« first day (117 days earlier)      last day (4120 days later) » 

00:00
lol
well its fast moving
and there might be a delay
and "somewhere northeast off mongolia" or somesuch isn't very specific
And interestingly, ISS/Soyuz and GOCE orbits intersect somewhere over south Argentina / Chile and they will be there roughly at the same time too
00:20
about 15 minutes apart actually ... and the ISS just passed over the Falklands now
OK, a lot higher orbit and all
if we had units on GOCE ....
GOCE LAT: -5.76 LNG: -72.03 ALT: 98.94 ↓ SPD: 7.96
@Undo Not completely burning up generates more publicity and thus more cash ?
00:28
It'll go over North Carolina ... US Air Force could use it as a practice target LOL
if that's in kilometers, it's now officially no longer in outer space
eh bugger the tracker just updated ...
GOCE LAT: -80.99 LNG: 44.60 ALT: 131.01 ↓ SPD: 8.07 still in outer space
over Antarctica
Uhm, solar heating the atmosphere?
Variable gravitity depending on where you are (ok, small difference. Something should map that..; ) )
01:12
does it update for you?
It shows it over China for me and not moving, did they shoot it down? LOL
01:38
ISON builds up on its tail, we now have 4 comets that can be seen with binoculars ... somewhere else than through the clouds here tho
Oh and...
oh bugger it's already on the wall LOL
@RealzSlaw You saw it now on NASA's stream what happens to solar panels? The Soyuz is separated into three sections, the middle one being the landing capsule with the crew
@TildalWave ah I missed it
but thats cool
@RealzSlaw you could find a really really slow proxy and hope that stream from 1 minute ago is still to reach it :P
or.. .wait for a repeat
or... ask a question on the site and let others find you recorded streams :)
bah why don't they show a stream the entire time
all I get is the control center video
01:51
Which stream? Those shots were from the ISS, and I presume Soyuz would be to it now a distant dot on the skies, with landmass in the background making it impossible to spot
I know, I mean they should have ground telescopes chasing it all over :P
All over the world... it's still in roughly 90 minutes orbit you know? You'd get maybe 4 minutes out of each telescope
best case
no weather
then they need a better telescope on the station
and/or satelites
and they can predict the trajectory, so no need to "spot" it, right
I'm sure in a few years they'll have better coverage
01:54
That I could agree with... they did get some new cameras tho not too long ago, and the live stream should be by now already available to everyone ... help me google for it, will you? I have a pissy feline here to deal with :)
it'll only get better
a dog and a cat?
yup and they team up sometimes
gangnam style
ISERV
I don't think it does video
01:58
Not sure it's that one, they got some cam on Cupola now that I think should have a live feed 24/7 somewhere ... it would be pretty new and I'm not sure it's already operational either
If you expect me to remember the name of the project, you're talking with a wrong person ... I lived through the 80's as a teenager, my memory isn't in its form :P
lol
> This fall, two UrtheCast cameras will be strapped into a Progress cargo ship and launched to the International Space Station aboard a Soyuz rocket
yup that might be it
> UrtheCast is a space technology startup with a bold mission: to provide the world with a near-live stream of the Earth, using HD video and imagery
02:01
so it's not live yet?
sounds like it should be happening soon
or just happened
so prolly not
yeah thought as much
also it might not have a usable FPS
"near live" doesn't need to do more than 1 FPS
they have at least 3 technicians up there now, so they should be able to sort it out
5 flight engineers actually
@RealzSlaw well I subscribed
> We will be inviting additional users to our platform in the coming months.
oh thats cool
02:09
> Thank you for your interest! To accommodate platform changes, we've temporarily closed access to the Beta.

