It’s 0140 so just a quick one tonight which won’t be lucid,
which no one will read and which won’t be relevant in a few hours time.
However....
Today Chris Hadfield returns to Earth. He is set to land at
around 3.30am in the Kazakh steppes. But his return needs to be seen in light
of two things:
1. What he has done for the public appreciation of space
exploration
I have wanted to be an astronaut ever since I first visited
the Kennedy Space Center as a young boy. I never will be because of my asthma (and many other reasons!)
but it is a dream I’ve always wanted to fulfil. Chris Hadfield has enabled me
and lots of other dreamers to at least experience a part of that way of life
through his social media presence, most notably through Twitter and the amazing
pictures he has sent back. These have given people with big dreams and other
with no previous interest in space a whole new view of this planet and even the
countries, cities and neighbourhoods in which they live.
More than that, through conducting chats via webcam with
school kids, Chris has helped a new generation look upwards and begin to think
about the amazing Universe which they are a part of. If they even just take a
casual interest in astronomy off the back of that then it is worth it. Hadfield
also can now claim the first music video shot in space, which I’m sure you’ve
all seen.
I’m very grateful for all of these efforts, which don’t even
include the important experiments Hadfield and others have been doing on the
ISS to further our understanding of space and the possibility of future manned
and unmanned exploration of the heavens.
2. The tremendous undertaking of space travel
Every so often I go over the Wikipedia entries for men like
Yuri Gagarin, John Glenn, Neil Armstrong etc and reflect on the great things
they did. However, it must not be forgotten that behind their efforts lie years
of research into understanding what those men face whilst in space. That
research has, of course, continued, leading to the development of structures
such as Skylab, Mir and now the International Space Station. It created the
Space Shuttle and the Soyuz programme and now must work towards successor
models and future missions.
Ultimately, all this hard work means that Chris Hadfield and
two colleagues are now in a spacecraft that will break through the atmosphere
at 20,000 km/hr and slow through resistance (creating tremendous temperatures)
and a couple of parachutes, before touching down. That alone is a testament to
the quality of the science and development going on, and also shows the amazing
endurance of the men and women who go to the ISS each year.
I am grateful for all those involved, both on Earth and in
space, and I am RIDICULOUSLY jealous of all of them.
Debate warmly encouraged
About Me
- Mark Summers
- Hello! Welcome to my blog! I've long been convinced that I'm not interesting enough to blog but others have persuaded me to give it a try. My name is Mark Summers and I live in Newcastle upon Tyne in the UK. My interests include politics (name a country, I'll read about it!) and, as a committed Christian, theology. I've got a whole load of other things I'd write on though so I've added 'Stuff' to the name. Hopefully that will cover things! I've been writing for many years and will hope to share some of my old pieces along with entries on current events and my random ideas. I'm also single......
Tuesday, 14 May 2013
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