LIVE - The Landing of Boeing Starliner !

Published: Sep 06, 2024 Duration: 00:46:08 Category: Science & Technology

Trending searches: starliner live stream
well good morning welcome to space audities um for the landing of the Boeing star lineer due to a changing the schedule they're actually Landing an hour early than was programmed so we're actually here much earlier with you than we thought we would be so good morning D how are you I'm fine but we're not transmitting I can see because it's it's on a countdown from8 minutes right well we'll keep transmitting wait wait yeah on okay so at the moment the spacecraft is uh just um carrying out its first steps for the final re-entry into the atmosphere and uh we're waiting with baited breath here to see whether this Landing uh goes okay so far things appear to be going normally any thoughts D um yeah well sorry let's get the microphone there uh yeah it's um as I said they've done the orientation um burn and they did have trouble as you can see the you can actually see the um oh they've lost it now yeah you can see that red dot that's the uh capsu re-entering yeah um they um they were testing they fired the thrusters on the module itself on cap they did have one failure but they got plenty of redundancy and they've been able to line it up um it's just hits in the atmosphere now and as you can see there's some uh uh the Little Red Dot is it's actually coming through the atmosphere U there was a for a brief second there bigger image you can actually see a slight tail behind it yeah like a meia yeah I think we do about so there we go um I think we do about another uh probably 10 10 odd minutes before it actually lands of course this is landing in the night over there um so everything's going to be infrared um all the crews are ready um I've been watching the preparations uh while they've been doing their last briefings and they're all at their vehicles now just waiting for this to come back you can see the tail developing well now yeah but uh F fingers crossed everything's good at the moment but of course at the moment they can't get any telemetry really uh contact with it because it's gone into uh uh radio silence itself at the moment that's right that's right and the fact that they've uh they've had a a Thruster fail demonstrates yet again that that you know there's a problem with the spacecraft um it was one it could have been it could have been more so yeah it's it's just another thing they got to put on their list of uh things to do do um it um you can see it's glowing very brightly now yeah uh but yeah it's just another thing they got to put on their tick list to do um and as I said we were saying earlier when this thing does get down there's going to be after a whole load of serious questions that have got to be answered yeah um so uh because I mean it strikes me the other week well but week ago um SpaceX lost a booster on as it tried to land at Sea on the barge and the FAA immediately decided they're going to have an inquiry yes um and we said well my attitude was well why are they doing that it was at C it basically obviously something's gone wrong there was no life at risk um why are they starting an investigation yeah um and also considering that all the other rocket providers dump all their rockets in the sea so why you know why are they you know why are they um all of a sudden they want this investigation but of course they soon retracted that um but if that's the case if they're that serious because at the end of the day there was humans involved with this capture so exactly um if if they don't have some sort of Investigation a serious one then um of course the only thing is when they do these in investigations who does the investigating Boe yeah so uh yeah I know um so it's the same with SpaceX when they have an investigation it's SpaceX who does the investigation uh it's because the FAA um even though they issue Li licenses they know nothing about space flight in vehicles and all that so the only people who can investigate it is the people themselves so uh um and so all they can rely upon is the people's honesty that they're actually saying that they've corrected these things so um yeah yeah it's funny to say that because there have been calls for a separate independent body to govern space flight uh rather than the FAA um but um I don't think that's likely to change in in the near future it's within the the faa's purview to um to govern space flight because it's it's airspace over the US basically yeah so uh but it it would make sense to have a body of people who who were experts on space flight um who had the expertise to to manage oh that's the Drone shoot that's that's a drone shoot oh oh that's the so that's uh I don't think that's the main parachutes is it I no I don't no it isn't no or is it no it can't be or is it it was it it might be a case that we just seen the um a small drone shoot to pull out these two shoots but then again he's coming in pretty fast by the looks of that it is it is um cuz I don't think those shoots have opened properly if they are the main shoots no they haven't um cuz usually they appear a lot larger than that yes I got I get the impr cuz sometimes we see these from different angles and from airplanes and we think it's closer to the grain than it really is yes inde they're using a telephoto lenses and all that it fores shortens everything so you think oh that's coming in fast that's close cuz we were all playing the guessing game when the benu uh samples came back all that's close hang about it's still about six miles up so let's listen into NASA and see see if they say anything are out we'll see the uh bottom heat shield that has been protecting uh Starliner through its journey through the atmosphere come off that makes way for the landing airbags to deploy yeah looks like the bucket handles the main parachutes there and they got all three it currently reefing one of them flapping so let's hope they all