Our apologies for the inconvenience. We’ll have you testing out the new platform as soon as possible.
Well, I'll see soon enough I guess
an API, thats cool :P
and if you hax the API, maybe you can hax ISS :P
eek
You know what's cool about live "streams"? They only need to buffer a strip of a few seconds in advance of photography and glue it on top of previous ones that slowly slide downwards
so if you have some smart enough server that can cut photos to stitch in live time (ok, small delay), you'd get a completely seamless motion
@TildalWave lol I recently saw an in-painting and "zoom-enhance" algorithm
the zoom-enhance works very well
it would be hilarious if they used that
it works well, in that it looks good, not that it is accurate
mmm lemme pull up a demo
02:14
no doubt it, they'd use orthophoto processing which would be in this case simple enough... then all the top images would fit exactly to the previous ones with no distortion at edges
nice, but don't some video filters already use that in real time over HD resolution videos... resolution enhancers or however they're called?
yeah I dunno, never done that directly, but i doubt its the same exact thing
thats sorta cutting edge, its only 2 years old
also might not be good for realtime
deconvolution filters?
that particular paper
02:19
ah gotcha
whatever happened with fractal image file format?
I never head of that
do you mean fractal compression?
because fractal compression is related
I have a smattering of image-processing/graphics knowledge heh
Fractal compression is a lossy compression method for digital images, based on fractals. The method is best suited for textures and natural images, relying on the fact that parts of an image often resemble other parts of the same image. Fractal algorithms convert these parts into mathematical data called "fractal codes" which are used to recreate the encoded image. Iterated Function Systems Fractal image representation can be described mathematically as an iterated function system (IFS). For Binary Images We begin with the representation of a binary image, where the image may be thought...
yup that's it
yeah that
its very hard to compress
easy to decompress though :D
yup... I was mightily impressed in the early days when I first saw it in action, but dunno why it didn't catch on
probably because it wasn't free
@TildalWave I think it just takes too long to compress
unless you have huge images
and a lot of CPU power
and a lot of need to make the images smaller
02:24
in which case, it's a problem that it's lossy compression
@TildalWave I am fairly certain you can overcome the lossy part
almost any lossy compression can be turned into lossless - you just take the delta of the lossy image, and compress that along with the compressed lossy image
the delta will be very low entropy
show me video!
they had some large zoom cameras last time so I imagine they'll have them now too, about the time when their main shoots deploy
oh cool
when is that, if you know
as the man said... and there's the clock for estimated time of landing on the stream too ;)
yeah but that includes the shoot
ah 2.5 mins
imma kill em if they don't have video :P
02:35
they will, remember there's also the olympic torch onboard that Russians will wanna sell the best they can before winter olympics in Sochi
lol
I think I see video
but it might be just the sim animation
its on the NASA control center screen
I don't see anything resembling a live feed, just some telemetry images in russian
yeah it keeps popping in and out
and now not even that
02:40
ah we had video for a second
:D
saw it
can't they stand somewhere else than on the bloody camera cable?
ah we have it
whoopee cushions :)
uh oh?
I didn't see the engines fire :/
02:50
they landed a bit under the camera's horizon but there was that plume of dust surrounding it, which obviously couldn't be from impact since it was landing pretty slow
And we heard them... I heard Karen Nyberg
but they should really sit on whoopee cushions to make the landing more fun
What has me missed?
02:52
@Undo well everything as usual
oh its a russian control center
they just touched down
So everything.
I should have called them and asked them to postpone it.
You can still wait so they pull them out one by one, which will last a while and then they'll sit in chairs for a while to acclimatize and adjust to gravity... and so on.
@Undo oh and GOCE fell down too
02:55
argh!
As luck would have it, it turns out that the tracking printscreen I added to the answer was one of the last frames of telemetry data ESA has received from GOCE, and it has by now already fallen to Earth somewhere between East Asia and the Western Pacific. If true, that would be not even 15 minutes later. :) — TildalWave 1 hour ago
@undo I cant see the deleted msg on mobile, but if its about area51 "private" beta,
@Manish Yup, talked to Sklivvz about it.
@ManishEarth Morning ;)
@Undo Slivvz?
02:57
@Tildal Never can spell his name right, but he's a Dev.
and he was the one in mSO chat at the time.
Sklivvz ♦, London, United Kingdom
14.2k 17 57 125
Well, at least I got the v's and z's right this time.
Soo... Is the event over?
well no they'll "extract" them out of Soyuz now one by one and so on, like I said earlier
02:59
Oh! So I haven't missed everything!
they're pretty fast this time around, must be because of the torch LOL
lol
@ShmuelBrin shalom
@RealzSlaw you too
@ShmuelBrin hey there ;) you know, I've just wanted to ask a question on Mi Yodeya about how long back in the past does the burying the Genizah tradition go, I just joined last night but didn't have the chance to be active yet ... anyway, I did search a bit and that wouldn't be a dupe, right?
03:18
@TildalWave just ask it :P
@RealzSlaw I just did :P
@TildalWave I think the dead sea scrolls are prolly the oldest known
some are ~2400 yo
IIRC
but they'll have cited answers likely
@RealzSlaw well I'm curious :) anyway, here it is if you wanna check it out that I didn't screw something up completely:
1
Q: How old is the tradition of the Genizah?

