India Flies Space Capsule, China Rolls Astronauts - Deep Space Updates November 10th
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024
- Catching up with almost 3 weeks worth of launches from around the world, including investor reports from Astra, Rocket Lab and Virgin Galactic.
And 4 Guys with bombs strapped to their backs make SpaceX fans get excited.
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In memory of Astronaut Frank Borman (1928-2023).
Can we name his achievements?
Apollo 8 commander
Put craters in the test range at nellis AFB nevada.
@@markrix Like ejecting out of test aircraft?
@@12pentaborane it consider that 👍
also Astronaut Ken Mattingly (1936 - 2023).
@@Sintesi.oh I hadn’t heard that he died… 2 in a few days….
That footage of the one Long March dropping its boosters was quite beautiful. The four trails following along and cutting through the exhaust from the main rocket, very pretty.
Nice to see Dreamchaser finally is going to make it to space. We've been waiting for you, baby shuttle!
It's baby #2, Baby #1 is X37B
Would they then have to change the name of the program to "Dreamcatcher"?
Another craft that will reach the ISS before Starliner. And possibly be converted to carry astronauts and do that too before Starliner.
I got a feeling that eventually a Falcon Heavy will be taking it up.
that isnt dreamchaser... lol thats the x37b
Space has never been so interesting. I applaud you for your international coverage 👏 and more importantly. Go India!! 🇮🇳
Another great video 👍
LoL, they use Expendable SRB rockets😂 get with the times.
@@snake88ificationWhy waste good expensive rockets on testing abort systems
@@snake88ificationgaganayaan launched on a hypergolic liquid motor
@@snake88ificationwhat does your rocket use ? 😂
@@snake88ification And? SRBs are still fit for purpose.
SpaceX launches more rockets than Blue Origin makes announcements.
Blue balls meme is fitting
ROFLMAO!
Burn, full 8 minutes, must be Tuesday for SpaceX lol
So glad my country is finally starting to get in the game with the Technology Safeguards Agreement. Still a shame we don't do enough of our own manufacturing and launches, but maybe this will help kickstart some.
Which country?
@@ankitnmnaik229That'd be Australia. Got a long history of helping out with a bit of remote and flat land.
4:14 The stability of these boosters post separation is amazing!
Good job, ISRO.
I really look forward to the next Starship flight-test.
Spectacular booms expected, and as long as they happen for completely different reasons than last time, it'll be successful no matter what. 😎
I burst out laughing when I saw the 4 guys with the backpacks crossing Abbey road. Love it. (23:07)
that orange smoke rip
4:22 that's a cool shot, mesmerizing
9:33 . . . Crazy how my first impression of the 1st high-res image (L'LORRI) was that this guy was a Contact Binary, then they released the GIF animation showing it wasn't, THEN they released another high-res image at a later time showing the small body was IN FACT a CONTACT BINARY ! 😅👋👍
Oops! There are two #17 in your graphic for falcon9 booster? Love your videos, very educational! Thanks!!
Bronco ov10!! Probably my favorite military prop plane after ww2
We had them at Pleiku, RVN in 1971. Made a pretty good FAC platform but kind of delicate in comparison to the Warthog. Had a great "blow you through the canopy" ejection w/ Instant bottle rocket type parachute. There was one at Naked Fanny where the pilot ejected inverted right into the runway on takeoff (engine out - Vmc roll), no time for the chute, and he survived. The seat took the impact mostly (2 broken ankles and lots of time/$$ at the chiropractor). Unfortunately, the airplane died in surgery a very short time later. Definite RUD.
Exciting spaceplane news! As I'm a child of Space Shuttle era, winged spacecraft hold special place in my heart.
Me too.
3:40 Can you imagine ULA etc scrubbing a launch, fixing the issue and launching the next day?! 😂 Not to mention the cost difference..
And we as a humanity 've just made the history... for all the wrong reasons.
First real warfare action in space.
As "Arrow-2" and couple of days later "Arrow-3" have intercepted Yemeni ballistic missiles above the Karman line.
Ouch! News reports sounded like ordinary SAM intercepts of cruise missiles .
