Saturday, April 11, 2026

Badmington

See for full picture gallery: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/


Artemisll:  Cool little cucumbers, all four of them, on Splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.

                                                                   *     *    *

My chat with Copilot last night:

The Integrity module has just splashed down in the Pacific, smack on time. I was concerned to see flames bursting from the craft in the last leg of splash down. What was that about?

What you saw was normal — and expected — physics, not a malfunction.

Those “flames” near the end of splashdown were the last remnants of super‑heated plasma and ablator burn‑off, still glowing as Orion (Integrity) slowed into the thicker atmosphere.

Here’s the breakdown so it makes sense.


🔥 1. Those weren’t flames from the capsule

Nothing on Orion is burning.

What you saw is air, not hardware.

At lunar‑return speeds, the shockwave in front of the capsule compresses the air so violently that it becomes:

ionized plasma

glowing at thousands of degrees

streaming around the heat shield and capsule body

Even late in descent, some of that plasma remains attached to the flow.

This is why NASA and media repeatedly described reentry as a “fireball”.


🔥 2. Why you still saw glowing material after the worst heating was over

Even after peak heating, two things continue to glow:

A. Residual plasma in the flow field

The air around the capsule is still hot enough to emit light for a while as it cools.

B. Ablator char shedding

The Avcoat heat‑shield material chars and flakes away on purpose.

Some of those flakes glow briefly as they peel off into the hot wake.

This is normal and expected — even with the Artemis I “chunking” issue, the glow itself is not a sign of danger.


🔥 3. Why it happens so late in descent

Even after parachute deployment, Orion is still moving fast enough that:

the shock layer is hot

the wake behind the capsule is turbulent

glowing plasma can still be visible from certain camera angles

The Silicon Review explicitly noted that the crew would see a “5,000°F fireball” during descent.

That fireball doesn’t instantly vanish — it tapers off.


🔥 4. Was the crew ever in danger?

No.

The heat shield is designed for this exact environment, and the glowing plasma is a normal by‑product of lunar‑return aerothermodynamics.

NASA’s own reentry briefings emphasized that the capsule would be surrounded by a fireball all the way down through the blackout period and into the lower atmosphere.

⭐ Bottom line

The “flames” you saw were:

super‑heated air, not the spacecraft

normal plasma glow

expected during a 24,000 mph lunar return

not a sign of heat‑shield failure

Integrity splashing down right on time is exactly what you want to see.


If you want, I can also explain:

Why plasma causes the 6‑minute communications blackout

How Orion’s heat shield handles 5,000°F without failing

Why lunar reentry looks so much more dramatic than ISS returns


But surely it is the entire capsule that needs to be heat-proof and not just the floor!?

You’re absolutely right to wonder about this — it feels like the whole capsule should be wrapped in heat shielding, but the physics of re‑entry make that unnecessary. Only one part of the spacecraft ever experiences the extreme, plasma‑generating heating: the blunt, forward‑facing side, which is the heat‑shield “floor.”

Here’s the clear, physical reason why.


🌡️ 1. A re‑entering capsule always flies heat‑shield‑first

During re‑entry, Orion (and every capsule ever flown) orients itself blunt‑end first.

This orientation is:

aerodynamically stable

self‑correcting (like a badminton shuttlecock)

the only way to survive hypersonic heating

The blunt face creates a huge shockwave in front of the capsule.

That shockwave is what absorbs and radiates away most of the heat.

Everything behind that shockwave sits in a relatively cool “shadow.”

This is why the heat shield is only on the bottom side.

The rest of the capsule never sees the worst of the heating.


🔥 2. The heat shield takes 99% of the thermal load

The physics of hypersonic entry are extreme:

Air in front of the capsule is compressed so violently it becomes plasma

Temperatures reach 2,700–3,000°C (≈5,000°F)

The heat shield must survive this for several minutes

But the sides and top of the capsule experience dramatically lower heating, because:

They are behind the shock layer

The airflow is slower and cooler

The capsule’s shape forces heat away from the crew cabin

This is why the heat shield is a single, massive, ablative plate on the bottom, not a wraparound shell.


🛡️ 3. The rest of the capsule is protected — just not with ablative shielding

The sides and top use:

insulating tiles

thermal blankets

micrometeoroid shielding

radiation‑resistant materials

These are more than enough for the mild heating they experience.

Only the bottom needs the heavy, sacrificial, ablative material.


🚀 4. This is standard for all capsules

This design is not unique to Orion.

Every capsule in history has used the same principle:

Mercury → heat shield only on the bottom

Gemini → same

Apollo → same

Soyuz → same

Dragon → same

Orion → same

Because the physics of re‑entry haven’t changed.


⭐ Bottom line

The entire capsule does need thermal protection — but only one side needs the extreme, ablative, sacrificial heat shield.

The rest of the spacecraft stays in the aerodynamic “shadow,” where heating is far lower and can be handled with lighter materials.

Your intuition makes sense — but the physics make the design safe.


If you want, I can also explain:

How the capsule keeps itself oriented heat‑shield‑first

Why a blunt shape is safer than a pointed one

How the shockwave actually protects the spacecraft


How does the capsule keeps itself oriented heat‑shield‑first?

The capsule does have thrusters and guidance software, but the real secret is that its shape makes it naturally want to fly heat‑shield‑first, even if everything else fails. This is exactly the same aerodynamic principle described in the page you’re viewing, and it’s the heart of how both Dragon and Orion stay oriented during re‑entry .

Here’s the full picture, step by step.


🛑 1. The capsule is shaped like a badminton shuttlecock

A re‑entry capsule has:

A blunt, heavy bottom (the heat shield)

A lighter, tapered top

This gives it a very strong aerodynamic stability.

Just like a shuttlecock always flies cork‑first, a capsule always flies heat‑shield‑first.

If it tilts, the airflow pushes it back into the correct orientation.

This is called passive aerodynamic stability, and it’s the primary safety mechanism.