open safely because the bucket the pale handles they call it reorientates the recovery teams report that they heard reorientates the uh capsule as those came out fully open there beautiful you can see Starliner in a slight tilt so we're going to see the rotation handle move here shortly and it will level out Starliner but three good parachutes looking great just a little over two minutes until the expected Landing time and we heard the rotational handle has been released so you can see that uh tilt evened out next up is the back heat shield jettison there we go and there it goes that again makes way for the airbag inflation you can see the airbags deploy well I they recover that are f nitr as they guide St safely back to the desert floor cuz if you remember the oran heat shield was completely crashed yeah so it' be interesting to see how this uh heat shield held up see again that's that's something else I can't understand I know that's um the Orion's lock heed Martin but um considering we've been building heat shields for to the Sands of you know since the 60s we can't understand why on the Orion they had one controllers confirming six good airbags s like got very seriously damaged coming to us from we we haven't had any answers from it considering how long go the ran no that's right be watching for that time for you so we're within a couple of minutes of the end of this uh sorry mission yeah we're sorry that the timings have all arrived but that's out of our hand absolutely everything seems to be going correctly yeah well at least it's a hopefully it's a successful end to a really rubbish mission to be quite honest yeah um and as we said things questions have got to be asked um and they've got to be answered seconds away from expect and to be honest I I'll be very surprised see in the ground there in your screen as this is allow to fly again with crew without at least one more test machine and big question isn't it are NASA going to ask Boeing to to fly another crude Mission before they certify because of course they'll be at the cost of Boeing yes indeed so um it's a watch this space scenario but I think there's going to be we know there's already been some heated debates between boing and Lassa um and I think there's a few more to come yet um but all these all these problems are basically of um Boeing's own making so exactly they've only got themselves to blame they have there we are toucher is back on Earth that Landing coming at 1101 and 35 seconds Central Time 10:01 and 31 seconds mountain time at White Sand space armor at the US Army's Missile Range INX our landing and Recovery teams will now wait for clearance before there we are well that's it then the mission's over but of course the mission isn't over for Butch wilmo and Sony Wilson no no they've got another uh few months up there five months is it four yeah like that yeah February um the last shoot slowly deflates itself well of course now the crews are going to come in first of all they'll um St keep a safe distance and use sniffers to make sure there's no um excess fuel venting from any of the uh the thrusters and all that and once they really think it's safe then they'll be able to move in slowly and uh make everything safe and recover the uh capsule and then we'll see what goes on and can we just say thank you to all of you for joining us at the moment good morning Ian than Ian um welcome uh welcome Andrew uh Andrew says uh Britain channel here uh could you uh could you um expound upon that angel not quite sure what you mean there um but um but uh you are welcome um yes uh Ian um the schedule changed so we're we're a bit early this morning but um we're glad you could be with us Ian and um what are these what are these two shoots those are the two Dres floating away okay then was Butch and sunny on there and they bailed out of course um Butch and S will be looking at that thinking God we could have been on that we could have been home well the thing is until they recover it and make sure everything's fine they you don't know what state the capsules in I mean it looks it looks fine but um yeah I mean at the end of the day you you don't want to put a crew in danger and that's what it and this this was basically um what the problem was is that um in the past when they've been a bit too flippant bit too um up themselves and they've we have lost crew um so it's a case of that uh uh being also being an election year um they don't want to be losing somebody so I think the the the choice was correct well actually the as far as I'm concerned they should never have been on there in the first place right um because with the leaks then you knew that there was a fault now if you know there's a fault you don't fly no absolutely um and saying you can't get to the bottom of this that and the other it's there no excuse um so uh it it's just one of those things but as I said there's going to be a lot of questions uh um going to be asked and I hope that like SpaceX they're open about it um because I know in SpaceX contracts is basically they're in their contract it means that they they have to be open yes um everything's got to be done in the glare of the public view um but it's not always the case when you look at like so Boeing and um other GRS and all so it'll be interested to see how quickly we start to get answers um and whether or not they will keep us uh informed um because the last thing we want them to do now is because they've been doing uh sort of like almost weekly press conferences is for them to just to completely shut up and then we get some sort of Half Baked um response in about a month or two's time um either way and there goes the boy yeah of course Bing going to turn around now and saying see we told you it would be okay so uh but yeah oh yeah that that's that that's their attitude yeah um but that's that's their attitude to everything even to their civil aviation mind you as you said that they they did lose one Thruster on the