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Astronaut and American hero Neil Armstrong, a Navy man to the end, to be buried at sea

by Bob in Breckenridge ( 58 Comments › )
Filed under History, Military, Patriotism, Space Exploration at September 10th, 2012 - 8:00 pm

Sea burial for Armstrong, Navy man to end

Neil Armstrong, a traditional Navy man to the end, will be buried at sea.

His colleagues from the Gemini and Apollo space programs had speculated about where Armstrong might go to rest.

Some thought near his hometown in Wapakoneta, Ohio, others thought perhaps closer to his home in the Cincinnati suburb of Indian Hill, where he spent the last decades of his life.

Instead, the first man to set foot on the moon wanted a traditional burial from the side of a ship.

“Well, he’s a Navy man,” said fellow astronaut and longtime friend Jim Lovell.

Armstrong’s Navy career began in 1947, when he enlisted in the Naval ROTC and went to college.

From that moment forward, many of the most significant events of his life involved the water.

By 1950, at the age of 20, he was stationed on the USS Essex, about 100 miles off of Wonsan Bay in the Sea of Japan.

He flew 78 combat missions, and after each of them he would fly back over the water toward the safety of the Essex.

In March 1966, after a successful but harrowing trip aboard Gemini 8, Armstrong went through re-entry before three parachutes opened and he dropped into the Pacific Ocean.

In July 1969, after Armstrong landed on the moon, after he said, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind” as he stepped onto the surface of the moon, he flew back again to water.

Armstrong and his crew splashed down in the Pacific Ocean and were picked up by the USS Hornet.

Returning to the water meant his mission was complete.

“It’s how he knew he was finished,” Lovell said.

“It’s how he knew his work was done.”

Details of the burial have not been released, and may not be.

The U.S. Navy confirmed it would perform the ceremony but cited the Armstrong family’s wishes for privacy in deciding to not say where, when or from which ship the burial would take place.

It is not known if this will be a full-body burial or a dropping of ashes.

In a burial involving casketed remains, according to naval regulations, taps will be played, there will be a prayer, a firing of arms, a salute and then the board holding the casket will be tilted forward, allowing the casket to slide into the sea.

The ceremony for cremated ashes is similar.

Armstrong had told his family this was how he wanted to be buried.

“It was his wish,” said family spokesman Rick Miller.

Burials at sea are a naval tradition mentioned in Homer’s “Odyssey” and in “Moby Dick.”

During times of war, American and British sailors who died at sea were sometimes wrapped in a sail weighted with cannonballs or chains and dropped into the water.

The practice was last in common usage during World War II, when many men died at sea and ships sometimes would be away from port for weeks or months at a time.

Today, the Navy still offers sea burials from deployed naval vessels for eligible personnel.

Because the ships are deployed, family members are not present, although exceptions can be made.

People eligible for a burial at sea include active-duty military; retirees and veterans who were honorably discharged; U.S. civilian marine personnel of the Military Sealift Command and dependent family members of active-duty personnel, retirees and veterans of the uniformed services.

The Navy performs, on average, approximately 900 burials at sea each year.

“It’s not as rare as you might think,” said Navy spokesman Ed Ziegler.

A public memorial service for Armstrong will be held on Thursday at Washington National Cathedral. The service will be conducted by the Right Rev. Mariann Edgar Budde. Political leaders and NASA astronauts, both active and retired, are expected to attend.

And It’s Only Chapter One

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 22 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Astronomy, Education, Humor, OOT, Open thread, Science, Space Exploration, Technology at July 29th, 2012 - 11:00 pm


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You got it. It’s Literacy Awareness Night on The Overnight Open Thread.

Amazing video you have to see! Big as a car, $2.5 Billion Mars Rover Set to Launch This Weekend

by Bob in Breckenridge ( 8 Comments › )
Filed under Astronomy, Science, Special Report, Technology at November 24th, 2011 - 12:00 pm

Do yourself a favor and watch the amazing video from NASA on how this rover will get to Mars and then how it will land on Mars. I hadn’t heard anything about this 9 month mission to Mars. This new rover, the Mars Science Laboratory, is the size of a car. To compare, the rovers from the 1997 mission were the size of skateboards, and the new rover weighs a thousand times more.

Watch the animation video below from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of how the rover will work from launch to landing on Mars. It’s simply amazing stuff, you might even say out of this world!

Here’s a video with narration about the mission by the people at JPL who designed and built the MSL-

Are You Curious about the New $2.5 Billion Mars Rover Set to Launch This Weekend?

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (The Blaze/AP) — As big as a car and as well-equipped as a laboratory, NASA’s newest Mars rover blows away its predecessors in size and skill.

