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Space Science

Beagle II Successfully Separates 369

Control42 writes "After the long journey out, it seems that little Beagle II, the lander of the Mars express mission has successfully separated. If all goes well, the lander should touch down on Christmas Day. Seems that NASA has actually lost the edge in robotic space exploration." Reader chalker writes "In order to build public interest in the Mars Exploration Rovers 2004 missions landing in January, NASA has released a series of movie trailers (Flash enabled page, Windows Media and Quicktime formats) for what they are calling "M2K4". They contain quite amazing animations of the landings, as well as a professional artistic style typically seen in action movie trailers. Additional videos on the launch, cruise, and landing challenges can be found at the JPL based mission site."
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Beagle II Successfully Separates

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:00AM (#7763404)
    I, for one, welcome our new British overlords.
    • Geez. The Martians will be drinking gallons (excuse me... liters) of tea and endless, mind-numbing rounds of cricket will be the official planetary sport by the time the first civilian colony opens.

      On the plus side, everyone will speak really really good English, even the Martian prostitutes.

      • excuse me... liters

        And that'll be litres, then.

        ;-)

      • by aldoman ( 670791 )
        Ugh. I've lived in England for 15 years now, and the one thing that I know is that 70% of British people speak almost undecipherable English - the accents are very heavy in most (especially) northern palces. In Inner city areas, you would have problems understanding how much a newspaper costs. That's how bad the dialects are - it makes a good ol' Southern accent seem like a tiny difference.
  • Congratulations. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by I don't want to spen ( 638810 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:00AM (#7763408) Journal
    Of course, the ESA has the immense advantage over NASA that everyone uses SI units, rather than a mixture of metric and imperial ;-)
    Still, its a long way down for Beagle 2 - hope it succeeds.
    • You forget. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by maroberts ( 15852 )
      Lots of British hold lovingly to their pounds, gallons and miles per hour.

      Even the documentation I saw used non-SI units, so the possibility of a screw up still exists.
      • British scientists would not be quite so stupid.
        SI units have been staple school fare for years.
      • Re:You forget. (Score:3, Informative)

        Well our currency (Pounds Sterling) was metricised in the 1970's. 100 pence = 1 GBP.

        Petrol has been sold in litres for about 10 years.

        Metric units have been taught for years (30+?) in schools.

        Our national mapping agency, the OS, produce maps with grids in metres or kilometres.

        Everything apart from the road network is marked up in metric form. We still use miles for the road network though.

    • Not that again! -5:utter, tired lameness. RTFFRB. [nasa.gov]

    • Re:Congratulations. (Score:3, Informative)

      by robsimmon ( 462689 )
      Curious -

      NASA officially uses SI units. It's the contractors who still use antiquated units.
  • M2K4 ? (Score:4, Funny)

    by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:01AM (#7763418)


    Only 5 generations 'til we get to the R2 series!

  • Hope (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Cujo ( 19106 ) * on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:02AM (#7763426) Homepage Journal

    It's probably too much to hope that we'll learn as much from the voyage of Beagle 2 as from that of Beagle 1, but that is my hope that goes with it.

    More realistically,just some good data that further constrains any theories about Martian life.

  • by Lipongo ( 704267 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:02AM (#7763428) Homepage
    See the Mars robot scrape up soil samples. Watch it analyse the atmosphere. Be awed by the movement over harsh landscape.

    Welcome to Mars!
  • Lost the Edge? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:02AM (#7763433)
    Uhh, NASA has already been to Mars, multiple times.
  • by zeroclip ( 700917 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:03AM (#7763436)
    for those of us that dosen't like to view the movies in our browsers. http://anon.nasa-global.speedera.net/anon.nasa-glo bal/M2K4/God_high.mov http://anon.nasa-global.speedera.net/anon.nasa-glo bal/M2K4/water_high.mov http://anon.nasa-global.speedera.net/anon.nasa-glo bal/M2K4/Sixminutes_high.mov
  • What edge? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bill, Shooter of Bul ( 629286 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:03AM (#7763438) Journal
    So Esa has one probe and Nasa has two. Therefore Nasa is behind?
    • by azzy ( 86427 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:09AM (#7763495) Journal
      Yeah.. 'cause Beagle 2 will be playing Blur [bbc.co.uk] tunes when it lands... it's hip and cool!
    • ESA has two as well - the part of Beagle that's going to land, and the part that's staying in orbit :-)
    • Re:What edge? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by zeux ( 129034 ) *
      And why is everybody always looking at space exploration as 'a race' or a 'competition' ?