way down yeah there was when when they tested the thrusters they fired all the thrusters there's 12 of them on there and one of them didn't respond yeah apparently they're um six times redundancy so I'm assuming that means they only need two thrusters um and so losing one was wasn't a problem but they still lost a Thruster yeah remember this is what this is the problem they've had um I mean I could go into other things which I'm not which probably isn't this isn't the place to do it about the ethics of the bo company and some of the the things tricks that they' they've got up to which could possibly it be part of this problem especially with the vales yeah indeed you know because they were sued for um um uh intellectual theft um by a company I can't remember their names now um but yeah they they had these Valves and uh they introduced them to Boeing Boeing said no they're not good enough and next thing you know they're using them they made made their own and they were sued and they the company W but um uh it's just strange I hope these aren't the valves that they they they're using these valves and this is where the problem lies because the company said the reason that they're more concerned is the fact that the Boeing didn't have the uh historical data where they've tested all these valves so they know the ins and outs of all of them um which also again went against NASA's um remit that everything has to be tested to the nth degree and they need the history of the valve testing and things like that um but it's things like that that doesn't put um Boeing in a very good light um I mean that's not the only case of intellectual uh theft that they've done um intellectual property theft that they've done but yeah it's um yeah let's see what happens let's see what happens but it's here and now you can see the heat shields slowly cooling down that's going to be hot hot hot uh well actually it's not the heat shield it's the sort of like the secondary Shield yeah because we saw the heat shield be um ejected um uh so uh yeah it's um I see we've got quite a few people in so thank you for joining us and again we apologize that you missed the start um but the timings have adjusted and things like that so uh it um it's one of these things anyway thank you for joining us because we know it's really early in the morning so uh indeed I wonder if um the new CEO of Boeing is going to make any difference because um guy who's just left um I don't know whether you saw him being questioned but yeah you know I mean obviously he's not an engineer he's he's a he's an accountant basically well he's he's a parasite because um his last wage U uh wage slip was 38 million for a year and that was 40 odd per more than he had the year before um and when he was asked whether or not his um uh what his remit was and was basically part of his remit to make sure everything is open clarified and that everything is open and it's in the public things and uh he said yes it is and he said well how come you you know they asked them why are you being investigated for all by all these uh organizations saying that you are not open you do not tell tell the truth you do not do this that and the other and he it was a conceited chat and he he did say yes I'm not an engineer no exactly um and again this all comes back again to whereas we said before um that the um um uh Boeing was the benchmark of all engineering um and that's what people look to once they um merged with loed Martin the whole attitude of the company changed exactly um and it's it's in total disarray at the moment um McDonald Douglas not ly Martin oh sorry McDonald Douglas I'm gonna get Su yeah McDonald the phone now yeah um McDonald then everything changed and it became a cash cow yeah and it was cut cost cut cost cut cost who must make as much profit as um I mean this this has been the trend hasn't it in um in massive corporations where the CEOs get massive pay Rises for really poor performance yeah and and they're not qualified for the jobs that they're actually you know like I said this bloke isn't an engineer he doesn't know anything about uh space but then can you remember I sent you that clip of the bloku supposed to be they were um interviewing for um a chap who was going to be the head of the FAA um and the bloke the best thing he he done is he said he managed an airport so he didn't even manage the planes all it was was managing the shops the infrastructure yeah he he wasn't manager of the airport he was some sort of ma as you say infrastructure manager yeah fa it was nothing to do with planes or anything like that no he he was relying more upon his military history yeah yeah it was it was quite entertaining watching him being grilled when he had to admit he had no experience in in the actual Aerospace industry at all and uh I managed a few shops at the airport that'll do yeah I mean they're all the same but do you know something I think when it comes down to it money means absolutely nothing to these people because it's not theirs yeah yeah and and if you think about Elon Musk the world's richest man depending on the month but you know in the top in the top two or three of the world's richest man and he asked for a 50 billion a year pay rise which was then struck down by the court um and he's still trying to get it now when you're the world's richest man what does an extra 50 billion a year mean to you you know nothing oh exactly he doesn't understand how normal people look at that and think I'll never have a salary of 50 billion a year let alone a rise of 50 billion a year and I I I don't understand this world there's a lot about this world I don't understand I've just noticed Ian's um admiring our backgrounds it says that and is is Whirlpool I'm not sure is but um and mine's The Crab Nebula nah mine's just a generic um nebula thing if anything it's probably a bit more like the um the veil nebula but it's it's just a generic cover you put up just to uh and it's backlit