- published: 15 Feb 2014
- views: 84439
MISTRAM (MISsile TRAjectory Measurement) was a high-resolution tracking system used by the United States Air Force (and later NASA) to provide highly detailed trajectory analysis of rocket launches.
A "classic" ranging system used since the 1960s uses radar to time a radio signal's travel to a target (in this case, the rocket) and back. This technique is accurate to approximately 1%. The accuracy of this technique is limited by the need to create a sharp "pulse" of radio so that the start of the signal can be accurately defined. There are both practical and theoretical limits to the sharpness of the pulse. In addition, the timing of the signals often introduced inaccuracies of its own until the introduction of high precision clocks.
In MISTRAM, this was avoided by broadcasting a continuous signal. The basic system used a ground station located down range from the launch site (at Valkaria, Florida and Eleuthera Island, Bahamas) and a transponder on the vehicle. The tracking station transmitted an X-band carrier signal which the transponder responded to by re-broadcasting it on another (shifted) frequency. By slowly changing the frequency of the carrier broadcast from the station and comparing this with the phase of the signal being returned, ground control could measure the distance to the vehicle very accurately. Even with the analog circuitry used, MISTRAM was accurate to less than 1 km at the distance of the moon.
Beneath the bloody cover I wake up from the virgins’
sexual lust
I can’t wait under the dark while I’m alone
I need to the virgins dark lips to kiss
Inside my hurt I have the lust to the blood and wine
I’m in the coldest land
There is no one just my darkness crows
I’m waiting to see the bodies
Of filthy virgins of the silent moon
The virgin’s blood
Is dark now
Thy need to my
Suffering screams
I have to call
The lusty souls
To my dark
To spill them hurts
I need to
Suffering screams
The filthy witches