1. As of 3/2/24, here are new potential readings, because the group changes from month to month and the previously suggested readings may not reflect current interests. For each one, should be read or view it more in-depth? 5=strongly agree, 4=agree, 3=neutral, 2=disagree, 1=strongly disagree.
- Lifetime Estimation Using Only Failure Information From Warranty Database, https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/5196697.
1. Previously suggested readings. These are from a long time ago but retained below for the record.
- One of McDowell's *yearly* (not the more frequent news) reports, in particular, the most recent one: https://planet4589.org/space/papers/space21.pdf. We read through the first paragraph of section 1.1. Vote to continue was 4.
- Already voted on: Portland International Conference on Management of Engineering and Technology. Let's find out more about it. We skimmed https://www.picmet.org/main/ and the question next is whether we want to read through the site in more detail. Do we search this site for another paper/papers to read? Vote was 3 11/12.
- Already voted on. We found that the paper at https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-40896-1_3 seems like it might be a good paper for us to read. Vote was 3.9.
- Already voted on: One candidate: https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/394111 is a recent account of using DEA (which is part of TFDEA). We rechecked the abstract and read the first paragraph. Votes were: 3,5,2,5,4, averaging 3.8.
- Goldin et al., The Productivity Paradox, https://cs.stanford.edu/people/eroberts/cs201/projects/productivity-paradox/. We read the "Home" tab and 2 paragraphs of the "Background" tab. Vote to continue reading was: 3.5.
- 5/20/22: We read the enlarged font paragraph at the beginning of "Women's Place in Space Exploration, 1996, ...\femaleAstronauts\relatedArticles\WomenPlaceInSpaceExplorationRef2.pdf. Vote was 3 1/3.
- 9/8/23: We could do this from the "talks"
section of planet4589: https://planet4589.org/talks. The ones we looked
at were all voted at 3 1/3.
- Already voted on: The Institute for Progress. They address questions like what policies and social factors affect technological progress. We will try out a bit of https://progress.institute/immigration-powers-american-progress/ to see if we want to read it in full. Vote was 3 2/7.
- 1/12/24: We could do part of: "Understanding Statistics and Experimental Design," https://link.springer.com/book/10.1007/978-3-030-03499-3. Chapter "Meta-Analysis" was evaluated at 3 1/4
- Voted on 4/15/22: One of McDowell's update reports, available on the website. Link is: https://planet4589.org/space/jsr/jsr.html. We checked #804. Vote was 3 1/12.
- Looks like a good one potentially: https://www.newthingsunderthesun.com/pub/4xnyepnn/release/9
- A paper about survival decision trees https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1072&context=ichita_transactions
- Jeffrey Manher & Kirk Woellert, 2018, https://room.eu.com/article/Sizing_down_and_reaching_higher_with_CubeSats, "Sizing down and reaching higher with CubeSats" Keywords : Moore's Law, Space Exploration. Summary: Industry revolutions, the chore of technology has started quietly. The year window between 1950 and 1960 was when space exploration depended on rockets and huge satellites. This paper explained how the miniaturization of electronics (technology in general, referring to Moore's Law) has continued to evolve but without affecting too much space exploration that has continued to its try and succeed/fail methods through space missions. Moore's law was the center of the study.
- Nick Allain, Spire Global Inc. San Francisco, USA, Issue # 2 (8), 2016, https://room.eu.com/article/big-or-small-aerospace-innovates-through-constraints, "Big or Small - aerospace innovates through constraint " Summary: The progress of technology behind Satellites built for Space exploration has been described in comparion with computer technology where a real bust has started around 1998. The evolution of commercial and research driven satellites technologies has been explored in details. Satellites size has moved from School bus size to smartphone size such as CubeSats, small size satellite. Moore's laws has continued to confirm its theory by allowing technology to make more powerfull computer processors increase in power while decreasing in size which is the direct consequence of the smaller size of satellite.
- Guerrice de Crombrugghe, Brussels, Belgium, Issue # 3 (17), 2018, https://room.eu.com/article/the-ethics-of-space-exploration, " The ethics of Space Exploration ". Summary: In more than 60 years space exploration technology has evolved at a rate that leads to drastic changes in society in a way that leads to questions the value behind the goal of exploring other planets using advancement of technology.
- Added 9/16/22: J. Trancik, Testing and improving technology forecasts for better climate policy, PNAS 2021.
- Chad Jones, https://web.stanford.edu/~chadj/, writes about endogenous growth theory.
- Pantelis Koutroumpis, The Productivity Paradox, a report.
- Some interesting videos are at the Kartik Gada channel such as at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuRX67CJhaOT98Jdjh85CEQ which we discussed previously.
- https://www.planet4589.org. Astronautics section. Something we haven't read yet, like one of the yearly reports.
- Future Spaceflight Meditations, a cosmist perspective, by Jiulio Prisco, physicist formerly with the ESA.