as well because of if people were here earlier on I apologize for this the quality of my uh uh camera work at the moment because I've had to DeCamp CU I couldn't work from me office upstairs come downstairs because uh my partner would be a little bit annoyed for and and Ian says why is Dazz so handy well oh yes didn't I change my name you didn't change your name never mind but you can you can you can tell the difference I'm the goodlook one so you know so he's dead but um going back to what we were talking about be quite honest um and i' I said this earlier all this problems with um how the space industry works well let's put it how NASA the Senate um or or basically the US government uh work in how they this goes back to Way Beyond way before um NASA how the this whole system works and it's ended up into basically a massive cashow um where people can um put in for contracts they get them under these Cost Plus contracts and they don't really have to do anything but they still get paid and if they overruns they get paid more yeah tackle a couple of questions here yeah sorry go um Andrew says uh funny how little seems to be coming from the web telescope they need have a fix for as long as possible for the deepest shots well there are new shots coming from the we all the time what you find happens Andrew is that um a lot of the observing programs are the data is not released immediately because of uh proprietary rights that the research teams behind the telescope have for example a university um is allowed observing time on the telescope but because they want their researchers to get the first analysis you and write the first papers very often because of that the data is not released publicly for some time for example um the um the Trappist planetary system that lovely system of seven planets that the web has studied uh a University team has the propietary rights on those so the DAT the full data uh wasn't released for a year after the observation so if there appears to be lullin observations it's probably because of that but the web is observing all the time I mean it was something like was it seven or eight times over subscribed the time on the on yeah yeah because this is the we just finished the second year have we or is it yeah yeah we just finished the second year haven't we um if I remember right so um so this this this is why um but but rest assured that telescope is in used 24 hours a day by by different research teams um it has to be it has to be because otherwise obviously it's a criminal waste of money we have to get the most science out of the web we can basically yeah I mean if if you go to the the the website um that's sound silly doesn't it the website um the the web telescope site uh there is lots of information there there's usually some images that you haven't seen before yes um and you can spend probably an hour or so just going through and being absolutely amazed reading the descriptions um um and um that but everything that is is available to the public is in the web telescope yeah it's all it's all in the public domain eventually yeah and then like I say Andy says as Andy said originally um some of the um things that are done um the people who have proposed the uh the run on whatever it is the Trappist or whatever they get first dibs at it and then eventually they they are contracted that it will be released at sometime yeah that's all plus all the data as well with it so absolutely absolutely what else we got here uh yes Ian my my background is indeed M51 um a lovely image of it um and um what else we got here uh Andrew wonders uh says uh hang on let's find it here uh doesn't China have two Rovers on the dark side of the Moon I assume he means The Far Side um they don't have any operational Rovers at the moment uh both Rovers both missions The Rovers have come to an end of course what you have to remember is that on the moon uh Rover missions are limited usually to two weeks because they're not equipped to uh survive through the Luna night which of course as we know depending where you are last two weeks so um R missions on the moon don't tend to last very long yeah um so um and he also says he loves how um most deep space exploration movies depict astronauts going bonkers that's true but then again if you think about it you know it's not very cinematically interesting if they don't if you had a space movie where you had long-term space flight and they said to the as how are you feeling they said oh AB everything's absolutely tickly boot absolutely fine there'd be no film so then again also they managed to hand all sort of like um how can I say love scenes and things like that quite well for in micro gravity and um do you do you remember the film Gravity with uh yeah and what's her name Sandra Bullock Sandra Bullock yeah and oh god oh that was just I I hated that film I hate it mind you I watched a film yesterday that I absolutely detested um I watched twister yesterday oh yeah yeah I know what you well I tell you something I literally fell asleep in the middle of it for about 10 minutes it's the first time I've done that in a film for a very long time I thought it was Dreadful I mean I loved the original Twisters um in 1996 I thought that was a Fab film and I sometimes rewatch that but um just just going back to the the thing about Rover on on the moon can you remember um um uh let me get this right uh slim um the Japanese Lander yes that landed and tipped over yes um apparently it was only about what about a week ago they actually switched it off it wasn't expected to survive the Luna Knight but it's done so several times several times it's come back to life but now they they they said because it fell over that the the solar panels weren't facing the actual where the sun would be and um but it was getting enough enough light to SL recharge the battery so it was actually giving scientific data even though it was on its side um all the for for for you know well consider so