How Starship Flight 1 Destroyed the Pad with Dr. Phil Metzger - NSF Live

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  • Опубліковано 13 тра 2024
  • In this episode of NSF Live, Das talks with Dr. Phil Metzger, who recently published a paper about the particle interaction during the Starship Flight 1 pad destruction. This show will dive into how this paper came to be, the lessons learned from Flight 1, and how the mishap during the first Starship flight occurred.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 65

  • @Inspace_noone_can_hear_u_honk.
    @Inspace_noone_can_hear_u_honk. Місяць тому +9

    Great interview, I went into this half hearted thinking it would be to dry of a topic… nope I was wrong… I listened the full duration and learned a lot. Thanks so much!

    • @ale131296
      @ale131296 Місяць тому

      It certainly wasn't dry, there was a lot of water talk

  • @traviswinch4536
    @traviswinch4536 Місяць тому +3

    Wow, was I ever surprised how great this interview was!

  • @zapfanzapfan
    @zapfanzapfan Місяць тому +16

    Thank you Dr Phil and Das! Happy Easter!

  • @corrinastanley125
    @corrinastanley125 Місяць тому +6

    Thanks Das and Dr Phil, great interview.

  • @citizenblue
    @citizenblue Місяць тому +4

    Man, y'all's intro! It still gets me so hyped every time!

  • @hallfamily2141
    @hallfamily2141 Місяць тому +3

    So proud of Maj. Brandon Dotson, an incredible paper and really great commentary here.

  • @janedoe9940
    @janedoe9940 Місяць тому +12

    I just finished watching it! Congratulations on the great interview, Dr. Metzger! I can only dream being so calm, composed and elaborate as you (and Becky) when explaining science, for which I often get "reminded" by my colleagues. On the topic, I think your investigative work actually did a great contribution to science and future spaceflight, even if we all joked about the Starship fiasco at the time. Das, you we're as always an amazing host.

  • @MarcelHuguenin
    @MarcelHuguenin Місяць тому +4

    Thank you very much for this super informative and passionate conversation!

    • @NASASpaceflight
      @NASASpaceflight  Місяць тому

      You're welcome, thanks for watching!

    • @DebraJean196
      @DebraJean196 Місяць тому +2

      @@NASASpaceflightit’s truly our pleasure to watch such informative content. And I hope the medical info has been simplified and released to the concerned public

  • @carljenne7675
    @carljenne7675 Місяць тому +2

    Great video! And great job, Das! We miss you on the weekly updates and launches. You appear to have listened well to your wife and studied up on the technical aspects of the testing. Points, baby.

  • @paulreinhardt6052
    @paulreinhardt6052 Місяць тому +9

    There was dust on our car windows in Colorado after the Mt. St. Hellens eruption in Washington in 1980. That’s about 1300 miles.
    I assume that’s because the dust got into the upper atmosphere and the wind carried it here.

    • @iamaduckquack
      @iamaduckquack Місяць тому +2

      In the UK we get sand from the Sahara coating everything from time to time. That's between 1500 and 2200 miles depending on how it's measured. It's nuts.

  • @Veptis
    @Veptis Місяць тому +2

    Congratulations to all participants becoming published authors ... For scientific preprint. It's great to see some open review commentary online.
    I am surprised Grady didn't get on it

  • @kenrsullivan
    @kenrsullivan Місяць тому +3

    Really? Chit chat about an old launch?? WOW was my initial thought wrong. This was an amazing analysis and I learned so much. So much information, thanks for breaking it down 🤣!

  • @flips300021
    @flips300021 Місяць тому +1

    Wow!! Extremely interesting. Dr. Phil Metzger deserves a medal. 💫 I think a huge hurdle has just been jumped.