Common occurrence when it comes to BMD tests. USA, Russia, China, India and Israel all do it regularly. Only difference this time is that it wasn't a drill or a test.
Welcome bac and thanks Scott for keeping track of all these launches and news I to hope for a launch of the Space X Heavy.
Great idea! Love to see improvements and different variations on previous projects!
Contact Binary Moon is a cool name for psychodelic rock album
Rocket launching has become routine with no failures!
The facón 9 scrub was due to a bad reading on a stage separation pusher. It was too bad since the new moon and a launch would have been beautiful!
Well, at least Astra had the best launch failure ever. That drifting rocket was a fail., but so cool to see live haha. I'm happy I saw this. it is sad they seem to be going under. but that is how this very risky and difficult market goes.
It would be interesting to know which direction India plans to launch there manned missions.
I believe nasa launched a couple of sounding rockets from a site near Darwin in northern Australia. It would be close to the equator. There is also a US military base up there as well. Australia’s main site for rocketry was at Woomera in South Australia and there were some nuclear tests in that site back in the 50’s.
There is a US military base in Australia? Damn.
@@fensoxx several.
Pine gap and Harold E. Holt are the biggest and best-known.
Several smaller ones are camouflaged as cooperations in the paperwork,. but under exclusive US control.
There are US bases almost everywhere, at least 1300 publicly known. Thats what empires do.
12:37 So, same issue as Starship OTF-1. But with actual safety mechanisms.
You can bet the Chinese astronauts probably felt that landing the next day.
17:45 finally
Interesting stuff Mr Manley. Curious though, no mention or commentary on ULA looking to sell in entirety?
I hope that internally they call the FTS the "self destruct sequence".
I wonder what the distance is between the two small contact binaries orbiting around Dinkinesh. Looks like ca 50 meters or so! Imagine that!!
Sadly SpaceX is not launching Dream Chaser 😔
I wish they would just go for orbit. Not like the second launch, where they only went for stage separation
22:45 - IFT2 - hoping it happens next week
When it’s put together like this. There is a bloody lot of rockets going up 🫣
Indians using the Little John/ Apollo capsule test set up, I like it!
Lots of launches recently
I was amazed when I heard this.
Dinkinesh(ድንቅነሽ) is not a place, just an Amharic word meaning "you are amazing."
Sorry if this is obvious but I can’t find the answer myself: why did the Chinese rocket have four “trailer” launches with it? I didn’t think they were launch stages bc all four where flying by together and did not “peel off” away from the rocket. Thank you for helping me understand! Love your videos as always 🎉
Are you talking about the boosters?
Timestamp? I don't see what you're confused about
At 4:16, it looks like the four boosters are flying along in a line abreast formation for quite a long time.??
@@sheevone4359 Boosters, yes, but the question is why are they remaining in a formation so far from the main engine, instead of tumbling over to the ground like all the Korolev crosses do
@@u1zhaThey may be trying to create their own iconic formation visually distinct from the USSR design .
I wonder if any spacecraft can gravitationally disrupt small systems such as Dinkinesh
You said X-57b
My expletives deleted first flight when I saw upward movement were... Fkn GOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!
In Beck we Trust 🙏
is that an expanse reference on the space plane...
The Chinese capsule tried to land. It went sideways quickly...
They could put that shuttle inside the Starship?
1:40 normal landing on Ryanair
11:50 couldn't equatorial Guinea or Gabon, rawanda, DRC, Kenya, Uganda, etc... host a rocket launch facility? Right on the equator? Or Brazil for that matter?
You mean in addition to the launch site Ariane Space and ESA operate in French Guiana? That's in South America, bordering on Brazil. It's inconvenient to operate so far from the main facilities in the home country but Europe was forced into it due to being unable to fly to the west from anywhere in Europe - no ocean to fly over.
Looking at maps, I recently suggested that Mt. Kenya in Kenya has good launch geography .
