Agenda and Minutes
Pictures from Lowell Observatory, Flagstaff, AZ, Summer 2022
Part of the telescope used to discover Pluto.
There were dozens of sponsored plaques with various quotes from famous people and such.
Pavilion. Note the sponsored plaques around the perimeter.
1. Announcements
- Guest speaker? Ideally schedule it for a day when SJL can be present.
- SJL plans to provide a draft SOW at some point.
2. Reading and discussion
- Readings for today:
- We finished a page linked from https://www.planet4589.org > https://planet4589.org/space/index.html > https://planet4589.org/space/gcat/web/intro. We will start on the next page linked from there, which has link tag "SatType scheme," next time.
- We did not read from https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/2/572 (because no one with a focus on the topic attended. We have read up to "The authors in [31]
also approached survival from a binary classification, i.e., transplant
success or failure."and can start there next time there is a strong reason to continue with this article.
- Here are some generic questions about articles (and videos):
- What is the source?
- What is the most significant advance in the human knowledge presented in the paper?
- Why is that advance important?
- What important questions arise from the paper for future research?
- What important questions would it be nice if the paper answered, but does not answer?
- What does the paper present that is novel (no one else has provided that before)?
- What is the relevance of the paper to our satellite research goals?
- Questions from the group?
3. Previously completed readings include:
- We finished section 6 of MR paper (C:\Users\jdberleant\Dropbox\research\SpaceTravelMetric-b6-5-16\PapersAndPresentations\byOthers\MatthewRoughanDraft.pdf). This completes the parts that we planned to read.
- Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9o66fH_sgo (about MOXIE device which converts CO2 to oxygen). We then read a bit more about MOXIE on wikipedia.
- Https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/07/we-need-new-science-progress/594946 on "progress studies." Completed 9/30/22.
- Ryan et al., "A Forgotten Moment in Physiology: the Lovelace Woman in Space Program (1960-1962)", 2009. Completed 7/22/22.
- Various previous papers.
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