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There was a demon that lived in the air. They said whoever challenged him would die.
barracuda wrote:The seductive crypto-militarism of the space-age fueled a billion fantasies, yet in the fifty years of rocket-fueled propaganda, less than 600 humans ever entered "space". (It's not really clear if you can even consider the low earth orbit of shuttle flights and the ISS as entering "space" per se.) The military almost undoubtably has a black shuttle program, one which will remain in force performing the duties of policing and weaponizing space for generations, all the while the space-age fan boys pray to catch the occasional glimpse throught the shadows...
82_28 wrote:Launch of giant rocket in Southern California heard for milesWith a thunderous roar heard for miles around, the tallest rocket ever launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base blasted into outer space, hurtling over the Pacific Ocean as it cut across the afternoon sky.
At 1:10 p.m. Pacific time, the 23-story Delta IV Heavy rocket lifted off from the base northwest of Santa Barbara. A white plume trailed the massive rocket as it ascended.
Standing 235 feet tall, the rocket was so large that the blast reportedly was heard as far away as 50 miles. According to aerospace experts, the booster was carrying a top-secret spy satellite for the National Reconnaissance Office — the covert federal umbrella agency that operates spy satellites. (anybody ever heard of this shit before? I sure haven't. I thought NRO was National Review Online.)
The rocket hit speeds of about 17,500 mph as it climbed toward space. About six minutes after launch, the first stage of the rocket broke away — later splashing down in the Pacific.
Because the rocket was so large, it was visible from much of the Southland after its launch, but it was difficult to see because the launch was in the middle of the day.
"Someone not looking for the launch probably wouldn't have noticed it," said Brian Webb of Thousand Oaks, who runs the website SpaceArchive.info, which monitors rocket launches.
Standing with binoculars on a bluff overlooking Highway 101 about three miles east of Santa Barbara, Webb said moments afterward that he could see "two or three very closely spaced orange points of light."
"Below me, vehicles were pulling off and stopping on the southbound shoulder of Highway 101 before the launch," he said. "Some of them were outside of their vehicle or vehicles."
The rocket lifted off from the base's Space Launch Complex 6, known on base as "Slick Six." The launch pad was built in the 1960s.
The Delta IV Heavy was built by United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin Corp. and Boeing Co. The rocket's three massive engines were built by Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne in Canoga Park.
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-v ... 0521.story
In keeping with the spirit of this thread, it does bear note that the payload is definitely a mystery as well. Apparently it is headed for a polar orbit.
Go to NRO.gov. It looks like some fan site for a sci-fi series.
Stephen Morgan wrote:You know they stopped making concorde, too? Technology seems to have jumped the shark and is now on the down-slope, mired in crass commercialism.
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