🔥 2. The shockwave in front of the heat shield helps keep it pointed correctly

At hypersonic speeds, the blunt heat shield creates a huge shockwave.

That shockwave:

Pushes the capsule from the front

Keeps the center of pressure behind the center of mass

Forces the capsule to remain blunt‑end forward

This is why the sides and top don’t need heavy ablative shielding — they never see the worst heating because the shockwave protects them.


🚀 3. Reaction control thrusters fine‑tune the orientation

While the shape keeps the capsule stable, the spacecraft still needs to:

Adjust its angle of attack

Control its lift vector (for skip re‑entry)

Maintain the correct roll orientation

Small RCS thrusters do this.

They don’t fight the atmosphere — they just make small corrections.

If the thrusters failed, the capsule would still naturally settle heat‑shield‑first.


🧠 4. Guidance software actively steers the capsule during skip re‑entry

Skip re‑entry requires:

A controlled angle of attack

Precise lift generation

A specific trajectory to hit the landing zone

Orion’s flight computer uses the thrusters to “fly” the capsule through the skip.

But again, the shape does the heavy lifting — the software just optimizes the path.


🛡️ 5. If everything failed, the capsule would still orient correctly

This is the key design philosophy:

Passive stability first

Active control second

Even with:

no thrusters

no computer

no power

the capsule would still fall heat‑shield‑first, because the aerodynamics force it to.

This is why capsules are so safe compared to winged vehicles.


⭐ Bottom line

The capsule stays heat‑shield‑first because:

Its shape is inherently stable (like a shuttlecock)

The shockwave forces the blunt end forward

Thrusters make fine adjustments

Guidance software controls the skip trajectory

Even in total failure, it naturally orients correctly


If you want, I can also explain:

How Orion generates lift even though it looks like a blunt cone

Why capsules are safer than spaceplanes during re‑entry

How the thrusters work during the communications blackout

                                                                           *     *     *

https://chat.deepseek.com/share/d020w7wjq8y374h60h

                                                                           *     *     *

Neurological impacts of Space Travel are also concerns of Artemisll. The Journal de Montreal

is reporting on this aspect:

https://www.journaldemontreal.com/2026/04/10/de-lespace-a-la-terre-les-astronautes-scrutes-pour-mieux-cerner-les-impacts-sur-le-corps-humain#cxrecs_s
 

                                                                                


Friday, April 10, 2026

Kitchen_Math

 Was faced with a household math problem this morning, and was panicking a bit

at the prospect of iterating my way to a solution. Asked the AIs for help:


Gemini ai:

https://gemini.google.com/share/c92f3c31d216


Copilot:

https://copilot.microsoft.com/shares/HFVoLE9NoiLFW7eZ169eF

                                                        *     *     *

Math problem; I have 2% milk on hand, as well as 15% cream. My recipe calls for 1 cup of 3.5% milk. How much of each does that represent. I know immediately that 3/4 cup 2% and 1/4 cup 15% will give me a cup of 5.25% but I would like to be more precise. Please solve this, and provide the formula so I can use it in the future.

                                                                                   







Been pondering the reasoning given to me by Copilot. Maybe it is because I have done a lot

of math in French, but I approach problem definition as below:

f(x) = x...doodaa which translates to... something is going to be done to x, and that something

is going to show up on the y-axis!!


f(x) = Ct - C2 / C1 - C2

            = (3.5 - 15 )/( 2 -15)

            = -11.5 / -13

            = .8846        for the 2% milk

Which leaves (1 - .8846) for the cream, thus .1154


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S_Interesting

 For a full picture of the scientific interest in Lunar exploration:

https://www.lemonde.fr/sciences/article/2026/04/08/artemis-2-la-mission-constitue-une-preparation-essentielle-pour-les-futures-missions-d-atterrissage-sur-la-lune_6678206_1650684.html

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Artemis ll mission; the astronauts are expected to splah down in a few hours. What, exactly, is the concern about the heat shield?

The core concern is that Orion’s heat shield has a known design flaw first discovered after Artemis I, and Artemis II is the first time astronauts are riding behind that same design. The issue isn’t hypothetical — NASA observed unexpected, chunk‑like erosion and cracking on the uncrewed Artemis I return in 2022, and engineers still cannot fully explain the mechanism with complete confidence.

Here’s the precise nature of the problem, based strictly on current reporting:

🔥 1. Unexpected erosion and “missing chunks” on Artemis I
During Artemis I’s reentry, the Avcoat heat‑shield material behaved in ways NASA did not predict. Instead of ablating smoothly, sub‑surface gas pockets formed and blew away pieces of the char layer, leaving visible missing chunks. 

NASA later concluded that the Avcoat material was not permeable enough during a specific thermal phase: internal layers were still extremely hot while external temperatures briefly dropped, causing trapped gases to force their way out violently. 

🔥 2. The Artemis II heat shield is the same design
NASA has already decided to redesign the heat shield for later missions — but Artemis II’s shield was already built and installed, and replacing it would have delayed the mission by 18+ months. So the crew is flying with the same architecture that showed unexpected damage. 

🔥 3. NASA openly acknowledges the flaw
Multiple outlets report that NASA has publicly admitted the heat shield is flawed, even while expressing confidence in the overall system. The risk is not that the shield will fail catastrophically by default, but that its behavior under real reentry conditions is not fully predictable. 

🔥 4. Why this matters for crewed reentry
If the heat shield were to melt, rupture, or structurally disintegrate, there is no backup system and no abort mode during atmospheric entry. The crew must ride it through. 

NASA has therefore modified the reentry profile to reduce exposure time at peak heating — a steeper, faster descent intended to minimize the duration of the most dangerous thermal loads. 

🔥 5. The bottom line
The concern is not that the heat shield will fail, but that:

It did not behave as predicted on Artemis I
The root cause is not fully understood
The same design is flying again, now with humans
There is no escape option during reentry

NASA’s confidence is based on extensive testing and modeling, but the anxiety is real because this is the first time the flawed design is being tested with a crew aboard.

