Yes, this is standard when the Ku is not available.
The SSU has the same problem. :lol:
Yes, this is standard when the Ku is not available.
More elaborate than what? The SSME exhaust is water vapour. In the very low pressure of the upper atmosphere it coalesces into water crystals (microscopic dust particles can help), forming noctilucent clouds. The shape is mostly due to the under-expansion of the exhaust.Similar sights here in Tampa. Is there a more elaborate explanation for these "jellyfishes"?
Foam comes off the ET, not tilesEDIT: My mom said that on the news, engineers were also concerned about excessive tile debris coming off the ET. Can anyone confirm or heard something similar?
The SSU has the same problem. :lol:
Well, our problem is with the gimbals, not the DEA! So the MTBF should be 15 minutes for the gimbals, not the DEA! This will prevent us from properly stowing the antenna for re-entry!One more such jokes and I'll hard-code the MTBF of the DEA to 15 minutes. :rofl:
Well, our problem is with the gimbals, not the DEA! So the MTBF should be 15 minutes for the gimbals, not the DEA! This will prevent us from properly stowing the antenna for re-entry!