Nicknamed Curiosity and scheduled for launch on Saturday, the rover has a 7-foot arm tipped with a jackhammer and a laser to break through the Martian red rock. What really makes it stand out: It can analyze rocks and soil with unprecedented accuracy.

“This is a Mars scientist’s dream machine,” said NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s Ashwin Vasavada, the deputy project scientist.

Once on the red planet, Curiosity will be on the lookout for organic, carbon-containing compounds. While the rover can’t actually detect the presence of living organisms, scientists hope to learn from the $2.5 billion, nuclear-powered mission whether Mars has — or ever had — what it takes to nurture microbial life.

Saturday Lecture Series: A Bubbly Heliosheath.

by coldwarrior ( 28 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Astronomy, Open thread, saturday lecture series, Science at June 11th, 2011 - 8:30 am

From Our Friends at NASA

and our friends on the Voyager Team…yes, Voyager is still in operation!

It appears that the edge of our solar system is full of bubbles!

 

 

June 9, 2011: NASA’s Voyager probes are truly going where no one has gone before. Gliding silently toward the stars, 9 billion miles from Earth, they are beaming back news from the most distant, unexplored reaches of the solar system.

Mission scientists say the probes have just sent back some very big news indeed.

It’s bubbly out there.

“The Voyager probes appear to have entered a strange realm of frothy magnetic bubbles,” says astronomer Merav Opher of Boston University. “This is very surprising.”

 

 

According to computer models, the bubbles are large, about 100 million miles wide, so it would take the speedy probes weeks to cross just one of them. Voyager 1 entered the “foam-zone” around 2007, and Voyager 2 followed about a year later. At first researchers didn’t understand what the Voyagers were sensing–but now they have a good idea.

“The sun’s magnetic field extends all the way to the edge of the solar system,” explains Opher. “Because the sun spins, its magnetic field becomes twisted and wrinkled, a bit like a ballerina’s skirt. Far, far away from the sun, where the Voyagers are now, the folds of the skirt bunch up.”

 

When a magnetic field gets severely folded like this, interesting things can happen. Lines of magnetic force criss-cross and “reconnect”. (Magnetic reconnection is the same energetic process underlying solar flares.) The crowded folds of the skirt reorganize themselves, sometimes explosively, into foamy magnetic bubbles.

“We never expected to find such a foam at the edge of the solar system, but there it is!” says Opher’s colleague, University of Maryland physicist Jim Drake.

Theories dating back to the 1950s had predicted a very different scenario: The distant magnetic field of the sun was supposed to curve around in relatively graceful arcs, eventually folding back to rejoin the sun. The actual bubbles appear to be self-contained and substantially disconnected from the broader solar magnetic field.

Energetic particle sensor readings suggest that the Voyagers are occasionally dipping in and out of the foam—so there might be regions where the old ideas still hold. But there is no question that old models alone cannot explain what the Voyagers have found.

Says Drake: “We are still trying to wrap our minds around the implications of these findings.”

The structure of the sun’s distant magnetic field—foam vs. no-foam—is of acute scientific importance because it defines how we interact with the rest of the galaxy. Researchers call the region where the Voyagers are now “the heliosheath.” It is essentially the border crossing between the Solar System and the rest of the Milky Way. Lots of things try to get across—interstellar clouds, knots of galactic magnetism, cosmic rays and so on. Will these intruders encounter a riot of bubbly magnetism (the new view) or graceful lines of magnetic force leading back to the sun (the old view)?

 

The case of cosmic rays is illustrative. Galactic cosmic rays are subatomic particles accelerated to near-light speed by distant black holes and supernova explosions. When these microscopic cannonballs try to enter the solar system, they have to fight through the sun’s magnetic field to reach the inner planets.

“The magnetic bubbles could be our first line of defense against cosmic rays,” points out Opher. “We haven’t figured out yet if this is a good thing or not.”

On one hand, the bubbles would seem to be a very porous shield, allowing many cosmic rays through the gaps. On the other hand, cosmic rays could get trapped inside the bubbles, which would make the froth a very good shield indeed.

“We’ll probably discover which is correct as the Voyagers proceed deeper into the froth and learn more about its organization1,” says Opher. “This is just the beginning, and I predict more surprises ahead.”

Author: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA

 

 

And an update about the most recent CME event: NO IMPACT: A coronal mass ejection (CME) propelled into space by the magnificent flare of June 7th has either missed Earth or its impact was too weak to notice. According to NOAA forecasters, the chance of geomagnetic storms during the next 24 hours has dropped to 15%.