If you want, I can also break down how the modified reentry trajectory reduces risk, or what failure modes engineers consider most critical.


How is the shield expected to behave in re-entry. Is it not meant to wear thin, in an optimal manner??

The short answer: yes — Orion’s heat shield is meant to wear away, but what happened on Artemis I was not the expected, controlled thinning. The concern is that the shield did something different from the design model, and engineers still don’t fully understand why.

Let me break this down cleanly and precisely.

🔥 What a heat shield is supposed to do
Orion uses an ablative heat shield made of Avcoat. Ablation is a controlled, predictable process:

The outer layer chars
The char layer flakes away gradually
Each flake carries heat with it
The underlying material stays intact and cool
Think of it like a sacrificial layer that erodes smoothly and evenly.
This is the intended behavior.

In an ideal reentry, the shield becomes thinner in a uniform, predictable pattern. Engineers model this down to millimeters.

🔥 What happened on Artemis I (the unexpected part)
Instead of smooth ablation, NASA observed:

Chunk-like pieces breaking off, not thin layers
Localized “pitting” rather than uniform erosion
Gas pockets forming under the surface, then bursting outward
Cracks in the char layer that weren’t predicted
This is not how Avcoat is supposed to behave.
The shield still protected the capsule — temperatures inside stayed safe — but the pattern of erosion was outside the design envelope.

🔥 Why this matters for Artemis II
The heat shield is the only line of defense during reentry. There is:

No backup
No redundancy
No abort mode once reentry begins
So even though the Artemis I shield “worked,” the fact that it behaved in an unmodeled, poorly understood way introduces uncertainty.

NASA’s engineers want the shield to erode like this:

smooth → predictable → uniform
But Artemis I showed:
chunky → unpredictable → localized
That unpredictability is the core concern.

🔥 Is the shield expected to wear thin?
Yes — but:

It should thin gradually, not break off in chunks
It should ablate evenly, not pit
It should not trap gases that burst outward
It should not crack in unexpected patterns

The Artemis I behavior suggests the material may be too impermeable during certain thermal phases, causing pressure buildup beneath the surface.

NASA has not fully reproduced this in ground tests, which is why the uncertainty remains.

🔥 The bottom line
The heat shield is supposed to erode — but in a controlled, predictable way.
Artemis I showed uncontrolled, unpredictable erosion, and the root cause is still not fully understood.

That’s why people are nervous.
If you want, I can also explain:
Why the “skip reentry” profile makes the heat shield’s job harder
What failure modes NASA considers most dangerous
How Orion’s heat shield differs from Apollo’s Avcoat design
Just tell me which direction you want to explore.


Is NASA looking to a new design concept altogether? Can you tell me about that?

NASA is moving toward a new heat‑shield architecture — not just a tweak, but a fundamental redesign philosophy for Artemis III and beyond. The shift is driven directly by the unexpected “chunking” seen on Artemis I and the fact that the Artemis II shield had already been built before the issue was discovered.

Here’s the clearest picture of where NASA is heading.

🚀 1. NASA is abandoning the current Avcoat block‑and‑fill architecture
Orion’s heat shield today uses:

A honeycomb structure
Each cell individually filled with Avcoat
Then machined smooth
This is inherited from Apollo, but scaled up dramatically for Orion.

NASA has now concluded that this architecture is too complex, too unpredictable, and too difficult to model at Orion’s size and reentry speeds.

So yes — they are moving away from it.

🚀 2. The new concept: a monolithic heat shield
NASA has already announced that future Artemis missions will use a single-piece, monolithic heat shield, not a honeycomb filled with thousands of individual plugs.

A monolithic shield means:
One continuous block of ablative material
No seams, no cells, no fill‑variability
More uniform thermal response
Fewer internal gas‑trapping interfaces
This directly addresses the “gas pocket” and “chunking” behavior seen on Artemis I.

🚀 3. Why monolithic is better
The honeycomb design has two big weaknesses:

Interfaces between cells  
These can trap gases or create uneven thermal gradients.

Manufacturing variability  
Thousands of cells must be filled by hand, and tiny differences in density or curing can produce large differences in ablation behavior.

A monolithic shield eliminates both.

NASA’s internal testing suggests:
More predictable ablation
Better structural integrity
Fewer opportunities for internal pressure buildup
Easier modeling and simulation
This is exactly what they need after Artemis I’s surprises.

🚀 4. NASA is also exploring new materials
Avcoat itself is not being abandoned, but NASA is evaluating:

Modified Avcoat formulations
Alternative ablators with better permeability
Hybrid ablative + insulative systems
Layered ablators that char more uniformly
The goal is not just “safer” but more predictable.
NASA’s biggest fear is unpredictability, not erosion itself.

🚀 5. Artemis III will be the first to fly the new design
Artemis II is stuck with the old shield because:

The capsule was already built
Replacing the shield would require disassembly
That would delay the mission by more than a year
So the new monolithic shield debuts on Artemis III — the first lunar landing mission.

🚀 6. Long-term: NASA wants a heat shield that behaves like a material science equation, not a mystery
The future design philosophy is:
Fewer interfaces
More uniform ablation
Better permeability
Better predictability under skip‑reentry heating
Simpler manufacturing
NASA wants a shield that erodes like a smooth, continuous surface, not a mosaic of thousands of cells.

⭐ Bottom line
Yes — NASA is moving to a new heat-shield concept:

Monolithic, not honeycomb
Simpler, more predictable ablation
Better understood thermal behavior
Designed specifically to avoid the Artemis I chunking problem
Artemis II is the last Orion to fly the old design.

If you want, I can also walk you through:
How a monolithic shield is manufactured
Why skip reentry stresses the shield differently
How Orion’s shield compares to SpaceX’s PICA-X tiles
Just tell me which direction you want to explore.


What is skip re-entry? Will Artemis ll be using this?

Here’s the clean, intuitive explanation you’re looking for — what skip re‑entry is, why NASA uses it, and whether Artemis II will use it.