@@donjones4719 I was more thinking that those countries could sell service to other countries. Their latitude is a resource they could use to benefit them
@@IanZainea1990 If location was enough, and it's not, not nearly so. Finding high points at or near the equator is one of a hundred issues that make it unviable. Spacex started at Kwajalein for their first 4 flights before moving back to the mainland. Remote locates bring a lot of extra problems, usually more than the locations benefits warrant.
@@johndododoe1411 The Everyday Astronaut put out a video a couple of days ago, "Why Don't They Launch Rockets From Mountains Or The Equator?" I believe you'll find it interesting.
Was Long March influenced by the R7?
10:10 So the FAA said no to drugs. 😆
That Chinese capsule, yeah, I'd never get into one of those. That was a really bad "landing".
You're not much of a Warrior.
China won't ask you out to play.
Blue Origin flies not even once in a Blue Moon!
Hello Scott, i think the Space-x landing boosters can be better with 1 landing leg less. 3 legs is more stable than 4, it is lighter so more payload.
When lifting heavy round steel discs in a factory, they use 3 chains to lift, not 4, because with 4, one is always without load on it=dangerous.
A table or chair with 3 legs will not wobble, one with 4 does.
What are your thoughts about this, or anybody’s else??
Also in the comic novel by Herge, Tin-Tin, men on the moon, the red-white rocket had 3 legs.
Hi Scott, first I would like to thank you for the high quality of your videos ❤ I have a question : I never realize how much launchs are done, how is the impact on the pollution created? I was always thinking that few launchs is not such important but by watching your channel I realize that at the end nowaday it is not anymore few launch per year we are speaking about 😅 thanks a lot again ❤
The Everyday Astronaut did a deep dive a while back on what is released into the atmosphere for each rocket fuel type, the Best was HydroLox, it just makes water :P
2:10 its interesting that the ruski's now also paint Z's on the fairing's of rockets as well....
Also this week was the first ever interception of a real ICBM attack
Yemen and Israel are on the same continent .
@@johndododoe1411 true. Should be interception outside the atmosphere
@@udibr123it's not an ICBM.
or, to give it it's full name, thr Boeing X37B
RIP astra
I take it the orange clouds around the Chinese Long March rockets indicate hydrazine fuel?
I wonder if space x get a good price for their fuel, since they use so much of it.
Let's be honest, it's not like a quick trip to the petrol station.
Does the US besides SpaceX not launch rockets anymore?
I remember watching the last failed Astra launch and viewers were posting messages saying it was "a good try", or "space was hard", or "they'll do it next time", etc... Essentially, these people were verbally giving Astra participation awards. They seemed to have no concept of the economics behind a small launch company that is repeatably losing customer's payloads. I hope Rocket Lab will get their act together once and for all. I don't know how many more failed launches they can survive.
Made drugs in space? Now the drugs be like,
"Hey, brah... we umm... like, don't want to ever come down, maannn! !
"Come on down, we've got PIZZA!"
"DUUUUUUUUDE!"
@ScottManley would i be right in saying the X-35B can't have a mannied crew as it is (currently) launched inside a fairing? Also do you think we will ever see a manned version of it in the future?
Hmm. I misunderstood what dreamchaser was for a second, but the thing that I misunderstood it to be is interesting.
Could you have a spaceplane that doesn't land back on Earth? It enters the atmosphere, gets low enough to safely drop cargo with parachutes, then accelerates back up into orbit again and docks with the space station. Likewise, could you have something meet up with a spaceplane to transfer cargo to it as a cheaper way of getting stuff into orbit?
I'm guessing no, but for a split second there thats what I thought Dreamchaser was.
Whatup scott!! Sinner!! 🫵 😂
4:20 is hypnotic to watch
Lucy in the sky with asteroids
Laser starlink satellites???
Maybe the new Blue Moon will first fly on a Falcon Heavy or the new Super Heavy. 😁
11/11/2023 1+1+1+1=4/2023? for Starship launch?
What's the logic behind using one parachute instead of multiple for redundancy on that Chinese capsule?
Hey Scott how many Gs do you think the chinese astronauts got from that landing?
I know this is kind of a stupid idea, but to heck with it, I'll throw it out anyway. What do you think of the idea of a hydrogen balloon as a first stage lift assist/a fuel resevoir for a space rocket?