what was that was probably about what eight months something like that something like that CU if you remember it was um good old Japanese engineering yeah um it was uh it was something that we look forward we were looking forward to um again um this is something we've got to get tired talking about because there's I think there's some more Moon Landers um in the pipeline very soon yes um so let's hope we have a bit more luck than we have had um recently with some hard Landings um uh so yeah um uh so I'm just trying to see what Andrew says once in a deep dark in a in a deep dark on a lake I had a rare experience looking up and I wondered how many others had the same without focusing on any one star my vision kept going deeper and deeper um yes if you um it's a funny effect um and it's there is it's you you if you just lay there and just stare your eyes actually sort of like almost unfocus and you do actually I well the impression is I you do see more um so uh yeah if you can uh if you Dark Skies um then yeah if you ever get to dark sky places and all that to be able to see the mil Milky Way in its full glory is absolutely amazing but then again also I find if you go to the really dark skies and all that sometimes it's hard to pick out the constellations because the Starfield is so so there's so much there that you can't even see the con make out the constellations you've got to really know where you're looking so it's uh but it's a fasc as I've said before the clearest darkest night I've ever seen was from Coral believe it or not um we just had an amazingly rare night where the Milky Way was thick thick Cloud across the sky and you're right you couldn't make out the constellations you didn't know what hell you looking at what I thought we'd do is just have a look at upcoming launches uh what have we got going on um for uh the next uh next few weeks maybe so um what have we got we've got Polaris Dawn launching on Monday we'll be covering that on Monday our coverage starts at 8:15 UK time on Monday hope you can join us for that for the launch of this incredible Mission um we've got the launch of a so on uh Wednesday um the next day we've got the Falcon 9 UM launching the first five satellite for as space space Mobile's um satellite constellation um for mobile phones that is not for not for anything else um and there the bluebird satellites wasn't there already a bluebird satellite oh that's a new one um of course we had the bluebird with all the um the car and the boats and uh then of course coming up in September we've got the second certification Flight of the uh Ula Vulcan rocket the first mission uh passed off without incident so once that they get this certification if all goes well they can actually start launching military payloads um we've got some upcoming Galileo launches sometime in September they to be announced uh Galileo of course is the European GPS and um I forget how many they launched so far but um that's coming up as well there's your crew nine oh there's the crew nine yeah we said it was September September the 24th for the launch of the crew n to the International Space Station oh we got her there as well yeah we've got uh we will of course as always uh try and cover that launch for you we've got um Hera which is the follow-up Mission if you remember to the um NASA Dart uh planetary defense Mission which uh collided a space probe with an asteroid and uh actually managed to divert its orbit so uh Europe's launching a follow-up spacecraft to observe what's happened a year on um then we've got uh a very special launch on October the 10th the launch of Europa Clipper beginning its long journey to Jupiter to study the um the uh that that very very interesting intriguing Moon Europa around Jupiter and uh we're looking forward to that of course uh Europe has already launched a probe to the Jovian moons the Jupiter uh icy moons Explorer or juice that's on its way arriving in 2029 I think it was something like yeah with the Europa Clipper if you remember they were saying that um after it had been built they were concerned about some of the instruments um not being able to survive the um the radi radiation but they've they're pretty confident that they've tested them and they will or they how can I say they should survive oh good that's good um so yeah that that's good um what I'm looking forward to that one then on October the 13th we've got the uh the maiden Flight of the blue origin new Glenn launcher this new uh heavy lift booster from new Glenn from from Blue origin uh sorry I was just going to say sorry I need to be rude uh Escapade yeah I'm I'm looking forward to the actual uh satellites but then I just suddenly realized it's new Glenn uh yeah okay I won't that one these are two um probes on their way to Mars um for for NASA uh the new name blue and gold where they're going to be carry out lots of interesting scientific work at Mars uh lasting for 11 months and they carry science experiments from the University of California in Berkeley and this is interesting because NASA have trusted blue origin enough to put two precious Mars probes on the ma and flight of a rocket I would question the wisdom of that because uh you know um wisdom does dictate that if you got a brand new booster you don't um you don't put valuable payloads on it for its made and flight however we will see and then some Point um much delayed is the launch of Sierra's Dreamchaser coming up um at some point and it's been delayed from August 22 December 23 January 24 April 24 and September 24 so um it's well overdue this Mission um so there we are anyway I just thought we' go go through that and uh so you know what's coming up we will of course do our very best to uh share as many of those as launches with you as we possibly can and um and there we are um Ian says how soon will people get to Mars in our lifetimes depends how old you are I um in my lifetime and has his lifetime maybe not uh so um but if you're being