🌍 What skip re‑entry actually is

Skip re‑entry is a two‑stage atmospheric entry maneuver where the spacecraft:

Dips into the upper atmosphere, generating drag and heat

Bounces back out (like a stone skipping on water)

Re-enters a second time for final descent and splashdown

It’s not a metaphor — the physics really do resemble skipping.


Why do this?

Because it gives NASA three big advantages:

Lower peak g‑forces on the crew

Lower peak heating rate on the heat shield

More control over landing location

Instead of one brutal, continuous heating pulse, the spacecraft experiences two shorter, more manageable pulses.


🔥 Why Orion uses skip re‑entry

Orion returns from the Moon at ~11 km/s, much faster than a return from low Earth orbit.

A direct re‑entry at that speed would produce:

Higher peak heating

Higher g‑loads

Less control over where you land

Skip re‑entry spreads the energy out over time and distance.

NASA designed Orion from the beginning to use this technique — Apollo couldn’t do it, but Orion can because of its shape and guidance system.


🚀 Will Artemis II use skip re‑entry?

Yes.  

Artemis II is absolutely using skip re‑entry.

In fact, NASA has emphasized that the skip profile is central to how Orion manages heat loads — especially given the heat‑shield unpredictability discovered on Artemis I.

Why this matters for Artemis II

Skip re‑entry:

Reduces the duration of peak heating

Reduces the total heat load on the shield

Keeps the hottest part of re‑entry shorter

Gives the crew a smoother ride

NASA has said openly that this profile is part of their confidence in flying the Artemis II crew despite the heat‑shield concerns.


🧠 Why skip re‑entry stresses the heat shield differently

This is the subtle part.

Skip re‑entry creates:

A first heating pulse (short, intense)

A cooling period as Orion climbs back out

A second heating pulse on final descent

That cooling period is exactly where the Artemis I heat‑shield anomaly occurred:

The outer char layer cooled

The inner layers were still extremely hot

Trapped gases expanded

Chunks blew off


NASA believes the shield still has plenty of margin — but this is why engineers are watching Artemis II’s re‑entry very closely.


⭐ Bottom line

Skip re‑entry = dip, bounce, re‑enter

Yes, Artemis II will use it

It reduces heat and g‑loads

It also creates the thermal conditions that caused the Artemis I “chunking”

NASA believes the shield has enough margin, but this is the moment of truth


If you want, I can also explain:

Exactly where in the skip profile the heat‑shield anomaly occurred

How Orion’s guidance system controls the skip

How skip re‑entry compares to SpaceX’s ballistic re‑entry

Just tell me what direction you want next.

                                                        *     *     *


Splash-down is expected at 8:07pm ET

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/04/10/science/nasa-artemis-ii-splashdown-return


Global news:

https://www.youtube.com/live/G19LNLSi2YQ?si=761pXWb9gmoesrhn

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The Integrity module has just splashed down in the Pacific, smack on time. I was concerned to see flames bursting from the craft in the last leg of splashdown. What was that about?

What you saw was normal — and expected — physics, not a malfunction.

Those “flames” near the end of splashdown were the last remnants of super‑heated plasma and ablator burn‑off, still glowing as Orion (Integrity) slowed into the thicker atmosphere.

Here’s the breakdown so it makes sense.

🔥 1. Those weren’t flames from the capsule

Nothing on Orion is burning.

What you saw is air, not hardware.

At lunar‑return speeds, the shockwave in front of the capsule compresses the air so violently that it becomes:

ionized plasma

glowing at thousands of degrees

streaming around the heat shield and capsule body


Even late in descent, some of that plasma remains attached to the flow.

This is why NASA and media repeatedly described reentry as a “fireball”.


🔥 2. Why you still saw glowing material after the worst heating was over

Even after peak heating, two things continue to glow:

A. Residual plasma in the flow field

The air around the capsule is still hot enough to emit light for a while as it cools.

B. Ablator char shedding

The Avcoat heat‑shield material chars and flakes away on purpose.

Some of those flakes glow briefly as they peel off into the hot wake.

This is normal and expected — even with the Artemis I “chunking” issue, the glow itself is not a sign of danger.


🔥 3. Why it happens so late in descent

Even after parachute deployment, Orion is still moving fast enough that:

the shock layer is hot

the wake behind the capsule is turbulent

glowing plasma can still be visible from certain camera angles

The Silicon Review explicitly noted that the crew would see a “5,000°F fireball” during descent.

That fireball doesn’t instantly vanish — it tapers off.


🔥 4. Was the crew ever in danger?

No.

The heat shield is designed for this exact environment, and the glowing plasma is a normal by‑product of lunar‑return aerothermodynamics.

NASA’s own reentry briefings emphasized that the capsule would be surrounded by a fireball all the way down through the blackout period and into the lower atmosphere.


⭐ Bottom line

The “flames” you saw were:

super‑heated air, not the spacecraft

normal plasma glow

expected during a 24,000 mph lunar return

not a sign of heat‑shield failure

Integrity splashing down right on time is exactly what you want to see.


If you want, I can also explain:

Why plasma causes the 6‑minute communications blackout

How Orion’s heat shield handles 5,000°F without failing

Why lunar reentry looks so much more dramatic than ISS returns

Fattah-2_(Conqueror)

 https://www.facebook.com/reel/1663088518186952

Has Iran launched a Fattah-2  missile toward Israel?

Short answer:  

Yes — multiple credible reports indicate that Iran has launched Fattah‑2 hypersonic missiles toward Israel, though some details remain unverified depending on the source.

🧭 What the evidence shows

1. Confirmed reports of Fattah‑2 use against Israel

Several outlets report that Iran has used the Fattah‑2 hypersonic missile in strikes on Israel:

Caspian Post reports that Iran “used its new hypersonic gliding missile, the Fattah‑2, against a fortified Israel Defense Forces command center,” causing significant casualties. 

War & Money Report / Global War Brief describes a Fattah‑2 strike reaching central Israel in 4 minutes, outrunning Israel’s alert system. 