      What about trying to make an international Mars mission ?

      I know that maybe ISS is not very useful, but it certainly is a success in terms of engineering and many countries took part in it.

      What about doing the same for Mars ?
      • If it isn't 'a race' or a 'competition', taxpayers (or party leaders in Communist countries) start asking why should they keep paying for it.

        Also, the scientist and engineers working on the actual stuff are much more likely to "go the extra mile" (or 1.609344 kilometers if working for ESA) if there's a feeling of competition.
        • Going to Space as itself IS a competition for all Mankind. No need to fight with other countries if you need competition its already there.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:04AM (#7763443)
    Why do you still have to think in terms of "losing edges"? The Mars Express mission will cooperate with NASA's "Mars Odyssey" to relay data back to earth. Competition is good, cooperation is better.
  • I did that. (Score:5, Funny)

    by presearch ( 214913 ) * on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:05AM (#7763451)
    Once, I had to get two beagles to seperate by spraying them with a garden hose.
  • In order to build public interest in the Mars Exploration Rovers 2004 missions landing in January, NASA has released a series of movie trailers (Flash enabled page, Windows Media and Quicktime formats) for what they are calling "M2K4".

    If the movie is anything like the trailer, this is gonna be the most anticipated movie event ever!

  • two-leg match (Score:3, Interesting)

    by BobTheLawyer ( 692026 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:05AM (#7763457)
    is it childish of me to giggle at how many Americans must be mystified by the great football (as in soccer) analogy?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:06AM (#7763461)

    what would happen ? would there be a sudden roar of disbelief or would there be a "god created life there too" statement made, of course we havent decided what consitutes life yet (from our tiny perspective), can silicon or alternativ chemicals have life ? is life just a product of complexity or can simple systems have it too ? does it have to be carbon based ?

  • Best of British (Score:5, Interesting)

    by fruey ( 563914 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:06AM (#7763465) Homepage Journal
    What I find so amazing about this (national pride aside) is that the budget is so low, and yet the science done on this mission is allegedly more complex and thorough, quoting from the Yahoo news story I just read "It will be far cheaper and contain far more science than either of the two U.S. Martian rovers that will be landed from Mars Odyssey in January."

    How is this so? Why are the US projects so much more expensive?

    • Re:Best of British (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Gumshoe ( 191490 )
      Why are the US projects so much more expensive?


      NASA spent a shedload of money developing vehicles that can navigate the Martian terrain. This will be needed for future missions I'm certain but I don't understand why they have implemented it this early. At this stage of the game, one region of Martian terrain will be just as interesting as any other region. Why bother scooting off to "that rock over there" when "the one right next me" is just as scientifically useful?
      • Re:Best of British (Score:3, Interesting)

        by jridley ( 9305 )
        one region of Martian terrain will be just as interesting as any other region

        Uhh, no. I went to a talk a few months ago by a planetary scientist where she talked about site selection. There was a LOT of argument about it. Mission parameters (direct-to-Mars crash landing mode) limited touchdown sites to somewhere around the equator, but there was still a lot of choice.

        The two sites look very interesting. One is a plain where there appears to be a lot of hematite, which we believe is formed primarily b
    • by zeux ( 129034 ) * on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:35AM (#7763742)
      ... you tend to waste it.

      NASA as a weak budget but it was used to very big fundings during the cold war.

      In Europ space has never been a top priority and fundings have always been really limited. When you have less you try to optimize everything and you tend to do better for cheaper.

      Look at the Pathfinder mission with Sojourner. It was a Nasa mission but a mission without a very big funding. It was a tremendous success.
      • by JanneM ( 7445 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:58AM (#7763974) Homepage
        Actually a different budget constraint ended up pushing NASA ahead; in the early sixties, the russian rockets were way more powerful than the american ones, so very tight weight and size constraints forced the american efforts to focus much harder on miniaturization. This, in the end, proved to be a much more effective edge than bigger launch vehicles.