Hard to control where a balloon goes and it would be very limited in terms of mass.
Not possible to use for refueling a rocket in orbit. But you mean a balloon as a launch platform? That would be somehow comparable to launching from an airplane which have been done, virgin orbit. Everyday astronaut said in his latest video this is what next will be about. Latest is about launching from mountains.
i don't know about that one man... how big would a balloon need to be to lift a hundred tons, i don't know , but it would surely be monstrous.
@@iamzid I k now it's completely unrealistic either way, but to clarify; I mean to assist the first stage getting off the ground, not to do the actual lifting by itself, but to help the first stage rocket in the lifting, lol.
If it helps, think of it as a sort of anti-ballast to make the rocket initially a little bit lighter
Why is SpaceX launching a space plane? Because they can!
Because they're being paid too. That's their job.
Scott Manley, flying stoned...
Rocker Lab IS noth us company IS New Zéland company 🤨
How will dreamchaser know which satellite they have when all those lovely decals and flags are burnt off in reentry. They might pick up the wrong 0ne?
Did you invest in Rocket Lab?
How many American Apollo Astronauts who flew around the Moon like Collins or walked on the Moon like Armstrong and Adrian are still alive? Who are they?
A Falcon Heavy Core solar panel you said?
In memory of david bowman
Informative and enjoyable, as always! Thanks
So...the zombie apocalypse will begin in Australia.😂
RIP my one share of Astra
Starship needs a license for their fish according to Elon.
Why don't any providers construct more launch facilities at ESA's French Guiana facility? Wouldn't that be a fantastic development for everybody involved?
Not really. French Guiana has just one advantage - the equatorial site is perfect for launching to equatorial orbits like GEO, which not coincidentally, was one of the strengths of the Ariane rockets launching from there. But you need a big rocket to reach GEO, and there aren't many of those around, and not all that many payloads either.
Further, that advantage means nothing when launching to other orbits... indeed, the higher the inclination of the target orbit, the worse that equatorial launch site becomes, since the free dV obtained from the earth's rotation isn't what you want for a polar orbit. And of course, the fact that Kourou is in the absolute middle of nowhere, carved out of the Amazon jungle, with poor road access and minimal local infrastructure. Much better to launch from somewhere like Cape Canaveral, even if it's not quite as efficient for those GEO launches.
Thank you for the informative explanation!@@simongeard4824
Re: Rocket Lab (11: 20), FAA and Australian launches. Rocket Lab is no longer a New Zealand company; Lockheed Martin provided $300 million for development to Peter Beck and is now the controlling interest .
RTs TH-cam adverts descibe itself as "an American company" with Peter Beck as "its founder and CEO". That's why the U.S. FAA required an investigation into the recent RL launch failure despite the launch being in a "foreign" country.
As a New Zealander this disgusts me; yet another small company devoured by an American corporate giant, stealing technology, again.🇳🇿🚀💰
While we sit on the ground finger popping our nether side waiting for the department fishies and pre-food to get all their brain cells pointed in the same direction.
Speaking of upcoming Starship launch.... Does anyone else's _Next Spaceflight_ app not load anything, or just mine?
I pull down to refresh and it's just an endless Waiting icon...
_Doubtful_ it's because of me now being on Starlink, but, figured I'd toss that out just in case. (doubtful because everything *else* works awesome)
*****SCOTT UNRELATED TO THIS VIDEO do you think this water deluge system that spacex has built is adequate for the launch in a few days? it is my opinion that the design is woefully missing a flame deflector and flame trench, and is about to be blown to pieces by the next launch (literally). The new spacex design comprises a simple metal gate with water deluge that emits water vertically into the flames of the rocket. this design completely misses the mark in terms of sound suppression and explosion/flame redirection. ******
What about the engines? Nobody ever talks about them. When a boosters relaunched is it always with the same engines? In fact that nobody talks about him, kind of implies that they don't swap engines or replace them. Engines are very important
Virgin Galactic Delta vehicle will not only be capable of flying more often than Unity, but it will carry 6 passengers rather than 4. It is specifically designed to bring in more money than Unity and make the company profitable.