  • @jcdavis5871
    @jcdavis5871 Місяць тому +3

    I was at Isla Blanca for the launch and drove to Brownsville after for food and people were talking about it. I didn't know and thought they were crazy, it's wild how this all tied together

  • @muddymike118
    @muddymike118 Місяць тому +1

    Great story and explanation of the time line of events . . . and the detective story behind it

  • @micvan4098
    @micvan4098 Місяць тому +1

    Awesome, Informational, show! Thanks Phil and Das

  • @mikekrawczyk1197
    @mikekrawczyk1197 Місяць тому +2

    This was fascinating - thank you so much!

  • @Driver_Pneuma
    @Driver_Pneuma Місяць тому +5

    They should redo the intro and add the starship footage in space

    • @TaurusSpace
      @TaurusSpace Місяць тому

      NSF only uses NSF footage

  • @stevenrofe6195
    @stevenrofe6195 Місяць тому +2

    Thank you both

  • @johit103067
    @johit103067 Місяць тому +1

    Raptor-side Chats are awesome!!

  • @motokenzo763
    @motokenzo763 Місяць тому +1

    So glad i listened to this. Very interesting and in a previous life I was involved in infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). 🤖🚀

  • @witchdoctor6502
    @witchdoctor6502 Місяць тому

    Great interview! From the moment Phil mentioned the build up of pressure because of water under pad, my thoughts were going to pipes underneath allowing steam to escape of side... I guess something like that is the way of the vented pad mentioned at the end.

  • @tomkrehbiel
    @tomkrehbiel Місяць тому +1

    This was a very interesting analysis. I also downloaded the paper and read it. The paper states "It is possible that thermal convection also drove rotational motion inside the cloud that kept the debris suspended...". This undoubtedly is true but is unlikely to be the primary cause of the lofting of the particles. It is commonly believed that clouds are formed due to thermal motion, but this isn't actually true. Clouds form because water vapor is lighter than air. Surface water vapor will rise in the atmosphere (independent of temperature) until it reaches the Lifting Condensation Level (LCL) where the water condenses. It is my belief that once the subsurface water was turned to vapor it simply floated upward carrying particles with it until it reached the LCL level in the atmosphere.

    • @NASASpaceflight
      @NASASpaceflight  Місяць тому +2

      Thanks for the comment Tom! After this conversation, we pulled all our extended footage of the cloud and will make it available for research and review. - Das

  • @seriousmaran9414
    @seriousmaran9414 Місяць тому +3

    The explosion is very much like a hydrothermal explosion or phreatic eruption in volcanoes. The magma heats the water which eventually flashes to steam causing a huge explosion which results in a big crater without lava getting on to the surface.

  • @stioks
    @stioks Місяць тому +1

    Great episode!

  • @peetky8645
    @peetky8645 Місяць тому +1

    nice interview

  • @gierdziui9003
    @gierdziui9003 Місяць тому +2

    Amazing!

  • @julianguffogg
    @julianguffogg Місяць тому

    Fascinating!

  • @willecutlip
    @willecutlip Місяць тому

    Curious! Can you post a link to the “50 ways” paper? Wondering if establishing a magnetic field around the launch “pad” would capture any ejected regolith?

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Місяць тому +4

    an hour and a half about sand. cool.

  • @willecutlip
    @willecutlip Місяць тому

    So, the “hole” beneath the pad became a barrel after enough erosion/breakage of the reinforced concrete and buildup of gas beneath the mixture of sand/water/broken up concrete?

  • @ricchamen6304
    @ricchamen6304 Місяць тому

    Concrete holds water itself. One places sand on the foundry floor because as soon as the 1250’C bronze hits the cement it explodes. Ejecting the bronze back towards you. The heat creates a lot of vapour as the water 💦 is drawn to the bronze heat&the interaction of water via steam exploded water/cement. The sands/which is basically far more silicate orientated and it really basically turns that sand in to glass globules. In fact they often glaze the bronze and glazes it and prevents air effecting the bronze surface from disintegrating from the air as it usually would do. It’s by no means the same thing. But a ver common foundry happening. It’s basically a heat into cement occurrence. We used that foundry casting cement area for 7 years. With the same results. It was an indoor foundry and never washed down etc. I expected this response in fact. In fact these. There are also material s like that which the metal bar is made up of. IE. U get bronze 90% copper and 10%tin= PB1. Copper Tin&lead. PB2. The lead eats our lungs 🫁 and is negative to humans. The same occurs since we understand the materials. Metal has rust(or oxide&it is responsive as are all other materials. Anyway leave it on the launch pad. Including fuels coming off after burns.