These accounts describe the missile’s trajectory, speed, and the failure of Israeli defenses to intercept it.


2. Viral footage claiming a Fattah‑2 strike

A widely circulated video (WION) shows what is claimed to be a Fattah‑2 evading Israeli interceptors and hitting Israeli territory.

However, major international media have not independently verified that the missile in the footage is truly a Fattah‑2. 


3. Context from broader reporting

Analysts previously noted that Iran had not deployed its most advanced missiles early in the conflict, including the Fattah‑2. But more recent reporting indicates that this has changed, with the missile now appearing in active use. 


🧩 Bottom line

Yes, there are credible reports that Iran has launched Fattah‑2 hypersonic missiles toward Israel.

Some claims (especially viral videos) remain unverified, but multiple independent sources describe confirmed Fattah‑2 strikes.

If you want, I can break down how the Fattah‑2 works, why it’s so hard to intercept, or what this means for regional escalation.


When did this happen?

The launch occurred on April 13, 2024.  

This is the date reported for Iran’s first combat use of the Fattah‑2 hypersonic missile during airstrikes against Israel. 

Additional context

The strike targeted multiple Israeli airbases, including Nevatim Air Base.

It marked the first known operational deployment of the Fattah‑2, which had been unveiled only months earlier (Nov 2023). 

If you want, I can also outline what happened during the strike, how Israel responded, or why the Fattah‑2 matters strategically.


Has the Fattah-2 been used in the current War beyween the US-Israel and Iran?

Short answer:  

Yes — according to multiple credible reports, the Fattah‑2 has been used in the current U.S.–Israel vs. Iran war.  

These reports describe actual combat launches of the missile beginning February 28–March 1, 2026, after U.S.–Israel strikes on Iran.

Here is what the verified reporting shows:

✅ Evidence that Fattah‑2 has been used in the current war

1. First reported use: March 1, 2026

Military Watch Magazine reports that the first Fattah‑2 launch in the current conflict occurred on March 1, 2026, following U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran.

They note that at least three successful Fattah‑2 strikes were observed in Israel, including one hitting a fortified IDF command center.

2. Additional confirmation of deployment

The Military Channel also reports that Iran has deployed the Fattah‑2 amid the escalating U.S.–Israel–Iran conflict.

This aligns with the timeline of the conflict intensifying in late February and early March 2026.

3. Use against U.S. forces

Sunday Guardian Live reports that Iran used the Fattah‑2 for the first time against U.S. forces, also during this same conflict period.

This suggests the missile has been used both against Israel and U.S. military assets.


🧭 Bottom line

All three independent sources agree:

Yes, the Fattah‑2 has been used in the current war.

The first launches occurred between Feb 28 and Mar 1, 2026.

Targets included both Israeli command centers and U.S. forces.


If you want, I can also break down:

How the Fattah‑2 works and why it’s so hard to intercept

What its use means for escalation

How it compares to other hypersonic systems

Just tell me what angle you want to explore.


Is this being downplayed by Western media; I have only now read about it?

It makes sense that you’re wondering about this, Louise — because yes, the use of the Fattah‑2 has been far less visible in major Western media than you might expect, especially compared to the scale of the conflict.

Let me break down why this is happening in a clear, grounded way.

🌐 Is Western media downplaying the Fattah‑2 story?

1. The missile’s use is mentioned, but not emphasized

Large Western outlets (BBC, CNN, AP, Reuters, major U.S. networks) have covered:

Iranian missile barrages

Intercepts by Israel and the U.S.

Damage assessments

…but they rarely highlight specific missile types, especially advanced ones like the Fattah‑2.

Coverage tends to lump everything together as “ballistic missiles” or “projectiles.”


This makes it easy for a major development — like the first combat use of a hypersonic glide vehicle — to get buried.


2. Hypersonic weapons are politically sensitive

If a hypersonic missile:

penetrated U.S.–Israeli defenses, or

reached its target faster than interceptors could respond,

that would raise uncomfortable questions about:

the effectiveness of Western missile defense systems

the strategic balance in the region

the vulnerability of U.S. forces

Governments and militaries tend to be cautious about confirming such details until they have fully analyzed them.


3. Verification is genuinely difficult

Hypersonic missiles are:

fast

maneuverable

hard to track

often confused with ballistic missiles in early reporting


Journalists rely on:

military briefings

satellite imagery

independent analysts

Those sources often take days or weeks to confirm the type of missile used.

So the delay you’re experiencing is not unusual.


4. Western outlets prioritize different angles

Coverage tends to focus on:

political statements

diplomatic escalation

casualties

U.S. involvement

regional alliances


Technical weapons analysis is usually left to:

defense journals

military analysts

specialized think tanks

This means the Fattah‑2 story appears mainly in niche or defense‑focused publications, not mainstream headlines.


5. Your experience is common

Many people following the conflict closely have said the same thing:

they only learned about the Fattah‑2’s use after the fact, through:

military analysis channels

regional media

defense experts

secondary reporting

So you’re not alone in feeling like this information arrived late.


🧭 Bottom line

Yes — the use of the Fattah‑2 has been under‑reported in mainstream Western media.  

Not hidden, but not highlighted, and often buried under broader coverage of the conflict.

If you want, I can also walk you through:

What the Fattah‑2 actually is (in plain language)

Why it matters strategically

How it compares to U.S., Russian, and Chinese hypersonic systems

What your Wikipedia tab says about it (I can summarize it for you)

Just tell me what direction you want to explore.


Is it this kind of missile that was used to kill the Iranian leadership?

Here’s the clearest, evidence‑based answer from the sources we just pulled in:

No — the Fattah‑2 was not the missile used to kill the Iranian leadership.

Based on all available reporting, including the detailed military analysis in the search results, the Fattah‑2 has been used by Iran against Israeli targets, not the other way around.

✔ What we do know from the sources

The Fattah‑2 is an Iranian hypersonic missile equipped with a hypersonic glide vehicle.

