight. If they are forced to fix all the newly discovered problems and complete another uncrewed test flight before crew certification they have mentioned scraping the Starliner program due to cost over runs. They are simply too addicted to the Cost Plus contracts especially when their core business is struggling. Hopefully Boeing decides to exit the non-defense space sector and sell Starliner and their 50% of ULA to Blue Origin to fund the substantial fixes needed in their airliner business. Also the idea of having more than 4 ride down on Crew Dragon is not new. This was they plan when Soyuz was damaged not long ago. They even demonstrated how they would be strapped in on the floor below the seats. Keep in mind Crew Dragon was designed to fly up to 7 crew. While it wouldn’t exactly be comfortable NASA has stated it is well with if the risk parameters for emergency evacuation.
Spending money on any orbital system that is not, in any way, reusable is a proven waste of money. SLS and Starliner fit that script. Reuse is the newly set standard and should be the focus going forward by any spaceworthy nation, agency, or private company. SpaceX has pushed the envelope and has successfully folded into a new standard. When Starship achieves this, the envelope will fold further in. Rocket scientists around the globe need to step up their game if they want to stay relevant…otherwise they might as well try to get a job at SpaceX.
i beg you to stop with this music in a middle of video, It's really annoying. It's too entrusive and make me feel like video is ending but it's just a middle of it. I really don't understand this decision.
Great day from dangrek mountain capital hill of Krung Preah Beida Sung Khmer-Thai. The only future dragonfly capital hill of Asia 🌏 that going to have the largest airport and airbase for Boeing and air force direct fly from all G7 countries members and Thailand Philippines Indonesia Myanmar and their people living up to 1 millions foreigners people and business and working and business and investing and largest theme park and biggest stadium for FIFA and largest community products village in Asia 🌏 for future tourists destination more 5 millions people per year to visit our capital.
If you ask me Mars had plenty of Life years ago, of course it's gone now, in fact the whole universe is teeming with life!! how could it be any other way? 🤷♂️ ... it's common sense my friends.
I look forward to Elysia's space updates every week. Never boring and always exciting. Thank you everyone at nasaspaceflight for all the work that is put into these weekly updates. 😊
SUNI 'The Hydra' Williams. Girl, get a banana clip on your hair. Get that shyte under control. DO SOMETHING! But you won't. Your mates don't seem to say anything about your whacko 'free the hair' policy, but I will.
Holy sh Falcon 9 flying more frequently than some train services now...
And in time.
I still can't get my head around the fact that Starliner is INCAPABLE of automated undock and return without a software update that takes 4 WEEKS to perform.
Yeah, kinda seems like it should have been able to do that...oops.
@@johnwiles4391
Yeah, mostly because the previous mission did exactly that.
Seems like Boeing intentionally removed the capability to autonomously undock for some bizarre reason.
Thanks for another awesome TWIS Elysia! Also thank you NSF!!!
Great update, thanks Elysia and NSF team. This Week in Spaceflight is always a informative round - up of all the current space related news .
Great job Elysia, as usual!
Great, well presented overview of the week! Thanks NSF!
Thank you for the update. I would like add I had the pleasure of visiting the Intrepid Museum last week and found it extremely interesting especially the space related exhibitions.
Thank you Elysia, Alex, Derek, Kevin, and videographers for this week's TWiS. Very informative as always.
Thanks NSF and Elysia, love your enthusiasm!
Great summary as always, I always look forward to these 👍
Holy smokes, this spaceflight business is getting so crowded I can't remember the beginning of the updates once I reach the end! 😂
Man you really nailed the news cycle in that opening....it's not just space news, but damn near any paper or discovery that sounds amazing ( whether it's still preliminary or in review or even just in discussion ) that the news gets a wiff of always seems to get blown up outta all proportion and hyped then when it turns out that the media seriously overstated things people act like it's Nasa or the scientists or the universities or whatevers fault....then the cycle starts all over again. Ridiculous
Another great Re-cap. Thanks so much
Excellent, good stuff
Technically, the very first sentence of this video is wrong. It was the _announcement_ that happened "while it prepares for Polaris Dawn".
Elysia' you rock! I so enjoy your weekly updates. You present a great amount of info and make it fun. Thank you!
Smashing...always lots.
really like your reports. Good balance between friendly and professional.
Remember the printer scene from Office Space? That’s exactly what NASA needs to do to Boeing’s Starliner if they ever get it back to earth.
It’s not coming down in one piece 😂. Boeing has flushed their entire reputation down the toilet
Thank you Elysia wonderful ❤
She is back❤
Excellent reporting on the latest research on a putative Mars ocean.
Wow, this came out later than normal. I'm glad it came out! I was worried!
She's back!! Missed her last week.. once again great voice and great video
Excellent as always!
Starliner excuse..... 'we need more eyes on the data' sounds to me like... ' if anything bad happens then we need to spread the blame further'.
no they just need to see more data so they can fix the problems.