born today you stand some being born today I think we can pretty much guarantee it uh so um we we're we're pushing Just to See Another Man on the Moon yes we'd like to see that again but but don't forget in 2019 um Elon said that SpaceX will be sending the first people to Mars in 2022 luckily he was talking Elon time and nobody took him seriously um but um so um I I don't know I I can't see it happening within the next 10 years to be quite honest well the the the way you to be quite honest the way um aramus is going um we're not going to I don't think we're going to see anyone on the moon before 2030 and probably much doubt it because it's in such disarray at the moment um because there even no question in the Luna Gateway um as regards that will the Starship be able to um dock with it without throwing it all out of of a kilter because of the the mass being added to it so uh as I said I think again the Luna Gateway and I've always said this right from the work when they first talked about it it's it's a white elephant it's it's not needed um Abol and considering it's going to be empty nine months of the year I think what what's the point um because we again Boeing can't build the sls's quick enough to have a a frequency a decent frequency of flying I mean look how long ago it was since well it's only flown um what was it once um and it still hasn't flown again because that was what two years ago exactly um so and of course as I was talking about earlier um they're uh during the inspections they're finding Sub sub quality um welding um exactly on the um thing so you know and so they're not doing very um well at the moment so no I think things if we ever want to get back to the Moon things are gonna have to change big time yeah lots of things I mean we haven't even got Moon suits and the people who were building the moon suits are pulled out haven't they yes exactly um so what's happening there I do not know no at one point I was thinking if NASA don't manage to get back to to the moon for you know these all these multiple reasons SpaceX will go it alone but you know the the way the the slow progress with Starship um means that I don't even see SpaceX on their own going they they got fined didn't they for this poed water but yeah oh well what I've been reading is that they were saying that what was printed in the paper which started all this investigation stuff going on was actually a misprint and the the the point the decimal point was in the wrong place yeah but they said you car M so I was going to say that uh I think there were four metals Mercury nickel copper and something else was it aluminium um that they apparently got the decimal point wrong I I I don't see that some I don't anyway who got the decimal point R blue origin or not blue origin well yeah they always get the decimal point wrong um uh SpaceX or the the people who did the investigation supposedly cuz I think it was written in a report and somebody picked up that this decimal point well they saw it and it basically meant that it was illegal amounts of mercury that I saw but then the space EX back said well that's rubbish because it's a it's a printing error yeah I don't know about that time because they said we've done everything that we've been asked by the Texas water authorities so yeah anyway time will anyway I think we're draw things to a close for this morning yeah yeah thank you so much for being with us this morning we will be back at uh 8:15 UK time on Monday morning for the launch of Polaris Dawn this is a mission we're we're well we look forward to all of them but particularly because this is so Innovative and and different and um and let's hope that with this Mission they can raise another 250 million for St Jude's Children's Cancer Hospital yeah this this is a very important first mission Didion yeah uh but we're going to get to see uh the the first space walk from SpaceX in a SpaceX design space suit this spacecraft is going to go into the highest ever orbit um uh around the earth uh attempted by a crude vehicle and uh all sorts of wonderful science as well so join us on Monday at 8:15 UK time for the launch of the Polaris dorm Mission don't forget coming up on Tuesday we have our normal Tuesday live stream and this coming Tuesday um planetary scientist Lou mayor will be starting a series on the subject of climate change but particularly relating to space and space exploration how that all fits together so looking forward to that very much from Lou because as you know Lou having spent decades um in planetary science Lou's speciality was uh Saturn's moon Titan um that was his area of expertise but he's a fond of knowledge about everything to do with space so we're looking forward to his series on Tuesday so don't forget join us at 8 o' UK time on Tuesday for our normal Tuesday live stream we' like to thank you all for being here very much thank you for attention uh have a Fant fantastic weekend I'm going back to bed um although what time is it here it's oh it's getting off at 7 o' in the morning here I probably won't get back to B I'd like to thank Daz um for for basically Daz has been up all night you you need to get some sleep mate yeah yeah I no the thing is I knew if I fell asleep I probably wouldn't have got up again but uh I mean there's plenty of stuff to watch and you know always go out St thank for guys out thank you Ian thank you for being as always your support he getting a headache now so he's your support is is much appreciated Andrew um thank you for being here believe it's your first time here so we hope you'll join us on Monday and Tuesday uh of course you can see the live streams uh in in advance on YouTube the live stream for Tuesday I will set up this weekend um when we know exactly what's happening in it so uh thank you all for being here and we'd like to wish you a very good morning from everybody space OES take care and we'll see you soon hope to see you Monday see you Monday stay safe everyone

