-there were a lot of studies, a lot of them. In fact, it's sorta confusing because there were a bunch of different acronyms used for the various studies, like MOL, MORL, MTSS, SLOMAR, and a few others. That makes it difficult to understand what study was focused on what subject and when. But I'm not sure that this is something that we could ever really sort out, because there was so much overlap. They were figuring things out for themselves.
Quote from: LittleBird on 05/23/2024 02:55 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/22/2024 10:15 amThen there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …That’s actually changed recently, in that NRO has acknowledged the relation of some of its tech to JWST in response to a media request. I have a note of the article that quotes this somewhere and will dig out. Found the background to what I was looking for, and now am not sure that they've gone as far as I thought, but judge for yourselves. Email chain is declassified here: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/135/documents/foia/declass/ForAll/041723/F-2022-00167_C05140549.pdf and attached. Grabs are first the reporter's question and then the background and release. The resulting Grid News article may be on archive.org if I can be bothered to go look, I may get round to that later-see third grab (and the back story: https://slate.com/business/2024/02/messenger-gawker-vice-media-layoffs-sites-deleted-why.html)Not 100% sure that the article I had seen was on Grid/Messenger-but not sure if I'll ever know now ...
Quote from: edzieba on 05/22/2024 10:15 amThen there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …That’s actually changed recently, in that NRO has acknowledged the relation of some of its tech to JWST in response to a media request. I have a note of the article that quotes this somewhere and will dig out.
Then there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …
Quote from: LittleBird on 05/26/2024 04:25 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/23/2024 02:55 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/22/2024 10:15 amThen there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …That’s actually changed recently, in that NRO has acknowledged the relation of some of its tech to JWST in response to a media request. I have a note of the article that quotes this somewhere and will dig out. Found the background to what I was looking for, and now am not sure that they've gone as far as I thought, but judge for yourselves. Email chain is declassified here: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/135/documents/foia/declass/ForAll/041723/F-2022-00167_C05140549.pdf and attached. Grabs are first the reporter's question and then the background and release. The resulting Grid News article may be on archive.org if I can be bothered to go look, I may get round to that later-see third grab (and the back story: https://slate.com/business/2024/02/messenger-gawker-vice-media-layoffs-sites-deleted-why.html)Not 100% sure that the article I had seen was on Grid/Messenger-but not sure if I'll ever know now ...The DORIAN mirrors being used for MMT is a well known story, but "the segmented mirror technology for the Dorian camera system" seems a bit too specific a wording to refer to technology developed by a third party (U Arizona) only after the cancellation of MOL. Has anything in the MOL or DORIAN documents declassified thus far even hinted at alternative mirror architectures?
Quote from: edzieba on 05/27/2024 02:50 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/26/2024 04:25 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/23/2024 02:55 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/22/2024 10:15 amThen there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …That’s actually changed recently, in that NRO has acknowledged the relation of some of its tech to JWST in response to a media request. I have a note of the article that quotes this somewhere and will dig out. Found the background to what I was looking for, and now am not sure that they've gone as far as I thought, but judge for yourselves. Email chain is declassified here: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/135/documents/foia/declass/ForAll/041723/F-2022-00167_C05140549.pdf and attached. Grabs are first the reporter's question and then the background and release. The resulting Grid News article may be on archive.org if I can be bothered to go look, I may get round to that later-see third grab (and the back story: https://slate.com/business/2024/02/messenger-gawker-vice-media-layoffs-sites-deleted-why.html)Not 100% sure that the article I had seen was on Grid/Messenger-but not sure if I'll ever know now ...The DORIAN mirrors being used for MMT is a well known story, but "the segmented mirror technology for the Dorian camera system" seems a bit too specific a wording to refer to technology developed by a third party (U Arizona) only after the cancellation of MOL. Has anything in the MOL or DORIAN documents declassified thus far even hinted at alternative mirror architectures?It seems that SOMEONE asked Corning for lightweight, hexagon shaped mirror blanks in the 1960s....https://glasscollection.cmog.org/objects/31966/blank
Quote from: hoku on 05/27/2024 06:11 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/27/2024 02:50 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/26/2024 04:25 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/23/2024 02:55 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/22/2024 10:15 amThen there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …That’s actually changed recently, in that NRO has acknowledged the relation of some of its tech to JWST in response to a media request. I have a note of the article that quotes this somewhere and will dig out. Found the background to what I was looking for, and now am not sure that they've gone as far as I thought, but judge for yourselves. Email chain is declassified here: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/135/documents/foia/declass/ForAll/041723/F-2022-00167_C05140549.pdf and attached. Grabs are first the reporter's question and then the background and release. The resulting Grid News article may be on archive.org if I can be bothered to go look, I may get round to that later-see third grab (and the back story: https://slate.com/business/2024/02/messenger-gawker-vice-media-layoffs-sites-deleted-why.html)Not 100% sure that the article I had seen was on Grid/Messenger-but not sure if I'll ever know now ...The DORIAN mirrors being used for MMT is a well known story, but "the segmented mirror technology for the Dorian camera system" seems a bit too specific a wording to refer to technology developed by a third party (U Arizona) only after the cancellation of MOL. Has anything in the MOL or DORIAN documents declassified thus far even hinted at alternative mirror architectures?It seems that SOMEONE asked Corning for lightweight, hexagon shaped mirror blanks in the 1960s....https://glasscollection.cmog.org/objects/31966/blankIt’s interesting that the Interpretative notes say “ This type of mirror blank was used in an _infra-red_ space-based telescope.” Does that square with anything we know about MOL ?