@@Rockethead293 No, it's the same data.
@@BoroBootBoy dude they need a LOT of data. why do you think they do so many tests when actually making a rocket? theres more data they need then "Hm yep that's not wokring"
Bravoooo SpaceX, thank You very much
Great update.
Thsnk you NSF
Thank you for another space news update! RE: Sunni & Butch, I think they will come down on starliner. However, more interesting would be a starliner/dragon rendezvous test before using dragon down.
So by the end of the month we should have a Starliner decision, launch of Polaris Dawn, and the arrival of Blue Origin's landing barge. The Everyday Astronaut got a great tour of BO's Cape factory with part 2 of the launch area promised. Really puts BO in a different light.
You’re THE BEST!!! Ty🙏🙌
I really like your videos - it's nice to see the variety of things that are happening around the world concerning space. Just a small point of feedback though, maybe consider taking the music volume down some while you guys are talking. There's a lot of points in the video where it was kind of distracting to listen to you talk and have the music playing. Not a huge deal or anything, but I would suggest maybe about half of what it was set at? Anyways thanks for the video!
My guess is leaning towards Crewdragon given how much footdraging they have done in the decition - It signals that they are prephering alternate options rather than focus on the main option.
They could also anounce it as way to give existing crew longer flight time while giving team time to further test the Starliners thrusters without aded risk to said crew.
13:21 challenger 😮
Land landings at a landing zone are the best! 👍
chances are pretty good that one meter down there will be modest amounts of water everywhere on Mars.
It would be just like a Kerbal rescue mission! With exactly the same mission briefing please 😂
Just a couple launches this week. Wow. I missed it all on a busy work week.
She does a great job....
Here is a quick reference for Russian words used in space :)
Vostok = East
Zvezda = Star
Soyuz = Union
Molniya = Lightning
Progress = Progress
Mir = Peace (also: World)
Nice T-shirt 😊
@nasaspaceflight - When is the IFT5 patch going on sale?
Boeing is putting the two crew members at an extra risk due to their company’s self preservation. That being said, I believe that variable puts them on Dragon for the return. Send the flawed capsule home crew less and if things go well, “great”. If the capsule has a rud, then they made a good decision and although will lead to major rethinking of program, to lose the crew would doom Boeing’s space reputation.
Here's my theory... mount Olympus blew out the majority of the deep crust, and the ocean water flowed in cooling its mantle and slowed down the core, and Mars lost its atmosphere.
Nice!
It's just amazing how Boeing keeps failing upwards. Don't forget SLS is their also cost plus contract.
Drilling down to the depth required to extract water from that speculative lake several kilometers under the surface of Mars would be a Major undertaking! Don't want to be a killjoy or Debbie Downer type, but yeah, good luck with that.
Exactly.
Drilling down that deep is one hell of a challenge - even here on Earth.
On Mars?... yeah, good luck with that. (at least, with our current technology)
You could read me a phone book and I wouldn't get bored. Very nice!
This soundtrack will NEVER get old.
Lets congratulate Soyuz and progress 89 for providing much needed fresh supplies to Starliner crew Sunita Williams & Butch Wilmore in the mission brief, Russia showing compassion to the US astronauts.
The progress mission was scheduled to take place this week for like a year or two prior to Starliner's launch
@@ale131296 Most important is Starliner crew Sunita Williams & Butch Wilmore now have comfort and supplies, thanks to Russia.
Early!!! And as always, such impressive updates!!!
No possibility of aquafirs on mars?
Water is the most ubiquitous material in the universe and almost indestructible as a mineral compound
Great T-shirt Elysia! I hope Boeing is sending Butch & Sunni new underwear, they've been wearing the same ones for along time now & washing clothes in space has got ta' VERY challenging....Just Sayin'!!! The Dragon Polar Orbit mission sounds GREAT, I hope we get ta' see it soon. NSF ROCKS........
Even on earth we know most of water penetrate into the crust and if we force all water move back to surface the sea water will raise at least 200m. So the question is do those rocky planets we see are actually liquid cover billions years in the past before all liquid move to underground.
I just found a 1999 zinc plated copper penny ! I have no clue how this exists but its def real ! Also wierd it weighs 2.51 ! I can also see on the edge the copper center ! Which isnt much ! Just puttn that out there if its a first !
Excellent recap. The background music however is a little irritating.
The senior designers for Boeing, the ones who made the decision to discard the thrusters so they cannot be examined after failing, should be ordered to fly on a Boeing Starliner to the ISS and to do a spacewalk in their Boeing spacesuits to inspect the thrusters. If *they* do not trust the products they designed then why should NASA?
Like giving it away? Can I have it? It could serve drinks and carry stuff. That’d be cool!
Are the new Mars seismic analysis results promising or disappointing. Of course they are scientifically exciting if valid but looking purely at the practicality of Musk's Mars colonisation dreams I found the statement at time index approx. 2:00 discouraging - "but for depths up to 8 km the data is not consistent with either a dry crust or an ice-filled crust". It's the last few words of that that concern me.