How's that cool-aid taste?
BHARAT india willl have space station and moon based by 2034 and 2040 and interplanetary travel with habitats in solar system by 2047
Asteriod mining by 2035 to 2040
Interplanetary mining by 2047
Ya we means Bharata Indian gona be interplanetary nation and I'm existed for that
Everything hinges on the success of Gaganyaan and NGLV.
not gonna happen.
imagine india sends crew to the iss before starliner
for 1/10th the price.
No Imagination Necessary... I already Believe They Will!
This is definitely going to happen no doubts about it.😊
Between this and their Navy India continues to impress.
ISS will be decommissioned by then
I know it's probably a lot to ask, but official timestamps in these updates would be highly appreciated for easy navigation and remembering the name of the topic/program/rocket being talked about. Thanks for everything you do!
*_"I know it's probably a lot to ask"_*
No, for a channel with 1.63 million subs and 160,000 views within 24 hours of a video going up, it's the very least, the absolute bare minimum, the lazy sod could do.
{:o:O:}
Yeah
@@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095its not that easy
@@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 The bare minimum would be to not make videos at all. He doesn't have to. Fortunately for us, he does, and we're very grateful.
@@ansfridaeyowulfsdottir8095 Ugh, I think we all know Scott is quite busy with his professional career, and we should consider ourselves extremely lucky he makes time to make some well researched and highly educational video's for our entertainment. The fact THIS channel has become so big while this is still an side project for Mr. Manley just shows quality is appreciated.
Thank Scott for the great updates on what's going up, down or simply going nowhere!
😂😂😂
That would be a good t-shirt.
I use to watch a lot of SpaceX launches. But ever since they moved the livestreams to Twitter. It’s harder for me to catch and watch them :(
Is there a special account to be followed? I got spaceX subscribed with notifications and I just get the 15 second clips afterwards. What a shame :( I used to watch every single launch because there was so much potential for awe and beauty and now? gone.
there's a few that do indeed carry the broadcast on yt - because that's how I watch them.
(I'm more of a 'rocket go vrrrroooom' person. always fascinated by launches - ever since the first shuttle launches.) 'the launchpad' is good, as is 'lab padre space', 'nasa' still cover launches, 'spaceflight now', 'what about it' - among others who do replays. @@ChrisBigBad
because there's a little bit more of a delay with some channels, you're watching a few seconds behind - but at least they're covering them. looking forward to starships next attempt. cancelled everything for next week and got my seat booked in front of the telly with a pile of snacks, and the app formerly known as twitter loaded and ready to see reaction/videos of what people are seeing.
Its called x
@@MozTSEveryone knows that Twitter is called X :).
@@MozTSthe url is still Twitter.
Man that capsule hit hard
The Chinese landing was rough for sure, but given the dust was mostly from the thrust of the landing cushioning rockets and the fact that the taikonauts were securely strapped in, I doubt there were any injuries. NFL football players probably have it worse.
I disagree, you can calculate the kinetic energy for yourself. Lets agree on one thing: there will be zero transparency. China replaces humility with denial.
If they had died it would have been listed as a unmanned flight. What's two more missing people in China?
@@MichaelOfRohan The astronauts were alive and well enough to give speeches, guess you fucked up the calculations
@@jonseilim4321 You trust a communist dictatorship, guess you fucked up in life choices.
@@jonseilim4321😂😂
If Starship flies next week it will make my entire week!!! Lets goooooo! Sad news about Astra. Getting to space is hard but running a sustainable Rocket company is just as hard it seems!
cancelled all plans for next week, seat booked in front of the telly, the app formerly known as twitter primed and ready to see reaction/videos.
Running a sustainable rocket company is *much* harder than getting to space. We've still only had two of the space startups - SpaceX and Rocket Lab - successfully make that transition into an operational launch company... and I wouldn't say the latter was sustainable yet, given the challenges of the small launch segment and their plans to step up a tier.
You forgot about the opening of Andøya space port in Norway for launching commercial polar satellites.