It's ~600kJ/kg to heat to boiling, depending on temperature, and another 400kJ/kg to melt it. That's half the energy just to melt, before you consider energy that goes to the regolith. Boiling is another 1.6MJ/kg to heat, and 10.5MJ/kg to vaporize, so that's not going to happen. You're a full third under the speed of sound, so you will get structural deformation slowing the rear of the satellite, so you likely won't even get full melt. The portion that does melt is now molten aluminum, with a surface tension ~10x that of water, and you're not going to have the mechanical energy left over to "atomize" it.Not turned to plasma. That would be the case from TLI entry I suspect. In LLO, you're only getting the other outcomes.
2 km/s is 2 MJ/kg kinetic energy. The heat of fusion of aluminum is only 321 J/kg and the latent heat of vaporization is 0.7 MJ/kg. Some of the kinetic energy will go into accelerating the regolith. So some of the aluminum won't turn to gas. But essentially all of it will turn to liquid - and hot liquid at that (never mind the propellant). So yeah, hot liquid with a high pressure stagnation point will lead to an expanding pressure wave that will atomize the aluminum.
Ahem, now go subtract Sakha, Buryatia, Chechnya, the other 18 "formally independent" republics of the Russian Federation, the autonomous Oblasts, Okrugs and Krais and other annexted territories, and you pretty much end up with Moscow and its boundary ringroad...Using Wikipedia numbers ...
Soviet Union = 22.4E6 km²
Russia = 17.1E6 km²
17.1/22.4 = 76.3%
Let’s use some real numbers.Not really. I mean, yes sort of, but with the right atmospheric conditions, you can bounce VHF off the moon to communicate with the other side of the Earth using HAM legal equipment and power levels. You don't need the DSN to talk to the moon, even with relatively low fain antennas on whatever is on or around the moon. Of course the lower the gain on the lunar end, the higher the gain needed on Earth.
But if you are running a frequency where the ionosphere is transparent, the gain and power levels aren't necessary mind boggling for low modularity communications. Mars is something like 200-1,000x further than the Moon necessitating around 15-20dB higher gain for the same radio power. The moon is about the same 1000x further than low earth orbit. And a handheld 5w radio with a modest antenna can talk to stuff in orbit okay. So you are talking ~20dB higher gain if still using a piddly 5w radio power. Not that hard to do.
Russia can go and f itself but it still saddens me of what have become of once great, world leading space organisation.
No one cares about the whataboutisms vatniks. The FACT is that the nation's Russia claims are "primitive" are the ones routinely putting landers and even SUVs on other planets entirely. Russia has the best track record for making new craters. The FACTS are against your view of the world. The FACT is that this war has been a total vindication of the US weapon stockpiles and "paranoia". When the US starts wanting to invade Mexico or Canada because "its our right" I'll start worrying.
Good for you. I don't care for whom your heart bleeds, especially when they happen to be a bunch of nasty little genocidal bastards.I still suffer with all the engineers and technicians who have worked hard to make this happen.
https://www.space.com/russia-cosmonauts-ukraine-luhansk-propaganda <-- That's why we're rejoicing. The only sad thing about this is it's not happened to their war effort too.And I really don't like how people rejoice on others failing.
It was meant as a propaganda stunt for a toxic fascist regime. There's nothing wrong with laughing at the failure of the propaganda of a toxic fascist regime.At least this was not meant to kill anyone
Then they should stop supporting Putin's propaganda.and whoever worked on this certainly has more in common with anyone else in the space industry than with fucking Putin.
Also, they left the country, and as such it's safe to say they probably don't support the regime and aren't shedding too many tears over this failure either.In the early 2000s I worked with some Russian programmers who left their crumbling country and these guys worked really hard and were really, really good and totally likable.
And I think you should find something better to do with your time and energy than concern trolling.I think whoever of you here who really work in the industry should at least think of your abstract colleagues for one moment.