        I hate to say this (as I am a scientist myself, and appreciate funding as much as the next guy), but constraints are in many cases a great motivator and focusing lens on what is truly important. With a nearly unlimited monetary/time/resource-budget, you'd likely waste most of it on nonessentials; in many cases perhaps the essentials would never even be identified, but lost in the sea of nice-to-haves.

        Naturally, the above does in no way affect my particular work, which is always essential and topical, so please do not hesitate to send me lots of money, ok? :)

    • Wait until after it has made a successful landing and becomes operational. It can be difficult to compare budgets. Development costs can be cut if you are willing to do less testing and accept higher risks. Is the supporting infrastructure "free" or is it charged to the project? Are major components being scrounged from other projects or are they being designed and built from scratch? Who is paying for the data acquisition, archiving, reduction, distribution and analysis? How much of the work is being done
    • NASA has not kept pace with the latest American management practices. They still use overpriced local labor resources.

      They should be outsourcing the entire project to Indian companies.

    • Re:Best of British (Score:4, Interesting)

      by BuilderBob ( 661749 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @10:07AM (#7764084)

      The answer is possibly related to the Scientists involved.

      The Spirit and Opportunity landers may have been made by experienced scientists in scientifically clean labs and using wind tunnels designed for the military.

      Beagle2 (not the Mars Express Orbiter) was cobbled together with pop groups and artists. There's a picture of the project PI (Collin Pillinger) pushing Beagle2 on a shopping trolley. This wasn't a "let's play up the low price tag" PR photograph. He really was transporting the lander on a shopping trolley.

      There is then the technical complications. NASA have built two remote controlled sem-autonomous rovers, they have been designed to move about on terrain which has never been seen (from the ground) before. The Sojourner rover from the 90s did very little science because it was mostly wheels and batteries. The only thing I remember from the Sojourner mission is a rock named Yogi [astronet.ru].

      The thing that separates the two missions is really only the PR. NASA tried to get the fancy rover factor that worked well with Sojourner, and even borrowed a few tricks from Beagle2 in their "were using musical tones to represent spacecraft state".

      Beagle2, on the other hand, has a PI who can get people to work for free with the promise of fame (and fortune?). using an artist to paint a spotted calibration plate for the spectrometers/cameras which a scientist would have otherwise done. Using a pop group to play the "mission success" tune on landing (which, I have no doubt, will come through in crystal clear surround sound in the Lander Mission Control).

      Going to Mars is expensive, Beagle2 was only cheap because a 300 million Euro orbiter was going that way anyway. Venus Express is recycling the Mars Express engineering models (and will be cheap).

      It also has less than 1 in 3 chance of success (3 out of the last 5 failed). Nozomi is dead. 100 million USD [nasa.gov] doesn't buy what it used to.

      BB
      • Re:Best of British (Score:3, Informative)

        by T-Punkt ( 90023 )
        > The Sojourner rover from the 90s did very little science because it was mostly wheels and batteries.

        I disagree, it did carry a simple but sophisticated instruments that has been used on foreign soil so far, the Alpha Proton X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS). The wheels and batteries and solar panel where just build around that instrument to make it mobile since it hat to be placed directly on the surface of the material (rock, dust) you want to investigate.

        I guess the reason you don't remember anything about
      • pushing Beagle2 on a shopping trolley. This wasn't a "let's play up the low price tag" PR photograph. He really was transporting the lander on a shopping trolley

        It may have been a genuine photo, however he would have been pushing a shell or one of the mock-ups used for assembly testing. The actual lander itself was assembled in an Aseptic Assembly Facility (aka "clean room"), and transported to the launch site by truck on a sealed container. This container was about 2-3m on each side, and lifted into th
  • Bleh. (Score:2, Funny)

    by clifgriffin ( 676199 )
    NASA hasn't lost its edge, it just has a different focus.
    • PR

      The US probes are fancy and will make good press as the roll about, but in terms of actual science, the Beagle probe is way ahead.
      • The US probes are fancy and will make good press as the roll about, but in terms of actual science, the Beagle probe is way ahead.
        Uh huh. And your authoritative opinion on this derives from where?
  • trailers (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Lord_Dweomer ( 648696 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:09AM (#7763494) Homepage
    "They contain quite amazing animations of the landings, as well as a professional artistic style typically seen in action movie trailers."