Share your thoughts

Related Transcripts

NASA and Boeing's Starliner Success: The Space Saga You Didn't Hear About thumbnail
NASA and Boeing's Starliner Success: The Space Saga You Didn't Hear About

Category: Science & Technology

Boeing starliner spacecraft recently completed a significant mission demonstrating that the pruit of commercial space life is both attainable and complex on september 7th 2024 the starliner dub calypso landed safely at white sand space harbor in new mexico this event marked the conclusion of a journey... Read more

NASA Cancels Astronauts' Return Aboard Boeing's Starliner Over Safety Concerns | Aug 2024 thumbnail
NASA Cancels Astronauts' Return Aboard Boeing's Starliner Over Safety Concerns | Aug 2024

Category: News & Politics

We are going to interrupt for just a second because we want to take you over to houston now nasa officials are going to announce what they have decided in terms of whether or not two stranded astronauts butch wilmore and sunny williams they are on board the international space station whether they will... Read more

Boeing Starliner Crewed Flight Test Spacecraft Lands Without Crew thumbnail
Boeing Starliner Crewed Flight Test Spacecraft Lands Without Crew

Category: Science & Technology

Four orbal maneuvering and attitude control thrusters on starliner service module are now firing slowing starliner down as a capsule against its journey back to earth this will take about 59 seconds to complete still looking good and we did see the uh durber burn cut off successfully teams here on the... Read more

NASA says astronauts stuck in space will return on SpaceX capsule — not Boeing Starliner thumbnail
NASA says astronauts stuck in space will return on SpaceX capsule — not Boeing Starliner

Category: News & Politics

And liftoff of starliner in atlas 5 it was a historic ascent into space mard with setbacks and while boeing starliner did successfully deliver it to astronauts their mission just got a whole lot longer nasa has decided that butch and sunny will return with crew nine next february uh and that starliner... Read more

Finally Happened! SpaceX To Do the Biggest Dragon Mission Ever that Boeing Starliner CAN'T... thumbnail
Finally Happened! SpaceX To Do the Biggest Dragon Mission Ever that Boeing Starliner CAN'T...