TildalWaveYou'll have to excuse my ignorance and if I word something slightly awkwardly, but I did wonder how old is the tradition of burying the Genizot, or alternatively, if that is unknown, what is the oldest recovered Genizah site that we know of? To my understanding, this tradition of paper-interment...

@TildalWave I already saw it :D
03:37
ah they had a better shot now of the landing from the helicopter
ah I shut it already :/
don't worry it'll be on YouTube in 15 minutes ;)
03:56
heh PSY did "NASA Johnson Style" they're now rolling on NASA TV :)
04:51
A hiccup in the orbital maneuvers for Mars Orbiter Mission http://www.planetary.org/blogs/emily-lakdawalla/2013/11102001-a-hiccup-for-mars-orbiter-mission.html An underburn, should be correctable, according to @pradx
oups, hope they can correct it
lol we get a live xkcd feed?
05:10
@RealzSlaw live xkcd makes any chatroom better
05:49
@ManishEarth :D
 
5 hours later…
10:45
and in other news, I just passed my PhD...
 
1 hour later…
12:00
posted on November 11, 2013

NASA Flight Engineer Karen Nyberg, left, Expedition 37 Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin of Roscosmos, center holding the Olympic torch, and European Space Agency Flight Engineer Luca Parmitano sit in chairs outside the Soyuz capsule just minutes after they landed in a remote area outside the town of Zhezkazgan, Kazakhstan, on Monday, Nov. 11, 2013.  The Olympic torch was launched with the crew of Ex

 
3 hours later…
15:18
@UV-D that sounds awesome, Congrats ;-)
 
2 hours later…
17:16
@UV-D Congrats DR-UV-D!!
@UV-D yay congrats!
17:38
@UV-D So, beers all around?
 
2 hours later…
19:50
posted on November 11, 2013 by Ben Montet

Do you have five minutes? Fill out this short survey to help us improve Astrobites!

20:25
@UV-D So does that mean that @Dr. will ping you?
 
1 hour later…
21:36
I really don't get Twitter.
They need to add badges.
And fake points.
And I SHOULD BE ABLE TO EDIT ANYONE'S STUFF!
I really don't like the tags on this question, anyone have better ideas?
0
Q: What private companies have launched a satellite?

StuAre there private banks or companies that have paid for access to up-to-date satellite imagery, whether through financing the satellite or purchasing the raw data? What are some notable names? I am more interested in companies that financed the satellites, and trying to learn what they use the in...