    Anybody else read that and get kind of disappointed? I mean...I guess it would make it slightly more interesting, but EVERYBODY these days is turning things into action movie trailers. Hell, the whole "War on Terror" on the news seemed like a bunch of teasers and trailers for a big upcoming blockbuster (no pun intended).

    I know they're trying to reach a broader audience, and I know they have to compete with Hollywood, but if they need to sink to the level of an action movie trailer to make science interesting then I think we are in trouble.

  • by Chitlenz ( 184283 ) <chitlenz.chitlenz@com> on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:10AM (#7763503) Homepage
    That a government agency needs marketing and promotional materials? Maybe the x-prize or the Chinese advancements will finally get people back into the 'space' mindset again. We've kind of lost the forward thinking momentum of the first shuttle and moon mission launches where EVERYTHING in America stopped to watch it happen.
  • by mj01nir ( 153067 ) * on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:13AM (#7763533)
    British-made spacecraft? Damn, that's gonna be impossible to find parts for.
  • Webcast (Score:4, Informative)

    by MagPulse ( 316 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:19AM (#7763579)
    Here's the Mars Express Webcast [capcave.com]. They talk about the training missions they went through and some of the science they'll be doing while they get telemetry in about how the separation was going.

    And the post doesn't make clear that this is all EESA, the Beagle has nothing to do with NASA or its probes.
    • by EricTheRed ( 5613 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:27AM (#7763658) Homepage
      Beagle 2 wasn't funded by ESA either, they just piggybacked for the trip.

      There was a lot of publicity by the Beagle 2 team over the last few years to get the funding. The UK government only put in (I think) 2 million after they had the promise of other institutions would pay up (and I'm not sure they have got the money back yet).

      The mission is almost entirely privately paid for.

      The only link with NASA is that they will be relaying the first signal to see if it landed ok, and ESA agreed to allow Express to be used as a relay for NASA's rovers.
  • by H8X55 ( 650339 ) <jason.r.thomasNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:20AM (#7763593) Homepage Journal
    "After the long journey out, it seems that little Beagle II, the lander of the Mars express mission has successfully separated. If all goes well, the lander should touch down on Christmas Day."

    Awwww, how cute, we gave Mars an Aibo for Christmas...
  • by EricTheRed ( 5613 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:22AM (#7763607) Homepage
    I've just seen the first picture taken by Mars Express of Beagle 2 just after it separated.

    I think this is the first time a spacecraft has taken a picture of another outside of earth orbit (ie the only previous ones are manned missions in either Earth or Lunar orbit).
    • You havn't by any chance an URL ? Or are they not
      published yet ?
      • You havn't by any chance an URL ? Or are they not published yet ?

        You can find it here [beagle2.com].

        The bright spot on the left-hand side of this picture is the back side of Beagle 2, slowly drifting away from Mars Express. This image, taken this morning (19-Dec-2003) at 9:33 CET, shows the lander when it was about 20 metres away from the mother spacecraft, on its way to Mars. - ESA, 19 Dec. 2003

        Al.

  • Separation pic (Score:4, Informative)

    by mlush ( 620447 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:24AM (#7763635)

    Here is a link to the seperation picture [beagle2.com] of Beagle 2 taken by Mars Express

    • Thanks for the link, but really, that's the most boring space picture I have ever seen. the caption begins:

      The bright spot on the left-hand side of this picture is the back side of Beagle 2

      It's not hard to spot, because there's nothing else in the picture apart from a fuzzy white dot.
      I have no idea how this could be of any interest to anybody other than maybe the engineers who know beagle 2 well enough that they might, maybe, be able to get some useful data from it.
  • The BBC's Take... (Score:4, Informative)

    by merikus ( 722704 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:30AM (#7763693)
    The BBC has a good summary of the descent, and the mission generally, at "Beagle glides solo towards Mars [bbc.co.uk]."

