1 / 14

Getting into Space

Getting into Space. (16.1, 16.3) BLM 16.1. Getting into Space (16.1). Read p. 488-490 How do aircraft fly? How do spacecraft fly? What is the difference between payload and launcher? Who was the first person in space? What was the name of the first space station? Do questions 1-3 p. 490.

kalei
Télécharger la présentation

Getting into Space

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Getting into Space (16.1, 16.3) BLM 16.1

  2. Getting into Space (16.1) Read p. 488-490 • How do aircraft fly? • How do spacecraft fly? • What is the difference between payload and launcher? • Who was the first person in space? • What was the name of the first space station? Do questions 1-3 p. 490

  3. The space shuttle orbit’s at 200km, that would be the distance from Fredericton to Grand Falls. BLM 16.1 Vehicles in and Above Earth’s Surface

  4. Satellites (16.3) What are they? They are objects that revolve around the Earth. There are natural and man-made satellites. Natural: Moon Man-Made: TV, weather, cell-phone, communication, scientific, Radar, Infrared, military, space stations Most are low Earth orbit satellites (200km high)

  5. Satellites generally travel with the Earth at 28 000 km/h and take about 1.5 hours to circle Earth. Some are geosynchronous, travel at the same speed as the Earth so they stay in one spot. (telecommunications) Some are slower, usually specialty satellites like the International Space Station and Hubble Space Telescope.

  6. RADARSAT (16.4) Read p. 496 It is a low orbit Radar Satellite… hence the name. A radar is a device that emits bursts of radio waves and picks up the reflections to find out how far they are. (RAdio Detecting And Ranging)

  7. How long and it bounces determines what it is detecting. Radio waves travel at the speed of light and can penetrate clouds. It is good for monitoring mining and disasters. Canadians built and operate it!

  8. Other Canadian Contributions Alovethe 1: a scientific research satellite that made Canada the 3rd country into space. (1962) Anik 1: a communication satellite in geosynchronous orbit for communications. (1972) Canada is the world leader in communications. • the history blips on TV with the towers. • First trans-Atlantic message. • First communication satellite. • First cell phone service.

  9. Canada is also a world leader in Robotics. Marc Garneau was the first Canadian in space. He is now the head of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). What is Canada’s most famous space equipment? Canada Arm

  10. International Space Station(ISS)(16.6) The first living quarters in space were Salyut then Skylab. Mir was the first continuously docked lab. Now International Space Station includes: Brazil Canada Europe Japan Russia USA

  11. Four Research Modules (ISS) Service Module Habitation Module Remote Robotic controls Cargo Block Docking station Huge solar panels These parts are all connected to a central beam 100m long. It took 45 launches of satellites, revolves at 450 km, and weighs 450 000 kg. p. 499, questions 1, 2. What are Canada’s contributions to the ISS? (p. 499)

More Related