K-9 and K-11 used the same boosters.
Interestingly he also said that they had been confused by US press reports and were expecting the readout feature to appear on the KH-9, in its different orbit from the KH-11's. This may refer to the second of the Aviation Week items in 1972 which said Lockheed were going to modify the "Big Bird" to include this (second grab). It's a reminder that the multiple contradictory open press reports may well have functioned as a type of disinformation, whether deliberate or accidental-I have to constantly remind myself when reading old press coverage that I am doing so through a filter of whet we know (or think we know) now.
<snip>Interestingly he also said that they had been confused by US press reports and were expecting the readout feature to appear on the KH-9, in its different orbit from the KH-11's. This may refer to the second of the Aviation Week items in 1972 which said Lockheed were going to modify the "Big Bird" to include this (second grab). It's a reminder that the multiple contradictory open press reports may well have functioned as a type of disinformation, whether deliberate or accidental-I have to constantly remind myself when reading old press coverage that I am doing so through a filter of whet we know (or think we know) now.
"For example, the Feb. 23 battlefield document names one of its sources as “LAPIS time-series video.” Officials familiar with the technology described it as an advanced satellite system that allows for better imaging of objects on the ground and that could now be more susceptible to Russian jamming or interference. They indicated that LAPIS was among the more closely guarded capabilities in the U.S. intelligence arsenal."https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2023/04/08/intelligence-leak-documents-ukraine-pentagon/Was this a known capability of KH-11 or is there also another imaging system out there?
Quote from: Blackstar on 03/03/2022 03:22 pm<snip>Following up on this, I think the things that would be interesting to know, but that we'll probably never know, are the details of the large, high-precision optics. How difficult was this? What were the key developments? If you compare the mass of the Hubble mirror with the mass of the FIA (WFIRST--Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope) mirror, there was a dramatic improvement. But what happened in the period 1966-1972? Were there any major complications when they developed the KENNEN mirror?The mass per collecting area of the primary mirror is definitely one of the main design drivers both for ground and space-based telescopes. The refinement of the "egg-crate" support structure seems to be one of the main technological achievements - see the attached images of the uncoated primary mirrors of the Palomar 200" and Hubble, and a back-side view of the Roman/WFIRST OTA.It might be interesting to add the specifics of the primary mirrors for KH-7/8 and KH-10 to the following compilation:Palomar 200": 627 kg/m^2 (12 700 kg total mass)KH-10 (MMT): 207 kg/m^2 (544 kg total mass)Hubble Space Telescope: 181 kg/m^2 (818 kg total mass)Roman Space Telescope: 41 kg/m^2 (186 kg total mass)James Webb Space Telescope: 21 kg/m^2 (705 kg total mass for PMSA segments + support structure)<snip>
<snip>Following up on this, I think the things that would be interesting to know, but that we'll probably never know, are the details of the large, high-precision optics. How difficult was this? What were the key developments? If you compare the mass of the Hubble mirror with the mass of the FIA (WFIRST--Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope) mirror, there was a dramatic improvement. But what happened in the period 1966-1972? Were there any major complications when they developed the KENNEN mirror?
One thing that Davies' 1967 idea highlights is that resolution might not be as high priority for crisis management as it is for intel. VHR and real time tend to be run together in histories and in discussions of MOL for example, but this is a reminder that real time imagery can sometimes be much more important than resolution. It's interesting that he was imagining a world were many "third party" countries would have imagery.
Quote from: LittleBird on 09/25/2021 07:51 amTo be honest I'm quite pleased even to have this cartoon, which appears to show the famous "stubby Hubble" shape, two solar arrays and what I assume are the two antennae that talk to the SDS relays. Antennae look smaller than I'd expect, but maybe somewhere in the huge pile of EOI docs the signal strengths etc are discussed.It would only have one antenna since only one SDS is in view at a time.
To be honest I'm quite pleased even to have this cartoon, which appears to show the famous "stubby Hubble" shape, two solar arrays and what I assume are the two antennae that talk to the SDS relays. Antennae look smaller than I'd expect, but maybe somewhere in the huge pile of EOI docs the signal strengths etc are discussed.
Thanks for th up Hoku. I remember Jim saying that HEXAGON didn't use CMGs, and I thought that I'd read in an NRO source that GAMBIT didn't but I'm now wondering if that's true, especially for the later G3 etc.
Quote from: LittleBird on 06/11/2023 11:47 amThanks for th up Hoku. I remember Jim saying that HEXAGON didn't use CMGs, and I thought that I'd read in an NRO source that GAMBIT didn't but I'm now wondering if that's true, especially for the later G3 etc.no place for them on the Agena
Quote from: Jim on 06/11/2023 02:05 pmQuote from: LittleBird on 06/11/2023 11:47 amThanks for th up Hoku. I remember Jim saying that HEXAGON didn't use CMGs, and I thought that I'd read in an NRO source that GAMBIT didn't but I'm now wondering if that's true, especially for the later G3 etc.no place for them on the AgenaThere's a story there that I don't think is in the official records (it may be that I have not seen it), which is that when they started work on the G3, there was concern that the Agena could not provide the fine pointing and stability required for the higher resolution. So somebody did an analysis of that to prove that it could. Maybe that's mentioned in the official histories somewhere.
Am I right in thinking that the key steps from KH7 to KH8 was i) that Agena stayed attached and ii) that job of fine pointing was taken over by a momentum wheel that was somehow part of the roll joint ?
Quote from: LittleBird on 06/12/2023 06:25 pmAm I right in thinking that the key steps from KH7 to KH8 was i) that Agena stayed attached and ii) that job of fine pointing was taken over by a momentum wheel that was somehow part of the roll joint ?There were a bunch of other things, like a larger mirror and longer focal length. Unless you are only referring to the spacecraft. But there is a separate thread devoted to the G1/G3 (KH-7/KH-8).
I'm also guessing that RHYOLITE and possibly CANYON were first NRO s/c to fly with CMGs, and possibly first usage in space, unless they were tested on R&D spacecraft of some kind. The textbooks on spacecraft control are understandably a bit coy about this sort of thing ... ;-)
Quote from: LittleBird on 06/12/2023 09:01 pmI'm also guessing that RHYOLITE and possibly CANYON were first NRO s/c to fly with CMGs, and possibly first usage in space, unless they were tested on R&D spacecraft of some kind. The textbooks on spacecraft control are understandably a bit coy about this sort of thing ... ;-)GEOsats typically don't used CMGs.
On October 7, 2022, Maxar’s WorldView-3 satellite snapped this sequence of images showing Landsat 8 in orbit. The distance between the satellites ranges from between 91.4 to 129.9 km (56.8 to 80.7 miles). ... The resolution of the Landsat 8 images in this sequence varies from 4.6 to 6.5 cm (SSD stands for Space Sample Distance).