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nasa_inflatables [2008-01-26 16:17] – 62.166.51.71 | nasa_inflatables [2008-07-23 12:39] – 62.166.51.71 | ||
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==== Nasa Inflatables ==== | ==== Nasa Inflatables ==== | ||
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- | {{Radar_Relfective_Spheres.jpg|Radar_Relfective_Spheres.jpg}}{{: | + | {{Radar_Relfective_Spheres.jpg|Radar_Relfective_Spheres.jpg?350}}\\ |
Radar_Relfective_Spheres\\ | Radar_Relfective_Spheres\\ | ||
These radar calibration reflector spheres have been manufactured since the very earliest days of Raven Industries and Aerostar International still manufactures them today.\\ | These radar calibration reflector spheres have been manufactured since the very earliest days of Raven Industries and Aerostar International still manufactures them today.\\ | ||
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{{inflate.jpg? | {{inflate.jpg? | ||
- | \\ | + | -Inflatable Antenna\\ |
+ | Credit: STS-77 Crew, Space Shuttle Endeavor, NASA\\ | ||
+ | High above the Earth the Space Shuttle Endeavor launches a new type of instrument - an inflatable antenna. The officially designated Inflatable Antenna Experiment was released in 1996 as part of a Spartan satellite - which contains many scientific experiments. The antenna is roughly the size of a tennis court and is even visible from Earth. At the end of the mission, the antenna will be jettisoned while the rest of the Spartan is recovered by the Shuttle. The function of an antenna is to broadcast radio messages, and the large dish at the end helps focus radio waves into a narrow beam which can be detected over long distances.\\ | ||
+ | source: apod.nasa.gov/ | ||
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{{24.jpg|24.jpg}}{{: | {{24.jpg|24.jpg}}{{: | ||
+ | .The concept for TransHab originated at NASA's Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, in 1997 as a possible design for an inflatable living quarters on future Mars-bound spacecraft. | ||
+ | source: www.spaceref.co.jp | ||
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