    A good resource if you had no clue what was going on, like me.

  • ...none of the ESA's member nations use Imperial measurements for much of anything other than selling beer anymore, so there's no conversions for them to screw up.
  • The two NASA probes have rovers.

    Remember: only 1/3 of Mars missions are successful. Does the failure of the Japanese mission (out of power) count in the failure list?
  • by Glock27 ( 446276 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:38AM (#7763763)
    Seems that NASA has actually lost the edge in robotic space exploration.

    Seems to me that we should wait for the probe to actually land, power up, and communicate before we judge how far the EU has caught up.

    With some of the coming propulsion breakthroughs, these missions are just scratching the surface (so to speak;) anyhow.

  • They break their marriage to check out cool new worlds.
  • These movies are stunning. I'd love to see more similar material. This is just what might be needed to get public attention back on Nasa & Space Exploration.

    Love it!
  • These are some awesome videos. Very good work, and a few nice allegations to geekdom, such as the fake MPAA prefix or the catchphrases ("Without risk, there is no reward" - no what does that remind me of? :) )
  • by Hieronymus Howard ( 215725 ) * on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:42AM (#7763808)
    So we're now just waiting for the news that the Beagle has landed.

    HH
  • by pease1 ( 134187 ) <bbunge@ladyandtram p . c om> on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:47AM (#7763851)
    The national pride in this thread is great to read, but if I were a brit, I wouldn't be counting my eggs yet just because the chicken has started to squawk.

    There are still many things that can go wrong; remember the poor record of successful missions to Mars spans all countries... Russian, Soviet, US and now Japanese.

    For one thing, be sure to keep an eye on growing dust storms [nifty.com] on Mars... they appear to be mostly confined to the southern hemisphere now, but that might change... and Beagle 2 is landing at only 11 degrees north.

    We ALL stand to gain from a successful Beagle 2 mission as well as successful NASA missions.

  • NASA's Record (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @09:58AM (#7763966) Journal
    Seems that NASA has actually lost the edge in robotic space exploration.

    Nasa is about to place several landers on mars shortly after beagle. They have landed 3 others on mars already (not including 2 that "landed" :) ). There are 2 orbiting mars taking pix (one of which I have code helping to control the cams). NASA sends up 1 or more robotic missions per year. The beagle is EU's first real robotic mission. Other than the US, only Russia has done and robotic missions. NASA has not lost the edge.

    They have lost their funding for various missions which makes them the same as Russia. They have had politicians control what missions take place (by providing moneys for their own local fat cats).
  • So to give equal time to the creationists, will NASA be required to launch a probe called Eden++ or Turbo Ark?
  • by skywhale ( 664067 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @10:05AM (#7764064)
    Well, maybe not yet. I couldn't wait any longer.. :)
  • by jridley ( 9305 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @10:17AM (#7764185)
    These movies were paid for by NASA, which mean they were paid for by me, and all us taxpayers. How come they're in DRM'd formats? Even if they want to use WMV, fine, but give me an unprotected download link.

    In the past I've borrowed the VHS from a NASA ambassador and encoded it myself, but why should I have to?
  • by mattr ( 78516 ) <`moc.ydobelet' `ta' `rttam'> on Friday December 19, 2003 @10:36AM (#7764417) Homepage Journal
    I hope the spacecraft does well. I also wish it was possible to read an honest science story without the jabs from left field. Lost their edge? This is based on who's historical revisionism?

    Is it rocket science for Slashdot to hire editors who would be considered satisfactory for any other publication to ensure that thousands of people do not have to have a moment of pristine delight spoiled by an editorial policy that rewards knee-jerk jingoism? And how is this even calculated when hours earlier photos were shown from the incredible Spitzer Telescope, which took off from the Cape Canaveral launch facility after being built between the U.S., U.K., and the Netherlands?