Same here.I still suffer with all the engineers and technicians who have worked hard to make this happen.
And I really don't like how people rejoice on others failing. At least this was not meant to kill anyone and whoever worked on this certainly has more in common with anyone else in the space industry than with fucking Putin.
In the early 2000s I worked with some Russian programmers who left their crumbling country and these guys worked really hard and were really, really good and totally likable. I think whoever of you here who really work in the industry should at least think of your abstract colleagues for one moment.
There was a story on CNN recently that one of the former commanders of the "special military action" in Ukraine has died...Has an appropriate scapegoat been selected and disseminated to keep everyone's story straight?
Same here.
I was in Moscow in Nov 1992, early 1994 and May 1995 for work with the Russian Academy of Sciences Mechanical Engineering Institute. We were trying to start joint scientific programs aimed at mapping the elemental composition of the lunar surface from low lunar orbit. The spacecraft would carry a 5 MeV proton beam accelerator to probe the lunar surface using the neutron energy spectrum produced by the surface elements.
Actually, NASA made far larger craters on the lunar surface during the Apollo program by crashing the S-IVB third stages of the Saturn V. The resulting shock waves were used to calibrate the seismic instruments left on the lunar surface by the Apollo astronauts.Headline in Pravda: "Russia makes largest man-made lunar crater!"
In the story they'll talk about how they wanted to leave a mark on the moon that will last for millions of years to prove Russian superiority over the other nations and this was the intention all along.
Never underestimate the ability to spin disaster into "this is fine".
It was a Ukrainian space droneI hope it's not a trampoline problem again![]()
Russian worker: The government pretends to pay us and we pretend to work.The previous Russian scientific mission, the Fobos-Grunt, in 2012 also ended up in dust. At that time, a Russian relative with experience in the Russian scientific millieu had told me insiders' rumors were that its failure had been planned due to gigantic technical short comings. Under pressure from "the top", they had launched the probe anyway, for propaganda, all knowing it couldn't work. From a Russian perspective, it's better to pretent to be part of the club of "space nations" than keep tinkering a machine in your garage for ever.
I wonder how much the Luna-25 mission follows the same path...
After Potemkin villages, Potemkin spacecrafts?
... The Russian physicists and engineers were cordial and professional.
Unlikely. Payloads went with SpaceX because it's the lowest cost option, but if there was no SpaceX some proportion of those payloads would have still needed to be launched. (Not all of them, but certainly some.)How do you people actually reconcile the fact that without Elon Musk who many of you hate as much as Putin the USA would have launched about as much as 5 metric tons to orbit in 2022? Less than India actually.
This mission was launched for political reasons. Sometimes things are interpreted as political because they are.I mean, I'm not trolling. I'm just totally sick of how you guys are politicalizing and emotionalizing just everything. You should better rein in yourselves before you at some point will really need to engineer yourself out of a wet paper bag one day with no help but by those you agree with in everything. Good luck with that...
Politics will change, sometimes within days. Engineering doesn't change this quickly. There will still be an US astronaut launching on a Russian rocket less than one month from now. Better stick to hard numbers and at least congratulate those who at least try to get get something done. Everyone else anyway is one step away from being forgotten.
simple, he's an asshole, but his company is important, and not being used to run propaganda missions for a murderous fascist regime.How do you people actually reconcile the fact that without Elon Musk who many of you hate as much as Putin the USA would have launched about as much as 5 metric tons to orbit in 2022? Less than India actually.
I mean, I'm not trolling. I'm just totally sick of how you guys are politicalizing and emotionalizing just everything. You should better rein in yourselves before you at some point will really need to engineer yourself out of a wet paper bag one day with no help but by those you agree with in everything. Good luck with that...
Politics will change, sometimes within days. Engineering doesn't change this quickly. There will still be an US astronaut launching on a Russian rocket less than one month from now. Better stick to hard numbers and at least congratulate those who at least try to get get something done. Everyone else anyway is one step away from being forgotten.
