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SPACE TALK

 

Sunita William s in School

Oct 3rd 2007.

Students make presentations to teachers and all classes in preparation for the big day, Oct 3rd 2007.

students

click to see some pictures


THE ARISS TELE-BRIDGE TALK WITH SUNITA WILLIAMS

ON 24TH FEBRUARY AT 2.20 PM at Vasant Valley School


click here to see Sunita Williams and other NASA astranouts at Vasant VAlley on March 17th 2003

 

VIDEO CLIPS OF THE TELEBRIDGE TALK

video clips link

click here to see them

 


Winners of 'Qs of the Day'

14 th feb

Q1. What is the minimum velocity required to launch an artificial satellite in an orbit around the Earth?

A1. 8 km/second
WINNER: Aditi Banerjee of VVS

15 th Feb

Q2. What is the fuel generally used to launch an artificial satellite?

A2. A mixture of liquid Hydrogen (or Kerosene), and liquid oxygen.
WINNER: Samarth Karwal of VVS

16 th Feb

Q3. What is the name of the orbit of satellite used for weather forecast?

A3. Polar orbit

WINNER: Kanika Vohra of VVS

17 th Feb

Q4. What is the minimum time in which an artificial satellite may take one round of the earth?

A4. 84.6 minutes or 5024 seconds

WINNER: Ritika Chaudhary of VVS

18 th Feb

Q5. When did the International Space Station or ISS go into orbit?

A5. November 1998

WINNER: Siddharth Banerjee of VVS

19 th Feb

Q6. “A satellite is continuously falling towards the centre of the earth”. Is this statement true or false?

A6. True

WINNER: N. Chandra Shekhar of Mother's International School

20 th Feb

Q7. What is the maximum height of polar orbits above the surface of the earth?

A7. Above 1000 km

WINNER: Shikhar Naik of VVS

21 st Feb

Q8. What is the time period of a communication satellite revolving in parking orbit?

A8. One day or 24 hours

WINNER: Varun Nath of VVS

22 nd Feb

Q9. What happens to a satellite on increasing its velocity 7/5 times of its value?

A9. It escapes

WINNER: Shreyas Dutta of VVS

 

23 rd Feb

Q10. What is the significance of the 5 stars in the NASA emblem of expedition-14?

A10. To honour the astronauts Apollo-I; Soyuz I; Soyuz II; Challenger and Columbia , who gave their lives in pursuit of knowledge and discovery.



 

nikhil

shikar

sanjana



kanika

rushil

arjun



The Expedition 14 crew members from left to right are Flight Engineer Sunita Williams, Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria and Flight Engineer Mikhail Tyurin. Photo credit: NASA

An FM signal has its frequency, or wavelength, modulated. An AM signal has its amplitude, or height, modulated. Spacecraft modulate the waveform in yet a different way, but we will save that explanation for another time!

Radio signal may be amplitude or frequency modulated.

Space Technology 5 (called ST5 for short) is a mission to make and test three very small spacecraft that will work together to study "space weather" in Earth orbit.

Three ST5 miniature spacecraft.


http://spaceplace.nasa.gov/en/kids/st5xband/st5xband.shtml
Codes and Decodes:
Or, How to Yell Across a Solar System

click to play animation

The transceiver in the movie sends the data through space using electromagnetic energy . One kind of electromagnetic energy is the light we see with our eyes. But there are many other forms of electromagnetic energy. One form is radio waves. We can't see radio waves, but we know how to make them and we know how to detect them. We also know how to make them carry messages. It is radio waves that bring you radio and TV!

Changing the shape of the radio waves to make them carry information is called "modulating" the wave. A radio wave that has been modulated to carry information is called a "signal." Now the wave is more than electromagnetic energy. It is a message!

It is the transceiver's job to convert an ordinary radio wave into one that carries a message.

Introducing Our Economy Model

Just like other electronics these days, transceivers are getting smaller, cheaper, and need less power. As part of NASA's New Millennium Program, space engineers are working on all kinds of ways to make spacecraft smaller, better, and less expensive to launch and operate.

Space Technology 5 (called ST5 for short) is a mission to make and test three very small spacecraft that will work together to study "space weather" in Earth orbit. They will be smaller and much less expensive than spacecraft in the past, yet they will be able to do all the same jobs.

One of their new, much smaller instruments is the transponder. A transponder is a transceiver and more. A transponder "bounces" a signal from Earth back to Earth, so that engineers can measure how far away the spacecraft is and how fast it is going.

Each transponder will be about the size of five decks of cards stacked together, about 6 x 6 x 10 centimeters (2 x 2 x 4 inches) and weigh less than 500 grams (about 1 pound). It will be nine times smaller and twelve times lighter than the transponders on other recent spacecraft. Each transponder will need much less power, too. Some of the technology used in this transponder comes from cell phone technology.

NASA hopes ST5 will help future space missions work better, be less expensive, and help us discover even more wonderful and useful information about our environment of space.

 

Expedition 14 continues preparations for a Feb. 22 spacewalk. Commander Mike Lopez-Alegria and Flight Engineer Mikhail Tyurin will don Russian Orlan space suits. Among other activities, they will ready a Progress 23 cargo capsule for undocking. The Progress 23 antenna didn't properly retract when it docked in October 2006

WHY EXPLORE SPACE : read morel!


ART GALLERY

 

click to play animation

 

click on the pictures to see them full size

aliensalien2shreekreeti
click to see full size

For answers to some frequently asked qs click http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/reference/faq/index.html