- Farmer and Lafond 2016: https://www.sciencedirect.com/
science/article/pii/ S0048733315001699#sec0130 - https://room.eu.com/about
- Some potentially relevant background reading is at http://www.spaceworkscommercia
l.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/ 01/SpaceWorks_Spacecraft_Mass_ Trends_2014.pdf and http://www.spaceworkscommercia l.com/#services which we could discuss. - https://www.wired.com/2016/10/
elon-musk-treating-mars-like- moores-law-problem-not/ - https://bigthink.com/think-
tank/elon-musk-searching-for- the-moores-law-of-space - http://www.thespacereview.com/
article/3653/1 is about satellite servicing (a way to extend lifespan!) - https://www.quora.com/Why-
hasnt-Moores-law-applied-to- human-exploration-on-the-moon- 1 - https://www.networkworld.com/article/3134727/white-house-small-satellites-bring-moore-s-law-into-space.html
- https://www.reddit.com/r/
AskScienceDiscussion/comments/ 5tqml0/is_there_an_equivalent_ of_moores_law_for_space/ - HA reminded us about the article https://spectrum.ieee.org/
tech-talk/at-work/test-and- measurement/wrights-law-edges- out-moores-law-in-predicting- technology-development. This is the paper that mentions 62 different domains as data for their research. - Here's another interesting paper: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048733315001699
- https://www.spaceworks.aero/insights/ links to https://www.spaceworks.aero/nano-microsatellite-forecast-9th-edition-2019/ links to a request form for the report "2019 Nano/Microsatellite Forecast"
- https://www.iac2019.org/
- https://spectrum.ieee.org/
tech-talk/at-work/test-and- measurement/wrights-law-edges- out-moores-law-in-predicting- technology-development - https://arstechnica.com/
science/2018/02/three-years- of-sls-development-could-buy- 86-falcon-heavy-launches/ The Falcon Heavy is an absurdly low-cost heavy lift rocket. The new SpaceX rocket seriously undercuts its competitors - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satellite_Catalog_Number
- https://celestrak.com/satcat/search.asp (e.g., type in "tesla")
- https://celestrak.com/satcat/boxscore.asp
- https://www.sia.org/annual-state-of-the-satellite-industry-reports/2017-sia-state-of-satellite-industry-report/ which has links to the yearly reports.
- https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/1605b6e32d867f4d (that link will probably only work for DB but we can fix that as needed)
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_spaceflight
- https://mynasadata.larc.nasa.gov/science-practices/data-volume-and-units/ (NASA DATA VOLUMES)
- http://highscalability.com/blog/2017/7/5/what-is-nasa-doing-with-big-data-check-this-out.html (What is NASA Doing with Big Data? Check this Out)
- http://news.mit.edu/2013/how-to-predict-the-progress-of-technology-0306
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elon_Musk%27s_Tesla_Roadster
- https://www.fastcompany.com/
40507858/space-startups- record-investment-rocket-labs- interorbital-phase-four (by Ungerleider) - https://motherboard.vice.com/
en_us/article/z43gm4/the- astronautical-congress-is-one- big-sales-pitch (Beyond Musk: The Six Trends That Will Change Space) - ... a multitude of diagrams of Time Lines of Space Missions: https://www.bing.com/images/
search?q=all+space+missions+ in+timeline&qpvt=all+space+ missions+in+timeline&FORM=IGRE - Start with wikipedia "extrapolation" article and branch out from there
- https://files.pressible.org/568/files/2013/02/futureevents_giorgialupi_large.jpg. What pages use it and what can we get out of it?
- https://phys.org/news/
2013-03-law-wright-tech.html is the popular summary of journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0052669
3. Forums to check out that might be places to share our results.
- COSPAR (Committee on Space Research) has yearly meetings. See https://cosparhq.cnes.fr/.
- A possible IEEE Aerospace Conference 2020 track (DB). It's far away (Montana in 2019) so travel is an issue in addition to delay.
- Annual ASGC Symposium track. May be 3rd Friday in April at Winthrop Rockefeller Institute. A good opportunity for a student to present a poster. MH is interested and will likely have some results in time to do it.
- IEEE Aerospace Conference. Annually. https://aeroconf.org.
- The journal Scientometrics. E.g. see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientometrics.
- "The Space Review is a reaction to the difficulties faced by publications, both online and print, which have focused primarily on space. Magazines like Final Frontier and Space Illustrated could not get enough subscribers and advertisers to be viable ventures. Space articles can be found in a variety of other publications, from Air and Space to Discover to Sky and Telescope, but are usually only a small part of their overall editorial mix. Several online publications continue to focus on space, like SPACE.com and Spaceflight Now, but these sites focus more on reporting news (and do a good job at it) than publishing lengthy articles and opinion pieces. There are, of course, a few sites that do publish lengthy articles and commentary, including NASA Watch, SpaceRef, and SpaceDaily, but there is certainly room for more." http://www.thespacereview.com
- Research Notes of the AAS. Articles are a maximum of 1000 words and one figure or table. Free to publish and read. Not peer reviewed. An official journal of the AAS.
- Advances in Space Research is a peer-reviewed scientific journal that is published 27 times per year by Elsevier. It was established in 1981 and is the official journal of the Committee on Space Research
- https://www.disruptordaily.com
/space-conferences-2017/
- There are workshops for people interested in the ASGC and NASA EPSCoR subgrants.
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