Rincewind
Philosopher
These people are very, very good at their jobs.![]()
Nah! They had it all done in the first couple of weeks, then decided to take a holiday!
These people are very, very good at their jobs.![]()
Nonsense. They originally said the mission might only last for 5 years, and now they're saying it might last up to 20. That's a terribly inaccurate prediction, and proves that they're garbage at their jobs.
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I know you’re joking, but how did this actually come to be? I assume the lifetime is mostly based on fuel available for station keeping? Was the initial 5-year lifetime based on worst-case (or even probable-case) scenarios and they’ve just over-performed every step of the way?
I know you’re joking, but how did this actually come to be? I assume the lifetime is mostly based on fuel available for station keeping? Was the initial 5-year lifetime based on worst-case (or even probable-case) scenarios and they’ve just over-performed every step of the way?
Pretty much. In cases like this I suspect everyone looks to under promise and over deliver.
Part of it is down to the incredible accuracy of the launch vehicle.
https://i.redd.it/9uynjtjms2881.jpg
Webb has sustained a micrometeoroid impact larger than predicted last month.
https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/08/world/webb-telescope-mirror-impact-scn/index.html
So, Dr. Becky mentions that there have actually been not just one but 5 micrometeor impacts so far. Basically one per month. Over time, the damage could add up.
And, not to derail, but I makes me think about the difficulty of even a mission to Mars, much less interstellar travel.
In science fiction, it's a problem that is just ignored for the most part. But these little dust or sand-sized particles could make travel between stars impossible from a practical standpoint.
..snip...
Historically that's not been the case, there was at one time a bit of a push back at all these spacecrafts that get a micro puncture or worse, even in trips to Mars like for example Clarke's "The Sands of Mars" published early in the 1950s.
OK, I guess I stand corrected, but I think the problem still remains a problem.
I never heard the hubble mirror being injured by these granules, yet it is a sure thing. What is the difference?
So, Dr. Becky mentions that there have actually been not just one but 5 micrometeor impacts so far. Basically one per month. Over time, the damage could add up.
And, not to derail, but I makes me think about the difficulty of even a mission to Mars, much less interstellar travel.
In science fiction, it's a problem that is just ignored for the most part. But these little dust or sand-sized particles could make travel between stars impossible from a practical standpoint. After all, if you want to get there in less than 10,000 years or so, you would need to travel at a significant fraction of the speed of light, but could any spaceship even survive that, or would it be ablated (eroded) away en route? Would it still be functional when it arrives? Or would it be shot through with tiny bullet holes? This could be the reason for the Fermi "paradox". That is, even highly advanced intelligent civilizations are incapable of traveling between stars, because it's impossible from a practical standpoint. Like trying to swim across an ocean that's 1000 times wider than the Pacific. Theoretically possible, but not practically possible.
So, Dr. Becky mentions that there have actually been not just one but 5 micrometeor impacts so far. Basically one per month. Over time, the damage could add up.
And, not to derail, but I makes me think about the difficulty of even a mission to Mars, much less interstellar travel.
In science fiction, it's a problem that is just ignored for the most part. But these little dust or sand-sized particles could make travel between stars impossible from a practical standpoint. After all, if you want to get there in less than 10,000 years or so, you would need to travel at a significant fraction of the speed of light, but could any spaceship even survive that, or would it be ablated (eroded) away en route? Would it still be functional when it arrives? Or would it be shot through with tiny bullet holes? This could be the reason for the Fermi "paradox". That is, even highly advanced intelligent civilizations are incapable of traveling between stars, because it's impossible from a practical standpoint. Like trying to swim across an ocean that's 1000 times wider than the Pacific. Theoretically possible, but not practically possible.
1. Hubble is in Low Earth Orbit (LEO).
2. Hubble has a flap over the entrance to the mirror that can be closed.
3. That tube makes it less likely a micrometeoroid will enter the tube and hit the mirror. Hubble would have to be pointed directly at it.
That said, we know the solar arrays have been bombarded with hundreds/thousands of micrometeoroids. Hubble also has to worry about more space debris than Webb.
One solution proposed in SF (notably by Arthur C. Clarke and Alastair Reynolds, is a water ice nose cone that ablates over the course of the trip. In Clarke's novel, Songs of Distant Earth, the inciting incident is a latter-day colony ship stopping over at an earlier-established colony to harvest some water from that planet's ocean to replenish their shield before the next leg of their journey.