Thursday, April 30, 2009
U.S.AIR Force Giant, C-5 Galaxy..
Mission
The gigantic C-5 Galaxy, with its tremendous payload capability, provides the Air Mobility Command airlift in support of United States national defense. The C-5 can carry fully equipped combat-ready military units to any point in the world on short notice and then provide field support required to help sustain the fighting force.
Features
The C-5 is one of the largest aircraft in the world and the largest airlifter in the Air Force inventory. The C-5 can carry more than any other airlifter. It has the ability to carry 36 standard pallets and up to 81 troops simultaneously. The Galaxy also carries all of the Army's air-transportable combat equipment, including such bulky items as its 74-ton mobile scissors bridge from the United States to any theater of combat on the globe. It can also carry outsize and oversize cargo intercontinental ranges and can take off or land in relatively short distances. Ground crews are able to load and off-load the C-5 simultaneously at the front and rear cargo openings, reducing cargo transfer times. Other features of the C-5 are:
• Able to operate on runways 6,000 feet long (1,829 meters)
• Five landing gear totaling 28 wheels to distribute the weight.
• Nose and aft doors that open the full width and height of the cargo compartment to permit faster and easier loading.
• A "kneeling" landing gear system that permits lowering of the parked aircraft so the cargo floor is at truck-bed height or to facilitate vehicle loading and unloading.
• Full width drive-on ramps at each end for loading double rows of vehicles.
• A system that records and analyzes information and detects malfunctions in more than 800 test points.
The C-5 has the distinctive high T-tail, 25-degree wing sweep, and four TF39 turbofan engines mounted on pylons beneath the wings. These engines are rated at 43,000 pounds of thrust each, and weigh 7,900 pounds (3,555 kilograms) each. They have an air intake diameter of more than 8.5 feet (2.6 meters). Each engine pod is nearly 27 feet long (8.2 meters).
The Galaxy has 12 internal wing tanks with a total capacity of 51,150 gallons (194,370 liters) of fuel -- enough to fill 6 1/2 regular size railroad tank cars. A full fuel load weighs 332,500 pounds (150,820 kilograms). A C-5 with a cargo load of 270,000 pounds (122,472 kilograms) can fly 2,150 nautical miles, offload, and fly to a second base 500 nautical miles away from the original destination -- all without aerial refueling. With aerial refueling, the aircraft's range is limited only by crew endurance.
Background
Lockheed-Georgia Co. delivered the first operational Galaxy to the 437th Airlift Wing, Charleston Air Force Base, S.C., in June l970. C-5s are operated by active-duty, Reserve, and Air National Guard crews. They are currently stationed at Dover AFB, Del.; Travis AFB, Calif.; Lackland AFB, Texas; Stewart Air National Guard Base, N.Y.; Martinsburg ANGB, W.V.; Memphis ANGB, Tenn.; Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio and Westover Air Reserve Base, Mass.
In March 1989, the last of 50 C-5B aircraft was added to the 76 C-5As in the Air Force's airlift force structure. The C-5B includes all C-5A improvements as well as more than 100 additional system modifications to improve reliability and maintainability.
Based on a study showing 80 percent of the C-5 airframe service life remaining, AMC began an aggressive program to modernize the C-5. The C-5 Avionics Modernization Program began in 1998 and includes upgrading avionics to Communications, Navigation, Surveillance/Air Traffic Management compliance, improving navigation, communication, and safety equipment, and installing a new autopilot system.
Another part of the modernization plan is a comprehensive Re-engining and Reliability Program, which includes new CF-6 engines, pylons and auxiliary power units, with upgrades to aircraft skin and frame, flight controls, landing gear and the pressurization system. This modernization program will enhance aircraft reliability and maintainability, maintain structural and system integrity, reduce cost of ownership and increase operational capability well into the 21st century.
General Characteristics
Primary Function: Outsize cargo transport
Prime Contractor: Lockheed-Georgia Co.
Power Plant: Four General Electric TF-39 engines
Thrust: 43,000 pounds, each engine
Wingspan: 222.9 feet (67.89 meters)
Length: 247.1 feet (75.3 meters)
Height: 65.1 feet (19.84 meters)
Cargo Compartment: height , 13.5 feet (4.11 meters); width, 19 feet (5.79 meters); length, 143 feet, 9 in (43.8 meters)
Pallet Positions: 36
Maximum Cargo: 270,000 pounds (122,472 kilograms)
Maximum Takeoff Weight: 769,000 pounds (348,818 kilograms) (peacetime), 840,000 pounds (381,024 kilograms) (wartime)
Speed: 518 mph (.77 Mach)
Range: 6,320 nautical miles without air refueling; unlimited with in-flight refueling
Crew: 7 (pilot, co-pilot, two flight engineers and three loadmasters)
Unit Cost: C-5A - $152.8 million (fiscal 1998 constant dollars) C-5B - $179 million (fiscal 1998 constant dollars)
Deployed: C-5A - 1969, C-5B - 1980
Inventory: Total force, 111
Point of Contact
Air Mobility Command, Public Affairs Office; 503 Ward Drive Ste 214, Scott AFB, Ill., 62225-5335, DSN 779-7821 or commercial 618-229-7821.
BIRTH & DEATH OF THE UNIVERSE.....
The Birth and Death of the Universe
About 10 years before the expanding universe was discovered, Albert Einstein provided the theoretical basis for Cosmology with his General Theory of Relativity or "GR". According to GR, Space and Time cannot be separated from each other and the two need to be thought of as intricately linked into a single Space-Time. Even more surprising, Space-Time is not merely the stage on which the drama of physics occurs, it is an actor in that drama. There is a "fabric" of Space-Time that can be bent and stretched. Einstein found that this stretching of Space-Time was related to gravity. Matter and energy gave Space-Time their shape and that shape determined how matter and energy would move. Einstein's theory also allowed physicists and astronomers to create mathematical models of the Universe as a whole including the shape of the entirety of Space-Time. Because GR and the cosmological models it spawned deal with all the Space and Time possible for the Universe, it is a mistake to think of the Big Bang as happening at some point IN space and time. The Big Bang was the expansion of all Space and Time itself. It's a very strange and wonderful idea. With GR, physicists had equations that could describe how the Universe emerged from nearly infinite compression to expand into what we see and live in today. The initial "explosion" came to be called the Big Bang. These equations could describe the evolution of the Universe from the Big Bang all the way into the far future. What will be the fate of the Universe? Will it go on expanding forever? Will the gravitational attraction of all the matter (and energy) in the Universe eventually slow the Universe’s expansion down so much that it will stop expanding and re-collapse in a "Big Crunch"? The answers to these questions depend on the amount of matter (and energy) the Universe contains. Cosmologists express this quantity in terms of the "density parameter" (called Omega). The density parameter is the ratio of two numbers: the actual density of matter and energy in the Universe right now, and the so called critical density of matter and energy where the Universe’s expansion and deceleration are just balanced. Low values of the density parameter (Omega < 1) mean there is not enough matter and energy to slow the Universe down. High values of the density parameter (Omega > 1) mean the gravitational pull of all the matter and energy in Universe will make it re-collapse. A Universe with Omega = 1 will stop expanding but only when time goes to infinity! All this tells us there are many kinds of Universes possible depending on the density of matter and energy (Omega) and the rate of expansion (the Hubble Constant H0). With this cosmology interactive you can see how changing these quantities changes the fate of the Universe.
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