Category: Science & Technology

3 2 one action this isn't just the start of a sci-fi movie it's also the countdown to the next incredible achievement by spacex and its partners the polaris dawn spacewalk after years of planning and preparation this groundbreaking mission is set to take place in the coming days with all stakeholders... Read more

Odd ‘ping’ noise from troubled Starliner identified thumbnail
Odd ‘ping’ noise from troubled Starliner identified

Category: News & Politics

By now you're probably familiar with boeing starliner spacecraft it brought two astronauts up to space but malfunctioned on the way up to be safe those astronauts will be coming home on a different spacecraft but now that spacecraft has started making strange noises all right for more we're joined by... Read more

Back To Eden Gardening Documentary. How to Grow a Regenerative Organic Garden thumbnail
Back To Eden Gardening Documentary. How to Grow a Regenerative Organic Garden

Category: Education

Paul gautschi intro when you look at the incredible landscape on planet earth all the different terrains the varying soil conditions the awesome water features oceans lakes rivers streams the waterfalls the different climates the huge amounts of plants and ground covers the requirements are so varied... Read more

NASA: Crew Coming Back On SpaceX Ship. Boeing No-Show At Presser But Insists Crew Could Still Fly. thumbnail
NASA: Crew Coming Back On SpaceX Ship. Boeing No-Show At Presser But Insists Crew Could Still Fly.

Category: News & Politics

Nasa administrator bill nelson's announcement nasa has decided that butch and sunny will return with crew nine next february uh and that starliner uh will return uncrewed and the specifics in the schedule will be discussed momentarily uh i want you to know that boeing has worked very hard with nasa... Read more

Mind-Blowing Facts You Didn't Know: Boeing Starliner thumbnail
Mind-Blowing Facts You Didn't Know: Boeing Starliner

Category: Science & Technology

What in the world or space is going on with the boing starliner why is it taking so long and who's really stuck and what does it mean for us it comes down to space time and money especially for boeing we do have spacex though and we do have two very qualified astronauts to handle the task at hand while... Read more

04 Why Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore stranded in Internation Space Station? thumbnail
04 Why Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore stranded in Internation Space Station?

Category: Science & Technology

[music] today breaking news is astronaut sunita williams and butch wilmore are stranded in international space station and might not be able to return to earth until 2025 but why are they stranded what is internation space station what is boing starliner and what are the problems astronauta and will... Read more

Starliner Crew Health Worsens Each Day NASA Delays! Suni Suffers Eye Damage While Waiting For Rescue thumbnail
Starliner Crew Health Worsens Each Day NASA Delays! Suni Suffers Eye Damage While Waiting For Rescue

Category: News & Politics

Who is nasa astro frank rubio & what's his connection to starliner [music] okay so quick show of hands how many of you have ever heard of this dashing american astronaut frank rubio and what his claim to fame is well i'm going to tell you and it ties into bu and sundance and this whole starliner mess... Read more

Starliner Earth पर आया | Boeing Capsule की वापसी | Spacecraft News thumbnail
Starliner Earth पर आया | Boeing Capsule की वापसी | Spacecraft News

Category: People & Blogs

[संगीत] स्टार लाइनर स्पेस कैप्सूल सफलता पूर्वक धरती पर लैंड करके दोस्तों साबित किया कि वह जहां एस्ट्रोनॉट्स को सफलता पूर्वक इंटरनेशनल स्पेस स्टेशन में ले जाने में सक्षम है वहीं दूसरी तरफ आईएसएस से पृथ्वी पर सफलता पूर्वक ले आने में भी सक्षम है वह हालांकि दूसरे तरफ आप ऐसा कह सकते हैं कि बगैर अंतरिक्ष यात्री के वोह पृथ्वी पर लैंड किया मगर उन्होंने यह साबित किया दोस्तों साबित किया यह वही स्पेस कैप्सूल है जो नासा के अंतरिक्ष यात्री वच विलमोर और सुनीता विलियम्स को 5... Read more