@Undo blech.
@Donald.McLean Eh?
The tags on that question.
Yep - have any ideas?
I like the first two (the second not as much, but it's acceptable), but the third needs to go.
21:47
Blech is just a disparaging expletive, usually when you don't like the taste of something.
It didn't come up in my dictionary :)
Feel free to suggest an edit if you have any ideas, I'll insta-approve it for you. And you get +2 :)
One of the few times where an American might use the German ch fricative.
Corporation?
I could have sworn we had a tag for private space programs, but I can't find it.
non-governmental organization?
[commercial] is what I'm after.
Now, do we keep [raw-data], and apply it to existing questions, or do we whack it?
21:52
I don't think that they would actually want the raw data.
Well, the raw data on what companies have launched satellites.
Oh, they do ask more evaluative questions, don't they. You're right.
22:06
@Undo Honestly, it's not that good of a question .. it's rather vague and a list type one at that too
@TildalWave It is rather broad, but I'm not sure we should close it...
Or at least it shouldn't be mod-hammered into closure - we should let the community do it.
it's unclear (not specific enough what would constitute a privately funded satellite venture ... would that include school projects, amateur radio sats, e.t.c.?)
I've VTC'd it as Too Broad, and I'll leave it up to you whether to hammer it.
some sats were added to rockets as ballast nearly for free, because it is sometimes cheaper to add some additional weight than to change carrier specs
OSCAR sats being good example of that
OSCAR is an acronym for Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio. OSCAR series amateur radio satellites use amateur radio frequency allocations to facilitate communication between amateur radio stations. AMSAT was started by a group of Amateur Radio Operators most of which were working at or associated with Goddard Space Center north of Washington DC. The beginning of this project was very humble. The satellite had to be built in a very specific shape & exact weight in order to take the place of one of the balasts used balance the rocket stage. The satellite actually took the place of o...
22:29
@Undo if you wanna mark this "answer" space.stackexchange.com/a/2763/49 as "not an answer" I won't object in converting it to a comment ;)
Done :)
cheers :)
Hey, it says 'converted to comment by' instead of 'deleted by' now! Awesome!
I really dislike LMGTFY answers... if it at least quoted one or two most relevant sentences fro mthe linked to page, then OK... but as such, it really didn't answer the question
@Undo where? on your profile?
ah on the post, I forget you can see deleted ones
I of course pressed the wrong button first, so I undeleted and converted to a comment ... actually, it's the system's fault, I honestly thought it's gonna give me options to do that on mod tools page... turns out that's only available on the post itself
I think devs do such things intentionally to keep us amused LOL
23:05
wait
is there a video?
some event in 9 mins?
hmm yeah, I think there won't be a live stream, wait let me check
neah doesn't look like it, it's a semi-hush-hush military mission ... maybe we get some videos of the launch tho
I can just find a few descriptions of it and that's all, will update if I find anything
If there's gonna be anything, it's gonna be here: tsenki.com/en/broadcast/broadcast
> Nov. 12, 2013, 03:46:00 Moscow Time (6:46 p.m. EST on November 11) from Pad No. 24 at Site 81 in Baikonur
how often does it happen that launches happen at the same time
so you must choose which to watch live :P
@RealzSlaw well we had days with two major launches before but so far none were at more or less the same time, there was always at least a few hours in between
23:21
hehe
I'm waiting for the day when there are daily launches
wait, are there?
how many launches do we have per year
sure, the last soyuz with expedition 38 launched during day
so just to be clear, how many launches do you think we have per year
ballpark ofc
hehe no need to delete posts really :P
@TildalWave this stuff gets saved forever
your grandkids will be reading them in 30 years :P
well check this launch schedule for example spaceflightnow.com/tracking/index.html
23:24
Uh-oh, I can see deleted messages. Bad thing?
it gets constantly updated of course
4 messages moved to Trashcan
wow thats a lot, its pretty close to 1/day
@Undo there :P
@Undo haha
Now I can't see them :(
23:26
