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Russia to Search For Life on Europa
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Mon Jan 07, 2008 11:45 AM
from the there-sure-are-none-here dept.
from the there-sure-are-none-here dept.
porkpickle writes "Russia plans to participate in a European mission to investigate Jupiter's moon Europa and search for simple life forms. The head of the Space Research Institute, Lev Zelyony, said a project to explore the giant gaseous planet Jupiter would shortly be included in the program of the European Space Agency (ESA) for the years 2015 to 2025."
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Watch out for monoliths (Score:5, Funny)
Oh wait, that wasn't a documentary was it...
Re:Watch out for monoliths (Score:5, Funny)
At least they can't say they weren't warned.
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We should insist they take Roy Scheider [imdb.com]just because he's earned it.
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But, if they (or whomever) can find life, they'd better hope it's not superior to us. Or, shit WILL really hit the fan.
I'm european and (Score:2, Funny)
Not sure how this fits... (Score:5, Funny)
Everyone knows that in Soviet Russia, mother nature screws you... so that sort of environmentalist talk is uncalled for.
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Hmmm... didn't know Soviet Russians are that kinky.
Please think of the children (Score:3, Funny)
Nasa Needs Outside Competition (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Nasa Needs Outside Competition (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Nasa Needs Outside Competition (Score:5, Funny)
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Err, waitaminute... (Score:5, Interesting)
Forget the Arthur. C. Clarke meme... I'm speaking as in a for-real 'we ain't going there yet' agreement that space-faring nations had agreed to, at least until they can come up with some sort of exploration set-up that can search for life there without risk (or at least an acceptably minimized risk) of contaminating the underlying ocean with Earth-borne bacteria.
I could've sworn that there was something in place to that effect... sort of the same reason why the Russians held off from their efforts to drill all the way down to Lake Vostok [wikipedia.org] in Antarctica.
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The concern is that biological contamination could t
Contamination (Score:5, Interesting)
Everything I've seen so far indicates it will be incredibly difficult and expensive to thoroughly decontaminate a spacecraft in order to ensure that Earth-based organisms don't "piss on the Petri Dish". The Russians are notorious for cutting corners, and their prime motivation for this exercise is political. The chance that they'll spend the extra millions of dollars to ensure the sterility of a Europa lander is non-existent.
I see a serious potential for compromising what appears to be one of the better spots in the solar system to look for extraterrestrial life.
Re:Contamination (Score:4, Insightful)
Even if there wasn't life on Europa before they look for it, there will be once they've found it.
And 10 million years from now, the Europan flibbity-wumpus people will argue with eachother over whether life arose there spontaneously, or was "seeded" from space.
Parent
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Never thought we'd be the I in ID.
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We won't be. We don't qualify.
Now, if you want "Borderline-moronic design", humanity fits the bill just fine.
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Yeah, Challenger and Columbia exploded because they used Russian parts, right?
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Challenger blew up because the launch was decided despite really, really bad conditions for a launch (to cold, too wet weather), because Reagan was about to hold a speech that night, and they wanted to be in it. This is about as Soviet Russian as can be.
Columbia was a matter of time and money. NASA engineers will tell you (of course not officially) that it was bound to happen sooner or later,
Re:Contamination (Score:4, Interesting)
You should really read physicist Richard Feynman's report on the Challenger disaster for an honest analysis of what lead to that orbiter's destruction. There's also a good list of myths about the disaster that's worth reading - for example the belief that Reagan's state of the union had anything to do with the disaster.
Launch officials clearly felt pressure to get the mission off after repeated delays, and they were embarrassed by repeated mockery on the television news of previous scrubs, but the driving factor in their minds seems to have been two shuttle-launched planetary probes. The first ever probes of this kind, they had an unmovable launch window just four months in the future. The persistent rumor that the White House had ordered the flight to proceed in order to spice up President Reagan's scheduled State of the Union address seems based on political motivations, not any direct testimony or other first-hand evidence. Feynman personally checked out the rumor and never found any substantiation. If Challenger's flight had gone according to plan, the crew would have been asleep at the time of Reagan's speech, and no communications links had been set up.
Feynman's Appendix to the Rogers Commission Report on the Space Shuttle Challenger Accident [ralentz.com]
7 myths about the Challenger shuttle disaster [msn.com]
Parent
Re:Contamination (Score:5, Informative)
Now how much you trust those dirty Europeans is a different matter...
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Did you even read what I wrote? I said nothing about whether or not the Russians were good. I said they would cut corners. Cutting corners is what you do to save money, and the Russians are famous for it. They did it early on in the space program, and the only reason you didn't see how many of their projects screwed up is that they weren't exactly forthcoming about their failures. And FYI, they didn't send any "rovers" to Venus. Landers. Not rovers. There's a difference, and not an insignificant one
Finally someone is sane (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Finally someone is sane (Score:5, Informative)
As I recall, a recent NASA study said that they can't do it for under $1 billion (US); actually, I think that they found that they couldn't even do a decent orbiter for under $1.5 billion, let alone a lander or a submarine probe. (Warning! This is only my recollection from presentations 6 months ago.)
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Still, it's an ambitious plan. But am I the only one who's beginning to get sceptical about Russian announcements? Weren't they going to do a sample return mission to Mars' moon Phobos? Weren't they going to do moon rovers? Weren't they going to build their own space station in 2015, when the ISS will be deorbited (not that I think it will be deobited
Am I the only one (Score:2)
Overheard from the spacecraft.... (Score:2)
world largest oil producer hasbucks and smarts (Score:2)
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The first few probably got modded offtopic by mods on a particular strong brand of crack.
How are you gentlemen !! (Score:2)
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Use them in peace.
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After the moon landing, the astronauts were in quarantine for several days just to make sure they didn't accidentally bring back some crazy microbe from the moon
Re:NIH (Score:4, Insightful)
If the life is based on DNA/RNA replication using L-amino acids you might think of contamination or panspermia. On the other hand, if it is based on a completely different chemistry from anything on Earth, you can be pretty sure it's alien. On the gripping hand, if it's somewhere in between, you have to consider all the possibilities including convergent evolution.
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Shouldn't your Soviet Russian overlords welcome you?
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Hi, you must be new here. Welcome to
HG2G (Score:2)
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you're uninformed (Score:2)
It's usually the children of illegal immigrants that are receiving free education, and that's because they are usually US citizens. "Free medical care" doesn't exist per se in the US; what exists is emergency treatment, and that is provided to illegals not to encourage illegal migration, but because we don't want Americans to die in the emergency room because we can't establish whether they are citizens.
now our politicians are talking about amnesty
Talking a