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A 'nerd' shoots for the stars, and NASA comes knocking

43 pointsby awkabout 16 years ago

7 comments

Chocobeanabout 16 years ago
How patronizing: "He goes to school dances (but not clubs) and has never had a girlfriend. Asked if his new science stardom might help land one, he replies: I haven't thought about that."<p>When will society ask the new starlets and Oscar winners how often they help out in the community or go to the library/museum/gallery when there isn't a gala on, or if they have ever written an academic paper which contributes anything to society?
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physcababout 16 years ago
I went to the Kennedy Space Center a while ago to watch the Shuttle launch with my dad who works for a rocket propulsion company.<p>I asked him what he thought about the magnetic launch idea...err "launch loop" as the article says...and surprisingly he said the idea wasn't so far-fetched.<p>One of the main problems with getting things into space is that you have to pass through a zone called "Max Q" I guess, where the pressure is maximized and can literally flatten you. The Shuttle apparently throttles back when approaching this point.<p>So propulsion isn't always the limiting factor. There are many different problems that occur when getting things into space.<p>One interesting side-note. He also thought scraping the Saturn V rocket was a huge mistake. Not only could it carry a massive payload, but it was equipped with numerous abort modes which aren't present on the new launch vehicles. Oh, and it had 100% mission success, which isn't true for the "new" systems they developed.
stuff4benabout 16 years ago
If you read the PDF linked from that site, you'll see an amazing amount of work for such a young man. Seriously, this guy has put a ton of effort into this, addressing everything from materials, to construction, government, food, cost breakdown, to even a timeline for how long it will take. It may not be feasible and I'm sure there is a lot he hasn't thought of, but this man should be commended for what he's done. I'm impressed!
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njharmanabout 16 years ago
"filled with detailed drawings done in Google SketchUp, a program he downloaded from the Internet."<p>Is it only me are is that a weird detail to a weird factoid?
Gibbonabout 16 years ago
The guy went to my high school! That's cool, but not that surpsising since they have an excellent gifted enrichment program. That's also why I went there.<p>In the 12th grade I remember there was a couple people doing cancer research at the hospital and another dude doing some kind of physics research at U of T.<p>Myself, I was using FEA software to test model aicraft structures and skipping exams to attend competitions. Fun times.
zaph0dabout 16 years ago
There is no language called "Hindu" (page 76) -- ah the ignorance of the "western" world.
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zandorgabout 16 years ago
Vaguely, but not quite the same level of glory, but I basically dropped out of high school when I was 15, but they gave us a quiz to do in the holidays around that time, with a £25 prize.<p>Me and a friend won the quiz (there was no Web in those days!).<p>I became briefly popular when they announced the quiz results in assembly [a gathering of students and the headteacher], except I was absent (ironically). I got girls asking me to buy everyone a drink.<p>Ah, such glory!<p>I even bought a Spectrum +3 with some of the money.<p>[postscript: The kid in my class who later went to Cambridge came second in the quiz, something I feel proud of, even if it's a hollow victory]