История изменений
Исправление i-rinat, (текущая версия) :
а эта крутотень уже годы как летела.
http://nfttu.blogspot.com/2006/01/nuclear-potato-cannon-part-2.html
Dr. Brownlee said that the the scientists working on Bernalillo were trying to figure out what happens during the few micro-moments of the nuclear explosion. The Los Alamos team was testing the feasibility of underground nuclear testing, as an alternative to spreading radiation in the atmosphere with above ground tests.
...
Brownlee and team had mounted high speed cameras near the well cover to record the blast effects. What the film showed is this: in one frame the steel cover plate is there. In the next frame, it is gone. Where did the 4-foot diameter, Jersey-cow-sized steel plate go? The area was searched carefully, but wasn't found. In fact, in the 40 plus years since project Bernllilo, no trace of the plate has ever been found, anywhere.
...
I'm told that the film ran at 160 frames per second, so obviously the time interval between frames was 1/160 of a second. He also said that the field of view, or the vertical area in view in the camera frame captured an area of roughly about one quarter of a mile. Therefore, I reason that the steel plate traversed an area of one quarter mile in less than 1/160 of a second. That calculates out to a speed of an amazing 41 miles per second.
...
The Los Alamos plate was propelled by the atomic cannon into the summer sky at a speed of more than five times escape velocity.
Многие склоняются к мысли о том, что крышка сгорела в атмосфере. Но толком это никто не знает. Так что она могла быть первым созданным людьми объектом, покинувшим Землю. Скорости должно было хватить, чтобы не только от Земли улететь, но и покинуть солнечную систему.
Представляешь? Где-то там летит крышка люка.
Исправление i-rinat, :
а эта крутотень уже годы как летела.
http://nfttu.blogspot.com/2006/01/nuclear-potato-cannon-part-2.html
Dr. Brownlee said that the the scientists working on Bernalillo were trying to figure out what happens during the few micro-moments of the nuclear explosion. The Los Alamos team was testing the feasibility of underground nuclear testing, as an alternative to spreading radiation in the atmosphere with above ground tests.
...
Brownlee and team had mounted high speed cameras near the well cover to record the blast effects. What the film showed is this: in one frame the steel cover plate is there. In the next frame, it is gone. Where did the 4-foot diameter, Jersey-cow-sized steel plate go? The area was searched carefully, but wasn't found. In fact, in the 40 plus years since project Bernllilo, no trace of the plate has ever been found, anywhere.
...
I'm told that the film ran at 160 frames per second, so obviously the time interval between frames was 1/160 of a second. He also said that the field of view, or the vertical area in view in the camera frame captured an area of roughly about one quarter of a mile. Therefore, I reason that the steel plate traversed an area of one quarter mile in less than 1/160 of a second. That calculates out to a speed of an amazing 41 miles per second.
...
The Los Alamos plate was propelled by the atomic cannon into the summer sky at a speed of more than five times escape velocity.
Многие склоняются к мысли о том, что крышка сгорела в атмосфере. Но толком это никто не знает. Так что она могла быть первым созданным людьми объектом, покинувшим Землю. Скорости должно было хватить, чтобы не только от Земли улететь, но и покинуть солнечную систему.
Исходная версия i-rinat, :
а эта крутотень уже годы как летела.
http://nfttu.blogspot.com/2006/01/nuclear-potato-cannon-part-2.html
Dr. Brownlee said that the the scientists working on Bernalillo were trying to figure out what happens during the few micro-moments of the nuclear explosion. The Los Alamos team was testing the feasibility of underground nuclear testing, as an alternative to spreading radiation in the atmosphere with above ground tests.
...
Brownlee and team had mounted high speed cameras near the well cover to record the blast effects. What the film showed is this: in one frame the steel cover plate is there. In the next frame, it is gone. Where did the 4-foot diameter, Jersey-cow-sized steel plate go? The area was searched carefully, but wasn't found. In fact, in the 40 plus years since project Bernllilo, no trace of the plate has ever been found, anywhere.
...
I'm told that the film ran at 160 frames per second, so obviously the time interval between frames was 1/160 of a second. He also said that the field of view, or the vertical area in view in the camera frame captured an area of roughly about one quarter of a mile. Therefore, I reason that the steel plate traversed an area of one quarter mile in less than 1/160 of a second. That calculates out to a speed of an amazing 41 miles per second.
...
The Los Alamos plate was propelled by the atomic cannon into the summer sky at a speed of more than five times escape velocity.