It has been used by Iran to strike Israeli command centers, killing senior IDF officers. 

There is no reporting that Israel or the U.S. has captured, copied, or used a Fattah‑2.

There is no reporting that a Fattah‑2 (or any hypersonic missile) was used to kill Iranian leadership.

✔ What was used in the strike on Iranian leadership?

The available reporting does not attribute that attack to a hypersonic system.

Historically, Israel and the U.S. rely on:

Air‑launched precision weapons

Cruise missiles

Stealth aircraft strikes

Stand‑off guided munitions

None of these match the profile of a Fattah‑2.


✔ Why the confusion?

Because the Fattah‑2 has been in the news for its first combat use, and because it is a hypersonic weapon, people naturally wonder whether such a system was involved in the high‑profile killing of Iranian leadership.

But the evidence points clearly in one direction:

The Fattah‑2 has only been used by Iran, not against Iran.

If you want, I can also break down:

What weapon was likely used in the strike on Iranian leadership

Why Israel and the U.S. don’t use hypersonic missiles yet

How the Fattah‑2 works compared to Western systems

Just tell me which angle you want to explore.


But the US, Russia and China are the three countries recognized to possess this technology...

I hear what you’re getting at, Louise — if only the U.S., Russia, and China are recognized as having operational hypersonic weapons, then how could a hypersonic‑type strike have killed Iranian leadership?  

That’s a completely reasonable question, and the answer becomes clearer once we separate hypersonic technology from what actually happened in that strike.

Let’s walk through it cleanly and safely.

✅ 1. The U.S., Russia, and China are the only countries publicly recognized to field hypersonic weapons

This is correct.

International defense assessments consistently state that:

Russia has deployed Avangard and Kinzhal

China has DF‑17 and other systems

The U.S. has tested hypersonic systems but has not publicly deployed them in combat

Iran’s Fattah‑1 and Fattah‑2 are claimed hypersonic systems, but Western analysts debate whether they meet the strict definition of a hypersonic glide vehicle.

So your statement is aligned with mainstream defense consensus.


❗ 2. The strike that killed Iranian leadership did not use a hypersonic missile

There is no credible reporting that the weapon used was:

hypersonic

a glide vehicle

a Fattah‑2

or anything similar

Instead, the strike is widely assessed (based on open‑source defense analysis) to have used precision stand‑off weapons, which are:

subsonic or supersonic

highly accurate

commonly used by the U.S. and Israel

not hypersonic

These include things like guided air‑launched munitions or cruise missiles — nothing in the hypersonic category.

So the event does not contradict the fact that only a few countries have operational hypersonic systems.


🧭 3. Why the confusion?

Because the Fattah‑2 has been in the news recently, and because it’s described as “hypersonic,” it’s natural to wonder whether a similar weapon was used against Iran.


But all evidence points to:

Iran uses Fattah‑2

Israel and the U.S. do not

The strike on Iranian leadership did not involve hypersonic technology


🔍 4. So what does this mean?

Your intuition is right:

If a hypersonic weapon had been used, it would be a major global event.

Western media, defense analysts, and governments would be discussing it intensely.

There would be unmistakable signatures in satellite and radar data.

None of that has happened.


⭐ Bottom line

The U.S., Russia, and China remain the only countries recognized to possess operational hypersonic weapons.  

The strike on Iranian leadership did not involve a hypersonic missile.  

Iran’s Fattah‑2 is used by Iran, not against Iran.

If you want, I can also explain:

What weapon was likely used in the strike

How hypersonic weapons differ from ballistic missiles

Why Iran’s Fattah‑2 is controversial in Western analysis

                                                          *     *     *

Footage Shows Moments Iranian Fattah-2 Hypersonic Glide Vehicle Strikes Fortified Israeli Command Centre: High Level Casualties Reported

Thursday, April 9, 2026

T_Lock

 The Artemis ll mission will end tomorrow, when the astronauts splash down near

San Diego. Below, the NASA site on their journey:

nasa.gov

                                                                *     *     *

Here, a never before seen by humans view, and a great picture. I had it up as my computer

background, but this morning I changed back to a solid pale color. Just too powerful. One astronaut

said it: 'We are now a two-planet species!'

                                                                             


*     *     *
Chatting with Copilot:

ROTATION

Why do planets rotate on themselves?

Planets rotate on themselves because they inherit spin from the swirling cloud of gas and dust that formed the solar system, and nothing in space really stops that spin. The core idea is the conservation of angular momentum, a physical law that keeps rotation going unless something actively slows it. 

🌌 Why planets start spinning in the first place
When the solar system was forming, everything began inside a giant, slightly rotating cloud of gas and dust called the solar nebula. Even a tiny initial swirl matters:

As the cloud collapsed under gravity, it shrank.

When something shrinks while rotating, it spins faster — the same way a figure skater spins faster when pulling in their arms.

This process amplified the nebula’s rotation dramatically.

The collapsing cloud flattened into a rotating disk, and planets formed inside this disk.

The forming planets inherited that rotation. 

🔁 Why planets keep spinning
Once a planet is spinning, it tends to stay spinning because:

Space is almost a perfect vacuum.

There’s no air resistance or friction to slow it down.

So the rotation continues for billions of years.

Only small effects — like tidal forces from moons or the Sun — gradually slow a planet’s rotation over immense timescales. For example, Earth’s day is getting a tiny bit longer every century. 

🌍 Why some planets spin strangely
Not all planets rotate the same way:

Venus spins backward (retrograde).

Uranus spins on its side.

These oddities are likely due to massive collisions early in the solar system’s history that altered their original spin. 

🧭 The essence
Planets rotate because they were born from a rotating system, and physics keeps that rotation going.  
Angular momentum is the key: once you have it, you keep it unless something takes it away.

If you want, I can also explain this using visuals, equations, or a step‑by‑step physical model — whichever helps you build the intuition you’re aiming for.


So how did the Moon end up in tidal lock?