The year 2012 saw a number of significant events in spaceflight. In May and October, the first Commercial Orbital Transportation Services resupply missions took place, during which the SpaceX Dragon became the first private spacecraft to dock with the International Space Station (ISS). In June, China launched the manned Shenzhou 9 orbital mission, and North Korea achieved its first successful orbital launch in December. 2012 also saw China's first successful asteroid exploration mission, and the landing of NASA's Curiosity rover on Mars. The Vega and Unha-3 rockets made their maiden fligh...
this is the list of most in 2012
hehehe
Did I get the queue link right?
@Undo No :)
Dangit.
What's the URL?
23:30
Well I won't tell you :P But think of it this way, if you have access to mod tools and you're not a mod, what tools do us mods have access to that we aren't?
it's following same SE logic
Fine, I'll go look it up on Meta :)
you'll kick yourself when you find it
I probably will :P
if it's not /mod, and it's one level higher, what would it be?
/admin?
23:32
there you go
But... but...
Wow, I can't find that link anywere.
Lol, get a 404 when I try to access /admin
it's top secret, that's why such inconspicuous name was chosen for it LOL
@TildalWave I'm waiting for launches on the hour :P
So the queue itself is at /admin?
Actually, the 10k thingies are at /tools. So /mod should be open.
russia leads in launches
wow
china has 10 launches for 2013
23:37
@Undo No... that's just the "dashboard" and the flags link is named somewhere in this reply of mine... it's a securiteh to make fuzzers work harder :))
I bet it's /mod/work-harder
you mean /admin/work-harder?
Aaack! Sooooo complicated!
Soo... what do the admins use?
/dev/fix-teh-bugz?
dunno /root?
/god?
Lol
/nukestuff
/status-declined
^I bet that's it.
23:41
/404?
Wouldn't that be awesome?
lol
this is public chat :P
@RealzSlaw The links are server-side validated, all of them. Trust me, I've tried to get into things I'm not supposed to. If you aren't on the list, you're not getting into something.
@RealzSlaw Try getting into space.stackexchange.com/tools
@Undo I just meant to be careful, no passwords or anything :P
Oh, yeah. Everything's tied to accounts, so we're pretty safe.
And anyway...
23:43
@Undo where do you live :P
Earth.
Actually, I'm thinking about moving to The Pod Bay, my tent's over there.
@Undo I don't have a wrench big enough :(
@Undo well the fact that SE doesn't use SSL/TLS for most stuff makes it a lot easier than whacking anyone with a wrench
True, and sad.
mmm
@TildalWave well it would require using SSL for everything
23:45
@TildalWave OpenID is over SSL, but you would still just need a cookie.
the cookie is prolly unique-IPd though
I doubt it.
most federated auth libs would do that
I can get in without re-logging-ing when I change location.
mmm well how do you know, it prolly does it transparently
23:46
I can tunnel to China and not have to log in.
thats not the point
on your machine, it can relogin automatically
But if I have all of @Tildal's data, then it doesn't matter.
because navigating to google/openid can be done and a new auth-cookie obtained
but if you intercept this cookie somehow, and try to use it yourself
then it will have to be from the IP that it auth'd on
hopefully
Mmm... I doubt it.
hypothetically
23:48
Last I heard, FireSheep still worked on SO.
@Undo like what? There's nearly no "data" to be had... unless you want some internet points and badges
@TildalWave Your cookies. Mmmmmm.
I have 5 btc on my machine
come get it :P
whacks with 5 dollar wrench
23:48
@Undo heh yeah, it's gonna be winter soon ... time to make some cupcakes and such
Hm, wrench broke. Need better wrench.
BTW, @TildalWave, your meta post dropped off the bulletin... maybe tack it up?
8
Q: Space.SE resolution: 1000+ questions by year end

TildalWaveI would like all of us to make one rather reasonable resolution, to ask at least 1000 questions by New Year's Day 2014. This is a perfectly reasonable number to target, and should be close to our statistical projection based on last few months of activities. But with many holidays coming up in b...

Oh, now it's back. Odd.
I must have scared it into getting back up there.
Or it took my unsuccessful attempt at applying mod-only tags as a good idea.
@Undo ah it was never featured, it's just one of last ones that well rated
^ It's very smart.
^ It's getting smarter.
23:58
This feature can not be used by @Everyone!

« first day (117 days earlier)      last day (4120 days later) »