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A McKendree cylinder is a type of hypothetical rotating space habitat originally proposed at NASA's Turning Goals into Reality conference in 2000 by NASA engineer Tom McKendree. [1] Like other space habitat designs, the cylinder would spin to produce artificial gravity by way of centrifugal force.
Production was handled by Bob Britt, Kevin McKendree, and McClinton himself. The album peaked at number 77 on the Billboard Top Album Sales, number 14 on the Americana/Folk Albums, number 70 on the Top Current Album Sales, number 18 on both the Independent Albums and Tastemaker Albums, and number 2 the Blues Albums chart in the United States.
The term space cylinder refers to a space habitat shaped like a cylinder. Types include: Types include: McKendree cylinder , hypothetical rotating space habitat originally proposed in 2000
The related concepts, O'Neill and McKendree cylinders, are both pairs of counter-rotating cylinders containing habitable areas inside and creating 1g on their inner surfaces via centripetal acceleration. The scale of each concept came from estimating the largest 1g cylinder that could be built from steel (O'Neill) or carbon fiber (McKendree ...
Discography is the study and cataloging of published sound recordings, often by specified artists or within identified music genres.The exact information included varies depending on the type and scope of the discography, but a discography entry for a specific recording will often list such details as the names of the artists involved, the time and place of the recording, the title of the ...
Tall, Dark, & Handsome is a studio album by American blues musician Delbert McClinton and his second album with Self-Made Men. It was released on July 26, 2019, through Hot Shot Records with distribution via Thirty Tigers/The Orchard.
Bishop Rings are a common type of habitat in the fictional universe of the Orion's Arm worldbuilding project; [4] their radius varies from as little as 100 km to as much as 1000 km (62–620 mi).
In Matter, Iain M. Banks (2008) [3] depicts a topopolis that loops its system star many times in various braidings, and houses trillions of sapient residents. The topopolis was so massive that stray gases from the system collected within the major spacing within the braids by gravitation alone, producing a slight atmosphere between the strands, that the author describes as a "haze".