Your Daily Dish

Feeding Outrageous to you Daily

Hide Advertisement
  • Animals
    • Farm
    • Pets
    • Zoo
    • Wildlife
  • Family
    • Grandparents
    • Kids
    • Parents
  • Health
    • Exercise
    • Food
    • Medical
  • Humor
  • Lifestyle
    • News
    • Science & Tech
    • Travel
  • Videos
Site logo
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Apple

40 Years Ago, NASA Put a Disco Ball in Space and It’s Still Floating Up There

By Jason Owen 2 min read
  • # Earth
  • # Goddard Space Flight Center
  • # LAGEOS
Advertisement - Continue reading below
Source: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Source: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

For four decades, outer space has had some serious Saturday Night Fever.

On May 4, 1976, NASA scientists launched the LAGEOS satellite – short for Laser Geodynamics Satellite – from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. For such an unassuming satellite, the LAGEOS would turn out to completely transform how scientists gathered data about the Earth, which had nothing to do with dancing.

Advertisement

The structure is simple compared to most NASA satellites. From Space.com:

“The 900-pound (408-kg) satellite has no onboard sensors, electronics or moving parts; it’s simply a brass core surrounded by an aluminum shell that’s covered in 426 retroreflectors.

“The retroreflectors, which reflect light with minimal scattering, made LAGEOS the first NASA orbiter to use a technique called laser ranging to take measurements. By sending light to LAGEOS and measuring how much time it took that light to bounce off the reflectors and make it back to Earth, NASA scientists could make measurements to millimeter-level precision of how far away LAGEOS was from the ground.”

Before LAGEOS, “laser-ranging” technology could only measure distances from the Earth’s surface to a satellite’s orbit – 3,600 miles above the Earth – to within an accuracy of three feet. LAGEOS brought that margin of error down to within half an inch.

Source: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Source: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center

Perhaps LAGEOS’ largest contribution to scientific research came in the ability to measure “small shifts in the Earth’s rotation that are caused by movement of mass in the atmosphere and oceans” as tectonic plates shift and move, Space.com wrote. In other words, LAGEOS has provided a whole new understanding on earthquakes.

“What had been missing was a way to measure the speed and direction of plate movement over time,” said Frank Lemoine, a geophysical scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

In 1992, NASA launched LAGEOS-2, a sister satellite traveling in a complementary orbit to LAGEOS-1, which would help prove one of the predictions Einstein made in his general theory of relativity.

The two satellites together allowed a greater accumulation of data that showed small fluctuations in the satellites’ orbits aligned with a “frame-dragging” effect (essentially, that Earth’s spin warps space-time around it and “drags” nearby objects inward) that is lowering LAGEOS’ orbit by approximately one millimeter per day.

So, that big shiny disco ball in our night sky is going to keep on spinning until the “drag” brings it back down to Earth… in roughly 8.4 million years or so. Talk about a long Saturday night.

(h/t Space.com)
Advertisement - Continue reading below

Japanese Taxi Drivers Report Phantom Fares Near Site of 2011 Tsunami
News
Felissa Allard 2 min read

Japanese Taxi Drivers Report Phantom Fares Near Site of 2011 Tsunami

Bose Introduces Stove, Pans That Won’t Burn Skin
Finance
Jason Owen 2 min read

Bose Introduces Stove, Pans That Won’t Burn Skin

Jessica Alba’s Honest Company in Takeover Talks With Unilever
Apple
Sara Wilkins 1 min read

Jessica Alba’s Honest Company in Takeover Talks With Unilever

Disabled Vet Visits Child Who Lost His Leg to Show Him Nothing Has to Hold Him Back
Trending
Jason Owen 2 min read

Disabled Vet Visits Child Who Lost His Leg to Show Him Nothing Has to Hold Him Back

Meet the Little Girl Who Is Making Trash Fashionable
Lifestyle
Margo Gothelf 2 min read

Meet the Little Girl Who Is Making Trash Fashionable

This Nonprofit Helps Inmates Get Jobs Via Cheap Tattoo Removal
Lifestyle
YDD Contributor 2 min read

This Nonprofit Helps Inmates Get Jobs Via Cheap Tattoo Removal

NFL Fantasy Football: The Top Three Sleeper Players at Each Position
Apple
Mauricio Castillo 7 min read

NFL Fantasy Football: The Top Three Sleeper Players at Each Position

This Pit Bull Cried – Like the Rest of the Internet – Because Scared Kids Wouldn’t Pet Him On Halloween
Trending
Mauricio Castillo 2 min read

This Pit Bull Cried – Like the Rest of the Internet – Because Scared Kids Wouldn’t Pet Him On Halloween

Beached Baby Dolphin Gets Second Chance
Lifestyle
Lauren Boudreau 1 min read

Beached Baby Dolphin Gets Second Chance

Dashcam Video Shows Student Juggling to Prove to Cops He’s Sober
News
Brian Delpozo 2 min read

Dashcam Video Shows Student Juggling to Prove to Cops He’s Sober

This E-Bike Is the Lightest, Most Affordable Folding Bike Ever
Apple
Robin Milling 2 min read

This E-Bike Is the Lightest, Most Affordable Folding Bike Ever

Does Your Labrador Beg for Food? This Is Why.
Lifestyle
Lauren Boudreau 2 min read

Does Your Labrador Beg for Food? This Is Why.

Subscribe to our newsletter

* indicates required

sidebar

ADVERTISEMENT
Latest

Get Into The Gift-Giving Spirit To Help Disadvantaged Children This Year
Lifestyle
Jason Owen 2 min read

Get Into The Gift-Giving Spirit To Help Disadvantaged Children This Year

Puppy and Baby Born on Same Day Think They’re Brothers and It’s Beyond Adorable
Pets
Jason Owen 1 min read

Puppy and Baby Born on Same Day Think They’re Brothers and It’s Beyond Adorable

Police Officer and Boy He Saved From Drowning Have Emotional Reunion 19 Years Later
Lifestyle
Margo Gothelf 1 min read

Police Officer and Boy He Saved From Drowning Have Emotional Reunion 19 Years Later

Subscribe to our newsletter

* indicates required
ADVERTISEMENT

sidebar-alt

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • For Advertisers