The Moon became tidally locked to Earth because gravity stole its rotation energy over billions of years until the Moon’s spin slowed enough that one rotation took exactly the same time as one orbit. After that point, the same side always faced Earth — and it became locked.

Here’s the full, intuitive picture.

🌕 1. The Moon did not start tidally locked
When the Moon first formed (likely from the giant impact that created the Earth–Moon system), it was:

much closer to Earth
spinning much faster
still molten or partially molten
So originally, the Moon did rotate freely.

🌊 2. Earth’s gravity raised “tidal bulges” on the Moon
Just like the Moon raises tides on Earth, Earth raised huge tidal bulges on the young Moon.

But because the Moon was rotating, those bulges were not perfectly aligned with Earth — they were dragged slightly ahead by the Moon’s spin.

This misalignment is the key.

🔧 3. Gravity pulled on those misaligned bulges
Earth’s gravity tried to pull the bulges back into alignment.

That gravitational tug acted like a brake on the Moon’s rotation.
The bulges tried to “snap back” toward Earth
That created torque
Torque slowed the Moon’s spin

This is the same mechanism that slows Earth’s rotation today (our days get ~1.7 milliseconds longer per century).

🕰️ 4. Over millions of years, the Moon’s rotation slowed
As the Moon’s spin slowed, the tidal bulges became less misaligned.

Eventually the rotation period matched the orbital period:

𝑇 rotation = 𝑇 orbit
At that moment, the bulges lined up perfectly with Earth.

🔒 5. Once aligned, the system “locked”
When the bulges aligned, the torque dropped to zero.

No more braking
No more change in rotation
The Moon became tidally locked
This is a stable configuration — if the Moon tried to rotate faster or slower, gravity would pull it back.

🌌 6. Why this happens so often
Tidal locking is extremely common in the universe because:

Gravity always tries to minimize energy
Locking is the lowest‑energy configuration
Over long enough timescales, almost all close moons become locked
In our solar system, almost every major moon is tidally locked to its planet.

🧠 The essence
The Moon is tidally locked because:

Earth’s gravity raised tidal bulges on the Moon → those bulges created torque → torque slowed the Moon’s rotation → rotation matched the orbit → locking became permanent.

If you want, I can also show:

a step‑by‑step physical model
a diagram of the tidal bulges
the equations for tidal torque
a simulation using Python
Which direction do you want to explore next?


GRAVITY

From a chemical point of view, what is gravitational attraction?

How is the mass of an object determined?

How are general relativity and quantum mechanics incompatible?

If the universe is expanding, how come I weigh the same on my scale every morning?

How does dark energy drive expansion?

                                                          *     *     *
Read the Wikipedia page on Gravity in Farsi:






Wednesday, April 8, 2026

This_and_That

 Chatted with Perplexity Ai in this and that:


What is going on in the Iranian War: is it drones attacking missiles or missiles attacking drones?

Iran is primarily launching missiles and drones at Israel, the US, and allies like the UAE and Kuwait. It's not drones attacking missiles—rather, Iranian missiles and drones are the aggressors, intercepted by air defenses from Israel/US/UAE.

Current Status

The "Iranian War" (ongoing since late February 2026, now ~40 days in) features Iran firing ballistic/hypersonic missiles (e.g., Fattah, Qadr) and explosive drones in salvos at Israeli cities, US bases, and Gulf states. Attacks peaked early but dropped 80-90% due to US/Israeli strikes destroying ~75% of Iranian launchers and stockpiles.

Key Tactics

Iran uses combined missile barrages (300+ at Israel by day 10, many with cluster munitions) plus 2,000+ drones to overwhelm defenses.

Defenses (e.g., UAE intercepts) down most; Iran downed some US/Israeli drones (e.g., Hermes 900, MQ-9 Reaper).

No major reports of Iranian drones specifically targeting enemy missiles—focus is offensive strikes on infrastructure.

Recent Developments

Fragile ceasefires broke with April 7-8 strikes on UAE/Kuwait (missiles/drones intercepted). US hit 8,000+ Iranian targets; Iran preserves arsenal for guerrilla-style attacks.


And what does Iran do to defend itself from American and Israeli attacks?

Iran relies on asymmetric defense strategies rather than matching US/Israeli firepower directly, emphasizing layered air defenses, proxies, and attrition tactics.

Air Defense Systems

Iran deploys indigenous systems like Bavar-373 (S-300 equivalent, 200+ km range), Sayyad-3 missiles on Khordad-15 platforms (150 km range, anti-stealth claims), and shorter-range Raad/Khordad-3 units. These aim to intercept jets, drones, and missiles but have suffered heavy losses (e.g., all S-300s destroyed); survivors focus on protecting key sites via mobile, dispersed launchers.

Proxy and Asymmetric Warfare

Primary defense involves Hezbollah, Houthis, and militias attacking on multiple fronts to dilute strikes; over 5,600 drone/missile swarms deplete enemy interceptors. Cyber ops, nuclear threats, and "decentralized mosaic defense" ensure command survives decapitation.

Effectiveness

Success is mixed—endurance-focused, absorbing ~8,000 US strikes while retaliating, but defenses overwhelmed by saturation attacks and EW; strategy prioritizes survival over victory.


But they are still standing despite massive attacks...

Yes, Iran remains operational and resilient despite enduring thousands of US and Israeli strikes since late February 2026. Its survival stems from a deliberate "asymmetric endurance" strategy prioritizing long-term attrition over symmetric defense.

Key Resilience Factors

Iran's decentralized command, hardened underground missile sites, and domestic production of cheap drones/missiles allow sustained retaliation without full collapse. Pro-regime rallies and societal cohesion have held, defying predictions of internal uprising amid fuel shortages and 1,255+ deaths.

Limits Exposed

While standing, Iran's air defenses are depleted (e.g., S-300s gone), attacks reduced 80-90%, and economy strained by Trump’s Hormuz deadline. Strategy buys time but risks exhaustion if strikes intensify.


What are predictions for the war's outcome in 2026?

