Astronomy Tonight

Astronomy Tonight for - 12-12-2024


Listen Later

Certainly! On December 12th in the world of astronomy, we celebrate a remarkable event that occurred back in 1984. On this date, the Space Shuttle Discovery launched on its second mission, STS-51-A, with a very special passenger aboard: the first commercial communications satellite to be salvaged from space!

Picture this: It's the height of the Cold War, Ronald Reagan is president, and the space race is still very much alive. The crew of the Discovery, led by Commander Frederick Hauck, had a daring mission ahead of them. Their target? Two malfunctioning satellites that had been floating aimlessly in orbit since their failed deployments earlier that year.

In a feat that can only be described as "space fishing," astronauts Joseph Allen and Dale Gardner performed spectacular spacewalks to capture these wayward satellites. Using a jet-propelled backpack called the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU), they literally flew out to grab these bus-sized objects by hand!

The first satellite they snagged was Palapa B2, an Indonesian communications satellite that had stubbornly refused to reach its intended orbit after launch. The second was Westar 6, a Western Union satellite that had suffered a similar fate.

This mission wasn't just about showing off cool space tech (although that was certainly part of it). These satellites were worth millions of dollars, and bringing them back to Earth for refurbishment and relaunch was a major economic win. It was like an interstellar repo mission!

The whole operation was so audacious that it captured the public's imagination. Time magazine even put the astronauts on its cover, dubbing them "The Salvage Crew." It was a proud moment for NASA and a testament to human ingenuity in the face of cosmic challenges.

So next time you're streaming your favorite show or making a video call, spare a thought for those brave space cowboys of December 12, 1984. They paved the way for the reliable satellite communications we enjoy today – by quite literally reaching out and grabbing the future with their own hands!
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Astronomy TonightBy QP-4