No. The same as I loathe the CCP drones working on ML for China despite that being my field.I still suffer with all the engineers and technicians who have worked hard to make this happen.
And I really don't like how people rejoice on others failing. At least this was not meant to kill anyone and whoever worked on this certainly has more in common with anyone else in the space industry than with fucking Putin.
In the early 2000s I worked with some Russian programmers who left their crumbling country and these guys worked really hard and were really, really good and totally likable. I think whoever of you here who really work in the industry should at least think of your abstract colleagues for one moment.
So, there are two claims here you’re portraying as “facts”:How do you people actually reconcile the fact that without Elon Musk who many of you hate as much as Putin the USA would have launched about as much as 5 metric tons to orbit in 2022? Less than India actually.
you don't have to be a politician to see that the timing of the mission was to give something other than depleting Soviet war stock to be proud ofBut are you a politician or what are you actually?
Speak with your own words please. I hate this kind of bowing to assholes like as if everything is just Putin, Putin, Putin.
Can't we talk about this as with we could with every other mission to the Moon? At least here? Where else?
Sure, Musk is an asshole and I despise him, but his company, SpaceX, is the most important and consequential Space-related enterprise in decades. I will even grant that much of SpaceX's vision and success is in some part due to Musk. Also, his/their project, Starlink, has had an extremely positive impact for Ukraine. So there is that.How do you people actually reconcile the fact that without Elon Musk who many of you hate as much as Putin the USA would have launched about as much as 5 metric tons to orbit in 2022? Less than India actually.
I mean, I'm not trolling. I'm just totally sick of how you guys are politicalizing and emotionalizing just everything. You should better rein in yourselves before you at some point will really need to engineer yourself out of a wet paper bag one day with no help but by those you agree with in everything. Good luck with that...
Politics will change, sometimes within days. Engineering doesn't change this quickly. There will still be an US astronaut launching on a Russian rocket less than one month from now. Better stick to hard numbers and at least congratulate those who at least try to get get something done. Everyone else anyway is one step away from being forgotten.
Oh don’t give me that nonsense. First off, processed cheese is still cheese. I’ve seen it made.Well, given that most of what North Americans call "cheese" tastes like rehydrated moon dust, I am not really that surprised...
(I'll go get my coat and make a hastyFrenchBritish exit)
Really! That surprises me.Second, I can get better “European” cheeses in America than I can import from across the pond.
Scientists and engineers can be every bit as selfish, greedy, authoritarian, and downright evil as any other member of the human species. Donning a lab coat doesn't automatically make one a paragon of virtue.I still suffer with all the engineers and technicians who have worked hard to make this happen.
And I really don't like how people rejoice on others failing. At least this was not meant to kill anyone and whoever worked on this certainly has more in common with anyone else in the space industry than with fucking Putin.
In the early 2000s I worked with some Russian programmers who left their crumbling country and these guys worked really hard and were really, really good and totally likable. I think whoever of you here who really work in the industry should at least think of your abstract colleagues for one moment.
Who do you think mostly settled America?Really! That surprises me.
sure originally, but timing of actually launching it was not coincidenceThis thing was in the works for decades now, at least since 1998.
Yes, Putin would have loved to see it succeed at this point in his flailing attempts to be a major player, but you rejoicing in seeing it fail doesn't make you a better human being at all. And I'm sure you know it.
There are loads of people in Russia very similar to you who are right now hating this outcome although they did the very best they could. At least extend a virtual hand to these guys. They're much more important in the long run than our fucking politicians. In a hundred years nobody will talk anymore of fucking Putin.
Simple. Musk didn't do it, the engineers working for him did.How do you people actually reconcile the fact that without Elon Musk who many of you hate as much as Putin the USA would have launched about as much as 5 metric tons to orbit in 2022? Less than India actually.
WHOLE lot of time. I also invest time in grammar nazi-ing too.You invest a hole lot of time in concern trolling.