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Pionir 10 Lyrics


We have lyrics for these tracks by Pionir 10:


Da da da I uvek kad kažem sve istina je da da da da…


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Comments from YouTube:

Coltafanan Studios

I would love a series where you talk about old spacecraft and their accomplishments. So much rich history that few knew about

psykkomancz

Actually, they kinda do this already at the beginning of each month with release of a new pin.

shadebug

Yeah, that is literally the series that you’re watching

David Foster

Check out Vintage Space.... Great information, very well crafted.

Craig Mooring

Right, Vintage Space is all about rocket and spacecraft history. She goes into great detail, is very engaging, and her cat is named Pete after Pete Conrad who commanded Apollo XII, was the 3rd man on the Moon, and commanded Skylab 2, the first crewed Skylab mission. She knows her stuff and was selected as the host of the New Horizons Vlog as the craft drew close to Pluto and flew by it.

JmKrokY

Yeah

rocketsocks

Fun fact: Pioneer 10's camera had a single pixel, it's crazy how far we've advanced in just a few decades.

Karina

That actually doesn't make sense, could you clarify what you mean by a single pixel?

rocketsocks

@Karina Pioneer 10's camera (the "imaging photopolarimeter") is made up of a handful of photo-diodes (sensitive to different wavelengths) connected to an optical system with a very narrow field of view of just 0.03 degrees across. The probe was spin stabilized with a rotation of 4.8 rpm so it would scan a full 360 degree strip of the local sky every 12.5 seconds. The probe could adjust its orientation to move where that strip scanned or it could just let it naturally sweep across objects as it moved through space and in that way take pictures of larger objects by collecting essentially hundreds of single pixel images and collecting them into a mosaic.

The Viking probes used similar imagers but had movable mirrors to scan where they pointed to be able to take images of the Martian terrain without having to move the probes (which were just stationary landers).

These types of imagers had many advantages at the time as they were all solid state and very robust, while having reliable response characteristics. But they were of course very slow at capturing images. The Voyagers optimized the exact opposite way, opting for CRT based cameras which were better at high speed capture but had limits in terms of fidelity and brightness response. It wasn't until the '80s or so when CCD imagers and ubiquitous digital computers finally ushered in the age of modern scientific imaging. It's easy to take for granted today but for the first 3 or 4 decades of spaceflight the simple prospect of how to capture images remotely and return them to Earth (or even of translating digital image data into something a human could see) was quite an engineering challenge.

Dan

@rocketsocks Thanks for the info! I'm gonna do some reading on these

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