The astronauts in "Columbia" managed to photograph dust as part of the Tel Aviv University experiment

 Reports from 27/1/2003

  The astronauts on the space shuttle Columbia finally succeeded in photographing dust in the Mediterranean Sea and the Middle East as part of the Tel Aviv University experiment. According to them, these are actual amounts of dust that could have been photographed and the photographs transferred to Earth. Today the astronauts on the shuttle will talk to their colleagues on the International Space Station.

Dr. Yoav Yair reports to the Metah website from the control center of the Israeli experiment at the Goddard Space Center near Washington: "Here it comes! Ilan Ramon was able to photograph plumes of dust on the west coast of Africa using the cameras of the Israeli dust experiment. According to the forecast 24 hours before Yes, the dust storm was indeed supposed to happen - and not only did the predictions come true - they were also photographed. The research women in the control room were very excited and will soon examine the photographs."

Dr. Yair also writes: "We are already on the tenth day of the mission and it seems that the routine has gained traction both at the top, with the astronauts, and also among the control teams in Houston and Maryland. Things are done very carefully and professionally, there is no great excitement and everything seems "day-to-day". Of course it's only so-called, because when you suddenly realize that the "Enter" command to your computer travels a distance of several tens of thousands of kilometers in space, via relay satellites, and that you have to wait more than a minute until the green light confirming that the shuttle received the command lights up - then you understand that we are dealing with a space mission , and not in something ordinary."
"The landscapes and photographs broadcast from the shuttle cameras are spectacularly beautiful and change rapidly as the shuttle passes over them at a speed of 8 kilometers per second. We in the control room try to focus on the mission and decode as much information as possible from what the experimental cameras have picked up. So far we have been able to detect lightning sprites of various types, and a little dust... most of the Middle East covered in clouds."

Yedan Ilan Ramon
 

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