Musk: Let Them Eat Burgers

Image (Credit): The Telsa Diner in Hollywood, CA. (Tesla)

So, what is the next step for Elon Musk now that he decimated NASA and the federal government in general? A trip to the Moon? A trip to Mars?

No, his next goal is serving burgers and fries. That’s right, Mr. Musk is now proudly selling diner food at his Tesla Diner in Hollywood where you can charge your Tesla (if you have not given it away), talk with a robot (because employees are expensive), and get your food served to you by someone on roller skates (most likely these employees will also replaced with robots to eliminate any lawsuits).

For $13 you can get an All-beef Snap-o-Razzo hot dog and fries. None of that freeze-dried food they would be serving on a trip to Moon should that ever happen.

I just hope that Mr. Musk is still working on his space-related projects in addition to all of his other companies, his new political party, and now his restaurant chain. Otherwise one might start to think this guy is starting to loose his focus.

Now hand me one of those fried chicken and waffle thingies, please.

Image (Credit): Menu item from the Tesla Diner. (Tesla)

Television: A Second Season for Murderbot

Credit: Apple TV+.

If you had a chance to watch Murderbot on Apple TV+, then you will not be surprised to learn that it has been green-lighted for a second season. If you missed it, then you should add it to your watch list.

While I was a little nervous about the casting and ability to bring to story to the screen, it all worked out well. It was not because the first season closely followed the book, because it did not, but because it followed the spirit of the book.

The characters were fun and likable, while Alexander Skarsgård was just plain enough to be believable in his role as the robot. I also liked the development relationship between Murderbot and fellow augmented human Gurathin. An additional subplot involving the soap opera The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon also helped to take the edge off of all the violence.

Overall, it’s a tight-knit crew that you would follow anywhere, no matter what Murderbot has to say about it. I only wish the episodes were longer so that we had more time together. You just get comfortable with the storyline and then the episode is over.

Fortunately, Martha Wells, the author of The Murderbot Diaries, has already written seven books and has an eighth due next year. That should be sufficient to keep the television series going for some time. When that ends, we can always go through the endless episodes of The Rise and Fall of Sanctuary Moon.

Pic of the Week: The Veil Nebula

Image (Credit): The Veil Nebula as captured by the Hubble Space Telescope. (ESA/Hubble & NASA, R. Sankrit)

This week’s image was captured by the NASA/European Space Agency (ESA) Hubble Space Telescope. The beautiful array of colors in the Veiled Nebula can be found about 2,400 light-years away.

Here is more about the image from NASA:

The remnant of a star roughly 20 times as massive as the Sun that exploded about 10,000 years ago, the Veil Nebula is situated about 2,400 light-years away in the constellation Cygnus. Hubble images of this photogenic nebula were first taken in 1994 and 1997, and again in 2015.

This view combines images taken in three different filters by Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3, highlighting emission from hydrogen, sulfur, and oxygen atoms. The image shows just a small fraction of the Veil Nebula; if you could see the entire nebula without the aid of a telescope, it would be as wide as six full Moons placed side-by-side.

Although this image captures the Veil Nebula at a single point in time, it helps researchers understand how the supernova remnant evolves over decades. Combining this snapshot with Hubble observations from 1994 will reveal the motion of individual knots and filaments of gas over that span of time, enhancing our understanding of this stunning nebula.

TRACER Starts Its Mission to Study the Upper Atmosphere

Image (Credit): A SpaceX rocket launching the TRACER mission earlier today. (SpaceX)

Earlier today, NASA’s Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites (TRACER) twin satellites were successfully launched from Vandenberg Space Force Station in California.

The TRACER mission’s goal is to study magnetic reconnection and its effects in Earth’s atmosphere. Magnetic reconnection is the interplay between solar winds and the Earth’s magnetic field.

The two satellites, each about the size of a washing machine, will be in orbit over both the North and South poles for the next 12 months taking measurements.

In this interview, David Miles, TRACERS Principal Investigator at the University of Iowa, answers a number of questions about the current mission, including:

  • Can you explain what space weather is?
  • Why was this mission designed to have two spacecraft instead of just one?
  • Why is understanding space weather important for protecting our astronauts as well as technology in space and on the ground?

You can learn even more about the mission from this NASA fact sheet.

It is encouraging to see scientific missions underway to better understand outside influences on our upper atmosphere. Let’s hope we can also maintain and expand on space missions that help us understand man-made influences on our atmosphere. Closing our eyes for political reasons is never a good idea.

Space Quote: The NASA Voyager Declaration

“We dissent to implementing indiscriminate cuts to NASA science and aeronautics research because this will leave the American people without the unique public good that NASA provides. Basic research in space science, aeronautics, and the stewardship of the Earth are inherently governmental functions that cannot and will not be taken up by the private sector. Furthermore, NASA has a nearly threefold return on investment in economic activity, and supports national security by ensuring the United States maintains its lead in science and technology.”

-Just one of many points in a letter to NASA’s Interim Administrator Sean Duffy from more than 300 current and former NASA employees, labeled as the NASA Voyager Declaration. Probably employees from every federal agency could issue a similar appeal (okay, maybe not the ICE employees) given the unwarranted and poorly-targeted cuts wiping out science-driven programs. We need such statements to remember what is important about these programs, and how petty politics will diminish our nation. It’s been quite a few years since a German priest nailed a statement to a church door highlighting great abuses by Church authorities. Sometimes history rhymes.