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Al's Morning Meeting

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Al Tompkins
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.


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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


*1. How to carve a pumpkin that shows your political leanings.

*2. ESPN's The Journey of Richard Jensen -- the comeback of a wrestler -- is an extra good video.

3.  You can lay subtitles or text bubbles on video -- any video. I will be using this to teach about storytelling.

4. Canon responds to the Nikon D90 with its own SLR still camera that records HD video.

5. Why do 97 percent of this railroad's workers get disability checks?

6. I now use Utterz to file audio reports. You can use your computer's mic or any phone. It's simple and would be a great reporter's tool.

7. I used Monitter to monitor what people said on Twitter about Ike. Just change the subjects to whatever you want to look out for.

8. I'm reading all about the Nikon D90, which shoots photos and HD video with the same $1K body.

9. Qik streams live video straight from a cell phone.

*10. Use Tweetbeep to keep track of conversations that mention you, your products, your  company, anything! You can even keep track of who's tweeting your site or blog.

11. This site watches TV and Web mentions of candidates. It also monitors Tweets and more.

12. This fall many PBS stations will air this documentary on whether there is a water crisis in the Southwest.

Sites marked with a * have been added recently.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. We will correct errors and inaccuracies when we become aware of them.


Millions of Pounds of Space Junk
The dying satellite that may hit Earth next month is just the start of it. There are thousands of pieces of man-made debris in orbit up there.

Space.com says that the U.S. Space Command monitors space debris and other objects, reporting directly to NASA and other agencies whenever there's threat of an orbital impact. The NASA Orbital Debris Program Office, located at the Johnson Space Center, is the lead NASA center for orbital debris research.

NASA has computer-generated graphics of the objects it is tracking that surround the planet. NASA says:

Approximately 95 percent of the objects in this illustration are orbital debris, i.e., not functional satellites. The dots represent the current location of each item. The orbital debris dots are scaled according to the image size of the graphic to optimize their visibility and are not scaled to Earth. These images provide a good visualization of where the greatest orbital debris populations exist. Below are the graphics generated from different observation points. 

Low Earth Orbit


GEO Orbit


2007 was the worst year ever for space debris. Look at this chart to see the huge jump in the amount of stuff floating around out there. (Click on the chart for a larger view.)

Orbital Debris - NASA - January 2008 - Small
NASA

The U.S. and the former Soviet Union were once responsible for most of the debris floating in space. But now, according to the January 2008 issue of Space Debris Quarterly Newsletter [PDF], China is the leading contributor, accounting for 42 percent of space debris, compared to 27.5 percent sent up by the U.S. and 25.5 percent from Russia.

In 2007, the Chinese used a missile to test whether they could shoot a satellite out of the sky. The test sent 2,317 pieces of debris into Earth's orbit, according to the newsletter.

Here is some more information on the Orbital Debris Program's work:
Sometimes the junk does hit Earth. NASA provides this photo of a steel tank that landed in Georgetown, Texas:

Delta Second Stage Reentry Object

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The BBC points out:

Normally, when U.S. spy satellites reach the end of their lives, they are disposed of through a controlled re-entry and dumped in the Pacific Ocean, so that no one can learn their secrets.
 
  • The oldest debris still in orbit is the second U.S. satellite, the Vanguard I, launched on March 17, 1958, which worked only for six years.
  • In 1965, during the first American space walk, the Gemini 4 astronaut Edward White lost a glove. For a month, the glove stayed in orbit with a speed of 28,000 kilometers per hour, becoming the most dangerous garment in history.
  • More than 200 objects, most of them rubbish bags, were released by the Mir space station during its first 10 years of operation.
  • The most space debris created by a spacecraft's destruction was due to the upper stage of a Pegasus rocket launched in 1994. Its explosion in 1996 generated a cloud of some 300,000 fragments bigger than 4 mm, and 700 among them were big enough to be catalogued. This explosion alone doubled the Hubble Space Telescope's collision risk.
Posted by Al Tompkins 12:41 AM Jan 30, 2008
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background on space debris You might find these articles useful for this topic. http://scitation.aip.org/journals/doc/PHTOAD-ft/vol_60/iss_10/35_1.shtml... More.
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