    It's a simple backhanded comment like this that obviously makes a lot of people feel like they're being fed shit when they could be spending their energy more productively. Geek editor you are unfortunately thy worst enemy. Poster, keep it in your pants! Slashdot, please quickly hire some talent, dudes!
  • Beagle software (Score:5, Informative)

    by orbitalia ( 470425 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @10:40AM (#7764472) Homepage
    Having been involved with space work a bit the software aspect of the Beagle lander is quite interesting - the reason I know about it is we used the same compiler on the Galileo signal generator project.

    ADA is still very popular amongst the European space companies and agencies (for a good reason I think) and particularly the ADA95 Ravenscar profile which gives a miniscule runtime the actual runtime is only about 4-5k which is pretty good considering that contains everything you need to execute the ADA code including tasking.

    There is another opensource attempt at a ravenscar compiler called openravenscar funded by ESA here - for Sparc and Intel platforms [openravenscar.org]. Ravenscar [dit.upm.es] is basically a profile that removes the more complex features of the ADA languages to give a mathetmatically provable scheduling - so you can always cater for your worst case scenario. Such small executives are neccessary due to the prohibitive cost of rad hard EEPROMs as most missions have some sort of inflight reprogramming requirements. I think they are using the ERC32 processor which again, is an open source processor, along with its replacement LEON, you can even download the vhdl for the Sparc based leon here [gaisler.com]

    Heres hoping Beagle makes it through the Martian atmosphere and takes some pictures of little green men.
  • MER Animation (Score:4, Interesting)

    by captaineo ( 87164 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @12:08PM (#7765667)
    I created all of the animation in these pieces associated with NASA's MER mission.
    The best way to view them is the 9-minute launch-to-landing music video at:

    http://athena.cornell.edu/the_mission/rov_video.ht ml [cornell.edu]

    And downloads including a DVD-spec MPEG-2 stream at:

    http://www.maasdigital.com/gallery.html [maasdigital.com]

    I also made a bunch of new animation for a NOVA documentary, "Mars, Dead or Alive," which will be shown on PBS January 4-6 (the first MER landing is late night Jan. 3).

    The trailers NASA made look neat. Wish they had used our 24p master rather than interlaced video sources though.
  • Mars Express info... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by rlink ( 734168 ) on Friday December 19, 2003 @12:25PM (#7765905)
    There is a US experiment on Mars Express, part of the ASPERA-3 (Analyzer of Space Plasma and Energetic Atoms, http://www.aspera-3.org/) instrument package. I'm a member of the science team for this instrument, and you can see some of my computer simulations of the interaction of energetic space plasmas with the Mars environment at http://www.aspera-3.org/model.pdf.

    Here's an email I got yesterday:

    Dear colleagues,

    We are very close to our target! On Dec. 19 Beagle - 2 will be separated
    and on Dec. 25 Mars Orbit Insertion executed. ESA is going to cover both
    events on live TV on the ESA television and, of course, Internet. Below
    follows a short time table for the main events.

    All times are in CET (Central European Time ) = UT + 1

    December 19
    07:51 go/no-go decision to proceed with Beagle-2 ejection
    08:21 spacecraft slew starts
    08:51 spacecraft slew ends
    09:31 first confirmation of separation

    ESA TV sending
    09:00 - 09:32 approx. (Internet 09:09 - 09:32) First sequence
    11:25 - 11:47 approx. (Internet 11:25 - 11:47) Second sequence
    12:00 - 12:10 approx. (Internet 12:00 - 12:10) Third sequence

    December 24
    21:00 MOI "go / no go"

    December 25
    02:47 MOI execution
    02:50 Beagle 2 landing
    05:15 Beagle 2 contact with Mars Odyssey

    I will inform you about exact times of ESA TV live sending for December
    25 later.

    The permanent ESA channel:
    Astra 2C at 19 degrees East
    Transponder 57, horizontal, MPEG-2, MCPC
    Frequency 10832 MHz, Symbol Rate 22000 MS/sec, FEC=5/6
    Service name: ESA TV

    Merry Christmas,
    Stas

    and another one ...

    Check out ESA's picture of Beagle-2 now
    separated from Mars Express.

    http://www.esa.int/export/esaCP/index.html

    Cheers,
    Rick

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