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My fault for not checking the photo first, but there is one damaged tile on the left inboard elevon.Are you sure its on an elevon? aren't the elevons on the back of the shuttle?
My fault for not checking the photo first, but there is one damaged tile on the left inboard elevon.Are you sure its on an elevon? aren't the elevons on the back of the shuttle?
Can you post an example of another shot of the same spot? TBH, the shape looks like lens dust.On the left wing you can see a white spot... it also appears on other RPM photos, so its not an artiffact from this picture....
what do you think it is?
They definitely don't look natural.There are 2 more spots on the clouds below the right wing.
I thought it may be some "birdy stuff", as it happened before (a similar white sport on the nose)....
Well, then indeed not further inspection needed. Maybe just some cleaning![]()
I understood that a Bat made a hitch hike with the Shuttle when it launhed. Maybe that was what's left of it.:rofl:
I'm sure there would be more of the bat- anyway, it was low down on the opposite side of the external tank- so it likely fell into the SRB exhaust plume and was vapourised, as there was no possibility of it impacting the orbiter.
Shame, poor little bat.![]()
Well, maybe he made it all the way up and is now orbiting among the stars![]()
Space Shuttle Discovery completed maneuvering the shuttle-station complex 180 degrees to the "undock attitude," placing Discovery in front of the space station. Discovery and the station will stay in this orientation long enough for the natural drag to slow the complex by about a foot per second, estimated to take three hours. This will lower the orbit enough to avoid a piece of orbital debris whose erratic orbit makes it a potential threat.
The debris is estimated to be about four inches in diameter, part of a spent Chinese satellite upper stage. It is in a similar altitude as Discovery and the station, but in a 98 degree inclination rather than 51.6 degrees. This would have allowed the debris to cross the shuttle-station orbit repeatedly for several days, and the maneuver eliminates that risk. Discovery performed the maneuver, as the ISS's CMG's (Control Movement Gyroscopes) are currently out of action, as the 4 CMG's are all spinning at different rates, when they need to be spinning at the same rate.
How does putting the shuttle before the station increase the drag?