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The Sky at Night S2023E03 The UK Space Race 720p WEB-DL x264-NGP EZTV

Episode Breakdown
The Sky at Night
The Sky at Night TV Show S2023E03

Season: 2023
Episode: 3
Air Date: 12 June, 2023
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Torrent Info
Torrent File: The.Sky.at.Night.S2023E03.The.UK.Space.Race.720p.WEB-DL.x264-NGP[eztv.re].mp4
Torrent Hash: F149181313C367C728189E6A59EA78AEEE08F1DB
Filesize: 1.06 GB
Released: 13th Jun 2023

File Format: MP4 (MPEG-4)
Resolution: 1280x720 px
Aspect Ratio: 16:9

The Sky at Night S2023E03 - The UK Space Race

Summary:

The Sky at Night team investigates the incredible science and engineering helping the UK to blast into space. We are now one of the biggest satellite building nations in the world, and the race is on to be the first company to successfully launch a rocket into orbit from British soil.

Chris visits Skyrora, a rocket company near Glasgow, to find out how rockets are built and why launches so often go wrong. Skyrora are planning their first orbital launch later this year; Chris learns how each stage of their rocket is designed for a successful lift-off.

Maggie is given a sneak preview of the brand new National Satellite Test Facility. Until now British-built satellites have been shipped abroad for the final tests of whether they can withstand the harsh environment of space. But this is all about to change with the opening of the huge NSTF. Maggie sees how a satellite up to 7,000kg will be vibrated to simulate launch conditions. She steps inside the vacuum chamber where they will be exposed to extreme temperatures. And she sees the construction of the enormous EMC, where communication signals can be tested in secret.

A result of the rapidly expanding space industry is that nearly 900 objects have been launched into space in the last year. Chris meets Professor Andy Lawrence to talk about the impact this is having on astronomy and the images captured by telescopes such as Hubble.

Another key issue is space debris – shrapnel from defunct missions and missile tests. Astronomers are currently keeping track of more than 23,000 pieces of debris larger than 10cm, and this space junk poses a danger to new satellites as well as the astronauts on board the ISS. Radio astronomer Professor Danielle George visits Clearspace, a company hoping to solve the space junk problem with technology designed to gently capture this debris in orbit.

And our in-house stargazing expert Pete Lawrence shows us why June is a great month for solar observing as well as the summer asterisms.



The Sky at Night S2023E03 The UK Space Race 720p WEB-DL x264-NGP EZTV
The Sky at Night S2023E3 Screenshot


General
Complete name: The.Sky.at.Night.S2023E03.The.UK.Space.Race.720p.WEB-DL.x264-NGP.mp4
Format: MPEG-4
Format profile: Base Media / Version 2
Codec ID: mp42 (isom/iso2/avc1/mp41)
File size: 1.06 GiB
Duration: 29 min 16 s
Overall bit rate mode: Variable
Overall bit rate: 5 165 kb/s
Collection: The Sky at Night
Album: The Sky at Night
Album/Performer: BBC TV
Track name: The UK Space Race
Grouping: Factual,Science & Nature,Science & Technology,Documentaries
Performer: BBC Four
Composer: BBC iPlayer
Genre: Factual
ContentType: TV Show
Description: The team investigates the incredible science that is helping the UK to blast into space
Recorded date: UTC 2023-06-12 21:00:00
Tagged date: UTC 2023-06-12 22:41:05
Copyright: 2023 British Broadcasting Corporation, all rights reserved
Cover: Yes
Lyrics: The Sky at Night team investigates the incredible science and engineering helping the UK to blast into space. We are now one of the biggest satellite building nations in the world, and the race is on to be the first company to successfully launch a rocket into orbit from British soil. / / Chris visits Skyrora, a rocket company near Glasgow, to find out how rockets are built and why launches so often go wrong. Skyrora are planning their first orbital launch later this year; Chris learns how each stage of their rocket is designed for a successful lift-off. / / Maggie is given a sneak preview of the brand new National Satellite Test Facility. Until now British-built satellites have been shipped abroad for the final tests of whether they can withstand the harsh environment of space. But this is all about to change with the opening of the huge NSTF. Maggie sees how a satellite up to 7,000kg will be vibrated to simulate launch conditions. She steps inside the vacuum chamber where they will be exposed to extreme temperatures. And she sees the construction of the enormous EMC, where communication signals can be tested in secret. / / A result of the rapidly expanding space industry is that nearly 900 objects have been launched into space in the last year. Chris meets Professor Andy Lawrence to talk about the impact this is having on astronomy and the images captured by telescopes such as Hubble. / / Another key issue is space debris - shrapnel from defunct missions and missile tests. Astronomers are currently keeping track of more than 23,000 pieces of debris larger than 10cm, and this space junk poses a danger to new satellites as well as the astronauts on board the ISS. Radio astronomer Professor Danielle George visits Clearspace, a company hoping to solve the space junk problem with technology designed to gently capture this debris in orbit. / / And our in-house stargazing expert Pete Lawrence shows us why June is a great month for solar observing as well as the summer asterisms. / / PLAY: https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001mwdn / / INFO: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001mwdn
Comment: The team investigates the incredible science that is helping the UK to blast into space
TVNetworkName: BBC Four
Part_ID: 202306122200
LongDescription: The Sky at Night team investigates the incredible science and engineering helping the UK to blast into space. We are now one of the biggest satellite building nations in the world, and the race is on to be the first company to successfully launch a rocket into orbit from British soil. / / Chris visits Skyrora, a rocket company near Glasgow, to find out how rockets are built and why launches so often go wrong. Skyrora are planning their first orbital launch later this year; Chris learns how each stage of their rocket is designed for a successful lift-off. / / Maggie is given a sneak preview of the brand new National Satellite Test Facility. Until now British-built satellites have been shipped abroad for the final tests of whether they can withstand the harsh environment of space. But this is all about to change with the opening of the huge NSTF. Maggie sees how a satellite up to 7,000kg will be vibrated to simulate launch conditions. She steps inside the vacuum chamber where they will be exposed to extreme temperatures. And she sees the construction of the enormous EMC, where communication signals can be tested in secret. / / A result of the rapidly expanding space industry is that nearly 900 objects have been launched into space in the last year. Chris meets Professor Andy Lawrence to talk about the impact this is having on astronomy and the images captured by telescopes such as Hubble. / / Another key issue is space debris - shrapnel from defunct missions and missile tests. Astronomers are currently keeping track of more than 23,000 pieces of debris larger than 10cm, and this space junk poses a danger to new satellites as well as the astronauts on board the ISS. Radio astronomer Professor Danielle George visits Clearspace, a company hoping to solve the space junk problem with technology designed to gently capture this debris in orbit. / / And our in-house stargazing expert Pete Lawrence shows us why June is a great month for solar observing as well as the summer asterisms. / / PLAY: https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001mwdn / / INFO: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m001mwdn
HDVideo: Yes

Video
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Audio
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Text
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Encoded date: UTC 2023-06-12 22:41:05
Tagged date: UTC 2023-06-12 22:41:05
tagc: public.main-program-content
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