Mar 182013
 

From the Hermann-Oberth-Raumfahrt-Museum via Ron Miller via IO9, here’s the semi-legendary 1938 science fiction film Weltraumschiff I Startet (Spaceship 1 Starts). It was intended to be a full-length movie, but since Germany had other priorities in 1938, filming was cancelled and only 23 minutes remain.

 

 Posted by at 4:17 pm
Mar 182013
 

Ah, Wilderness! Mountain Man vs. the Building Inspector

Short form: a “mountain man” who lives on his own 500-acre plot of North Carolina mountain property, has had the entire state government land on him due to “building code violations. Such as:

lumber that isn’t “grade-marked,” meaning it doesn’t specify the mill where it was produced.

But…

The lumber’s not stamped with a grade because he produced it himself at his own sawmill, from trees felled nearby, he says.

The whole point of the guys property is to live primitive. But the nanny state just can’t allow that sort of thing.Heck, he might even have mugs of more than 16 ounces! The Horror!

To me the system should be simple: If someone owns their own property and uses it for their own private use, then building code inspectors need not apply. If someone owns property for public use, for *conventional* purposes such as grocery stores or book stores or churches or brothels or whatever, then the building code inspectors should do their job. If someone owns private property for public use, but it is *unconventional,* such as a mountain-man retreat or a rocket test site, then the building code inspectors should be able to inspect, write a report, and hang their findings on the front gate with a “caveat emptor” for the public.

 

 Posted by at 12:47 am
Mar 172013
 

This video, produced by the Hayden Planetarium, is on one level a bit simple and rudimentary… it is mostly just a straightforward pullback from the Earth showing the orbits of the planets and the positions of the stars. But on another level… well, I laughed good and hard at one point. Not laughter from humor, but laughter from “holy crap that’s AWESOME.” You will too, once the “blue circle implication” settles in fully. If you don’t… well, you’re dead inside.

Be sure to watch it as full-screen and high-rez as you can.

[youtube yDNAk0bwLrU]

The universe is just bloody fantastic, and science is revealing it.

 Posted by at 4:16 pm
Mar 172013
 

Pluto May Have 10 More Undiscovered Moons, Study Suggests

Evidence for more than the five currently known moons of Pluto is lacking. However, in trying to simulate just how the dwarf planet managed to collect the five it has, computer simulations suggest that up to ten more moons above 0.6 miles in diameter might have formed from the dust cloud that the four moons smaller than Charon are hypothesized to have formed from. Might make the New Horizons flyby in 2015 entertaining.

Moons, it seems, are *everywhere.*

 Posted by at 2:48 pm
Mar 172013
 

I’m in general not a fan of the lawsuit industry… it’s mostly a way for lawyers to enrich themselves and to stifle businesses. But every now and then one comes along that’s new and perhaps full of merit:

Family sues to force sex offender to buy their home

The facts:

1) Creepy neighbor guy molests little girl, goes to prison for slightly less than two years

2) Creepy neighbor guy is put on sex offender registry

3) Consequently, the fact that creepy neighbor guy is a sex offender is public knowledge

The family obviously wants to get the hell away from creepy neighbor guy. But who wants to buy a house next to a sex offender? So the house has lost substantial value, and the family can’t afford to move away. So they’re suing creepy neighbor guy to make *him* buy their house so they can get the hell away from him.

An interesting thought: criminals drive down property values. Why not gouge *them* to recoup the losses?

 Posted by at 1:02 pm
Mar 172013
 

The OPEC oil embargo of the west of 1973-74 and subsequent skyrocketing of petroleum prices made sure that the American SST program, cancelled by Congress in 1971, stayed cancelled. As Concord subsequently showed, an SST in an era of expensive aviation fuel would be an economic disaster.

In the late 1970’s there was a flirtation in the American aviation industry with liquid hydrogen as an alternate fuel for jetliners. LH2 would pose a number of issues, not least of which being the very low density of the stuff; relatively gigantic heavily insulated fuel tanks would be needed. For subsonic jetliner designs, these tanks often took the shape of extremely large fuel tanks on the wings, nearly the size of the aircraft fuselage. This was not much of an option for supersonic transports due to the increased drag. Nevertheless, liquid hydrogen fueled supersonic transports were designed. One such is shown below, a late 1970’s Lockheed design. The liquid hydrogen tanks occupy much of the forward and aft fuselage volume; the passengers are stuck in a relatively short segment in the middle of the double-deck fuselage. There would be no direct connection between the passenger compartment and the cockpit… so at the very least, the likelihood of a hijacking – another feature of air travel in the late 1970’s – would be greatly reduced.

By the 1980s, efforts to wean the west off OPEC petroleum were bearing fruit (or at least looking promising); as a result, the price of oil plummeted. And with cheap oil the imperative to design hydrogen-fueled aircraft largely vanished.

 Posted by at 2:08 am
Mar 162013
 

The Plan to Bring the Iconic Passenger Pigeon Back From Extinction

On one hand, the Passenger Pigeon is an obvious choice for a species to bring back. Humanity wiped it out recently and there are a bunch of potential sources of DNA in the form of some 1500 stuffed examples. On the other hand, the Passenger Pigeon was something of an ecological nightmare, like locusts with wings.

Still: if they are recreated, released and become a nuisance, at least we know we can take ’em out again…

 Posted by at 11:59 pm