  • @nirbhay_raghav
    @nirbhay_raghav Місяць тому

    Would be great to have some timelines

  • @stevenrofe6195
    @stevenrofe6195 Місяць тому +1

    Excelent

  • @DebraJean196
    @DebraJean196 Місяць тому +2

    Starship cloud seeding!

  • @stevenrofe6195
    @stevenrofe6195 Місяць тому

    What landing had a hover regicide that lowered the lander? This was elevated thrusters.

  • @willecutlip
    @willecutlip Місяць тому

    Rapid Prototyping always leverages lessons learned from prior efforts. I not sure the SpaceX engineering team fully embraced this. Examples - Pad design for Saturn V, Launch stool for Taurus ELV, launch of Atlas E and Titan II out of silos.

  • @ZapperGazer
    @ZapperGazer Місяць тому

    shapes of your pavers should look more like shakes on a roof, with that little spike in the center, and each ring of pavers directs exhaust gas out over the next ring, each ring starts underneath the inner.

  • @ricchamen6304
    @ricchamen6304 Місяць тому

    U need to put heated metal rods below to dry your lower soil. Then introduce colloidal silica and regolith. Liquid poured and allowed to dry from below. Then heat actually Sets the colloid silicates the size of the required pad. But I’d say it’s roughly a good approach to attempt. It’s chances are high. Moon landing source. Ric.Chamen. Receipy available.

  • @oogabooga4542
    @oogabooga4542 Місяць тому

    I would imagine changing some variables doesn't tell you about other changes. That entire space program is startling.
    Any engineer would tell you last launch had broken attitude control, perhaps stuck activated one of the many rockets. Frustrating to watch

  • @niscola1
    @niscola1 Місяць тому

    So every starship launch with a South East wind will increase probability of rain in the area north west. #terraformthedesert

  • @michaeldeierhoi4096
    @michaeldeierhoi4096 Місяць тому

    The very last thing I care about is hearing about this again. I suppose I could have just noted the not interested option in this video. 🙄 Doh!

    • @NASASpaceflight
      @NASASpaceflight  Місяць тому

      Interesting... you had already read the paper that corrected a bunch of original speculation and incorrect information about the pad failure mode? There were quite a few videos about it, which this analysis calls into question. - Das

    • @michaeldeierhoi4096
      @michaeldeierhoi4096 Місяць тому

      @@NASASpaceflight Then I stand corrected, although I'm sitting right now so I sit corrected. Thanks for the response. That was a presumptuous comment on my part.

    • @NASASpaceflight
      @NASASpaceflight  Місяць тому

      No problem, I know a lot of folks thought it was settled with all the speculation... which I why I thought this paper was so interesting (and worthy of a show) Cheers! -Das

  • @DebraJean196
    @DebraJean196 Місяць тому

    Totally off point, why is Das’ face so red?

    • @friendo760
      @friendo760 Місяць тому

      The redness is obviously due to excessive sun exposure on someone who has skin that has evolved over time to survive in a bog.

  • @toddmadden7377
    @toddmadden7377 Місяць тому +1

    Christ is risen.

  • @phillipbox7957
    @phillipbox7957 Місяць тому +1

    This is really old info. What’s the point

    • @ale131296
      @ale131296 Місяць тому +1

      Given the paper was released a couple of weeks ago, it ain't old info

    • @SwampMonster1
      @SwampMonster1 Місяць тому

      feels like phillip is having a "get off my lawn" moment....@@ale131296

  • @MaTTK74
    @MaTTK74 Місяць тому

    DAS.... dude your such a fricken hard ass! like somehow balancing what your doing whiten 😂that whiten bullshit constraints...