Quote from: hoku on 05/27/2024 06:11 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/27/2024 02:50 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/26/2024 04:25 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 05/23/2024 02:55 pmQuote from: edzieba on 05/22/2024 10:15 amThen there's segmented mirror designs. Among many others, LAMP from Itek back in the mid 80's, and LODE from Lockheed in the late 70's, possibly some work occurring even earlier. Officially these mirrors were for space-based lasers, but it could hardly have escaped NRO's attention that their prime contractors were also working on much larger diameter mirrors ground to very high optical quality, and with other desirable features like actively controlled thinned substrates. Publicly, the only segmented design the NRO has acknowledged having anything to do with was the Segmented Mirror Telescope …That’s actually changed recently, in that NRO has acknowledged the relation of some of its tech to JWST in response to a media request. I have a note of the article that quotes this somewhere and will dig out. Found the background to what I was looking for, and now am not sure that they've gone as far as I thought, but judge for yourselves. Email chain is declassified here: https://www.nro.gov/Portals/135/documents/foia/declass/ForAll/041723/F-2022-00167_C05140549.pdf and attached. Grabs are first the reporter's question and then the background and release. The resulting Grid News article may be on archive.org if I can be bothered to go look, I may get round to that later-see third grab (and the back story: https://slate.com/business/2024/02/messenger-gawker-vice-media-layoffs-sites-deleted-why.html)Not 100% sure that the article I had seen was on Grid/Messenger-but not sure if I'll ever know now ...The DORIAN mirrors being used for MMT is a well known story, but "the segmented mirror technology for the Dorian camera system" seems a bit too specific a wording to refer to technology developed by a third party (U Arizona) only after the cancellation of MOL. Has anything in the MOL or DORIAN documents declassified thus far even hinted at alternative mirror architectures?It seems that SOMEONE asked Corning for lightweight, hexagon shaped mirror blanks in the 1960s....https://glasscollection.cmog.org/objects/31966/blankThat may 'just' be a blank for a larger monolithic mirror, assembled using Corning's 'hex seal' process (mate and fuse multiple hexagonal blanks into a single large diameter circular blank). That doesn't shed any light on what this 1960s space-based infra-red telescope with a large mirror (monolithic or segmented) was, though.
Anatoly Zak pointed out that Almaz (Soviet counterpart to MOL) fired its cannon 50 years ago today:https://www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a18187/here-is-the-soviet-unions-secret-space-cannon/
Quote from: Blackstar on 06/24/2024 06:16 pmAnatoly Zak pointed out that Almaz (Soviet counterpart to MOL) fired its cannon 50 years ago today:https://www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a18187/here-is-the-soviet-unions-secret-space-cannon/Interesting article, but it says the cannon was fired January 24, not June 24.
For the Gemini B that would have flown with MOL, would it have RCS thrusters on the adapter section? If not, would they have used only the Gemini re-entry RCS for attitude control after separating from the MOL? None of the drawings that I have seen show RCS on the adapter section, but that seems odd.
Quote from: Blackstar on 05/17/2024 07:25 pm-there were a lot of studies, a lot of them. In fact, it's sorta confusing because there were a bunch of different acronyms used for the various studies, like MOL, MORL, MTSS, SLOMAR, and a few others. That makes it difficult to understand what study was focused on what subject and when. But I'm not sure that this is something that we could ever really sort out, because there was so much overlap. They were figuring things out for themselves.While I agree on the confusing acronyms, the situation is not quite that dire I believe. My research has found several, declassified but mostly unknown, archival documents on MTSS and SLOMAR which will contribute to understanding the scope, goals and interactions. As you say, they were figuring things out. The MTSS results have already been written up as a draft article but polish and publish is a bit delayed due to other circumstances.