If the modelling is correct then does that mean that to get to even water ice (as opposed to liquid water) any humans on Mars will need to drill at least 8km down to get to it? I think a few people were hoping that water ice was going to be more accessible than that because 8+ km drilling where all equipment needs to be shipped from Earth is going to be a very major undertaking let alone getting 20km down to get to liquid water.
Or am I being too pessimistic?
12:47 OK, are we sure that this place isn't actually some super villain's lair?
Algorithm = BS Dada
Thank you NSF and Pray to the stubby gods - Soul/Mach Space
If these oceans and artesian wells were drilled, would it gradually create a martian atmosphere?
Butch & Sundance
Boeing thought they'd just get it right by look, whereas threatening the life of experienced astronautas.
So irresponsable.
It brings light to how much important and imponent spacex is for the market.
i'd be 100% feeling more secure going back with Dragon lying in the cargo than flying anything Boeing....
I live along the st johns River that is tidal. We built a dock 1.5 foot above the average sea level in 1985. This dock only goes underwater during hurricanes and never during any other time of the year. Land may be sinking but seas are not rising.
Hii❤❤
Russia has been using Molniya orbits for years.
Yeah that's why they're called Molniya. We explained what that type of orbit is, we didn't say that nobody else used them
New leader ship will change soon 😅
video starts at 0:01
NERD! 😉
Huh........... Lying on the floor, or RUD/skipping off the atmosphere? I know what I would choose, but hey....
Until Humans get there…. It’s just data…. So humans need to get there.
when i think of marswater i think of like really thick, barely moist and probably extremely salty mud 2 km underground. like thats not gonna help anyone!
They should use Crew Dragon 9 return option but they will end up returning on Starliner due to financial reasons.
Rather than using the lower risk option they will appease Boeing who already lost a $billion having to fix problems & do an extra test flight. If they are forced to fix all the newly discovered problems and complete another uncrewed test flight before crew certification they have mentioned scraping the Starliner program due to cost over runs. They are simply too addicted to the Cost Plus contracts especially when their core business is struggling.
Hopefully Boeing decides to exit the non-defense space sector and sell Starliner and their 50% of ULA to Blue Origin to fund the substantial fixes needed in their airliner business.
Also the idea of having more than 4 ride down on Crew Dragon is not new. This was they plan when Soyuz was damaged not long ago. They even demonstrated how they would be strapped in on the floor below the seats. Keep in mind Crew Dragon was designed to fly up to 7 crew. While it wouldn’t exactly be comfortable NASA has stated it is well with if the risk parameters for emergency evacuation.
Who at NASA and Boeing will lose their careers if tragedy strikes Starliner? Americans will demand accountability!
What surprises me
Is
SpaceX
Doesn't have a recon flight to mars...
On it's way
Already
Already
Falcon Heavy?
Spending money on any orbital system that is not, in any way, reusable is a proven waste of money. SLS and Starliner fit that script. Reuse is the newly set standard and should be the focus going forward by any spaceworthy nation, agency, or private company. SpaceX has pushed the envelope and has successfully folded into a new standard. When Starship achieves this, the envelope will fold further in. Rocket scientists around the globe need to step up their game if they want to stay relevant…otherwise they might as well try to get a job at SpaceX.
so how many times will they discover water on mars lol seems like when they discover evidence of life which has happened so many times too now lol
"and did NASA just discover an ocean underneath Mars?" - SMH
Sure... there's an ocean floating down below Mars - not attached to anything - just hangin' there.
|GENZIQLO|
If NASA's plan is still to maintain 2 crew rockets for space access, they must choose starliner for return.
Otherwise starliner will get canceled.
i beg you to stop with this music in a middle of video, It's really annoying. It's too entrusive and make me feel like video is ending but it's just a middle of it. I really don't understand this decision.
omg. You even play it twice?! why???
I like the new format, but I think 21 minutes is too long. 15 might be better from my perspective.
Great day from dangrek mountain capital hill of Krung Preah Beida Sung Khmer-Thai. The only future dragonfly capital hill of Asia 🌏 that going to have the largest airport and airbase for Boeing and air force direct fly from all G7 countries members and Thailand Philippines Indonesia Myanmar and their people living up to 1 millions foreigners people and business and working and business and investing and largest theme park and biggest stadium for FIFA and largest community products village in Asia 🌏 for future tourists destination more 5 millions people per year to visit our capital.
NASA = No Answer Still Analysing.
If you ask me Mars had plenty of Life years ago, of course it's gone now, in fact the whole universe is teeming with life!! how could it be any other way? 🤷♂️ ... it's common sense my friends.
And like everything in a failing empire this will end up in the trash bin
Troll
Do not feed it.
bla bla bla bla bla bla.... so many words an 21 minutes of boring video for a little message ... don't steal our time!
😢en el planeta marte ay civilización ay escuelas tienen aeropuerto ay carros