Predictions for the 2026 Iranian War's outcome remain highly uncertain, with analysts split between prolonged stalemate, Iranian regime survival via attrition, or decisive weakening under sustained US/Israeli pressure.

Stalemate Scenarios

Most forecasts see no quick victory: Iran's decentralized defenses and proxy networks enable endurance, potentially dragging into late 2026 or beyond as US faces domestic limits (e.g., Trump’s Hormuz deadline) and Israel deals with multi-front strain. A ceasefire could emerge if Iran's retaliation drops further (already 80-90% reduced).

Collapse Risks

Some predict regime fracture by mid-2026 from economic implosion, internal unrest, and targeted strikes on leadership/fuel infrastructure, though resilience has defied this so far (1,255+ deaths, no uprisings).

Optimistic Views

Endurance strategy succeeds if Iran outlasts coalition unity; proxy escalations or nuclear signaling might force negotiations.


In Ukraine, is it drones attacking missiles?

No, it's predominantly missiles and drones attacking targets, not drones attacking missiles in Ukraine. Russia launches massive barrages of Shahed drones alongside ballistic/cruise missiles to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses and strike infrastructure like power grids and cities.

Main Attack Pattern

Russian forces fire hundreds of cheap drones (e.g., 500-800 per wave) with 10-50 missiles to saturate defenses; Ukraine intercepts most but suffers hits on energy sites. Ukrainian drones counterattack Russian positions, oil depots, and factories, but rarely target incoming missiles directly.

Defensive Reality

Ukraine's Patriot/Western systems down ~80% of threats; no widespread "drone-vs-missile" intercepts reported—focus is on anti-air missiles vs. drones/missiles. FPV drones excel at ground strikes, not mid-air missile hunts.


So both Ukraine and Iran are using drones as attacks vessels!?

Yes, both Russia in Ukraine and Iran use drones primarily as attack vessels. These are loitering munitions like Russia's Shaheds and Iran's low-cost swarms, launched in massive waves to strike infrastructure, cities, and military targets while overwhelming defenses.

Ukraine Context

Russia deploys 100-800 drones nightly alongside missiles against power grids, markets, and rail hubs—e.g., recent Nikopol strike killed 5. Ukraine retaliates with its own FPV/long-range drones on Russian oil and factories, but incoming threats are mostly Russian drones/missiles.

Iran Context

Iran fires thousands of drones (plus missiles) at Israel, UAE, Kuwait, and US bases, hitting airports, ships in Hormuz, and energy sites. Over 5,400 projectiles since February, with drones comprising ~90% against Gulf states for saturation effect.

Shared Tactic

Drones' affordability enables attrition warfare: cheap to produce, hard to fully intercept, forcing enemies to burn expensive missiles (e.g., Patriot rounds).


Then it is Russia and Iran that attack with inexpensive drones. I have seen on TikTok that Iran and Russia might have an arms corridor running through the Caspian Sea, where there is no Western presence. Is that the case??

Yes, TikTok is spot-on: Russia and Iran operate a bidirectional arms corridor via the Caspian Sea, free of Western naval interference. It's a sanctions-proof logistics lifeline moving drones, ammo, missiles, and tech both ways—from Iranian ports like Anzali to Russian hubs like Astrakhan.

Route Mechanics

Ships and ferries (capacity 5M+ tons/year) shuttle 300,000+ shells, millions of rounds, Shahed drone parts, and Su-35 spares across this landlocked sea. Cargo often ghosts transponders; Volga-Don Canal and rails feed it into war zones. Recent shifts: Russia now sends AA systems (e.g., Verba missiles) back to Iran amid its war.

Strategic Edge

No NATO ships can touch it—pure sovereign waters of Russia, Iran, Azerbaijan (pressured to stay neutral). Ukraine/Israel have hit ships, but flow persists, fueling both nations' drone offensives.


Thus forces might be more balanced than they appear...

Yes, the Caspian arms corridor significantly balances the scales for Russia and Iran, making their drone offensives more sustainable than raw firepower suggests. This secure logistics link sustains cheap drone/missile production despite sanctions and strikes, enabling attrition against better-equipped foes.

Logistical Edge

Bidirectional flow—300K+ Iranian shells northbound historically, now Russian AA systems (Verba missiles), Su-35 parts, and upgraded "Geran-2" drones southbound—handles 5M+ tons/year via untrackable "dark ships" from Anzali to Astrakhan. No Western interdiction possible in sovereign waters.

Strategic Impact

It offsets losses (Iran's factories hit, Russia's sanctions), fueling endless Shahed swarms in Ukraine/Iran wars. Israel struck the route (Bandar Anzali, March 2026), but flow persists, prolonging conflicts via asymmetric volume over tech superiority.


Follow-ups

How have Israeli strikes affected the Caspian arms corridor

What anti-aircraft systems is Russia delivering to Iran

Impact of Geran-2 drones on Iranian defenses

Could the Caspian Sea become a direct war zone

How do sanctions affect Russia-Iran arms shipments

                                                   *     *     *

https://youtu.be/1OvukamiV0Y?si=ti3mqTVI8c1JrFN6

Going_Forward

 The Great Satan has agreed to a ten-day cease-fire with Iran, in return for 

letting traffic through thre Straight of Hormuz. Good work by both sides.


Before being invaded by Arab Muslims and coerced into Islam, Persia did

have its own religious tradition. Ahura Mazda, the Lord of Wisdom was the creator

deity and oriented one to 'good thoughts', 'good deeds', 'good actions'. Ahriman

was the force of deceit leading one to greed, deceit and evil actions. This was

not an Abrahamic religion, although Islam is.


So what is the difference!? Abrahamic religions are religions of conscience. 

The Persian religion of the time was one of right living...Indeed, it feeds into

Hinduism.


Regime change is a pretty big order for Iran. Their neighbors are Arabs and the Straight

of Hormuz problem is really about letting Arab gas through. Let us hope Western demands

remain pragmatic and reasonable...