Venus Probe Returns First Images 154
The BBC reports on the first images returned from Venus by the EU probe. From the article: "They show the hothouse planet's south pole from a distance of 206,452km. Mission scientists are already intrigued by a dark 'vortex' feature which can be clearly seen in one image. Venus Express will orbit the planet for about 500 Earth days to study its atmosphere, which is thought to have undergone runaway greenhouse warming." They're offering some high-rez images of the planet at the ESA website.
Whoa (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Whoa (Score:1)
Infact, I expected much better - they "high-rez" looks very grainy, like a bad jpeg.
I hope this first capture isn't going to be indicative of the quality.
Earlier on (when I saw this article) I went looking at the first images from other craft, and one of the more startling comparisons comes from First close-up view of Jupiter from Voyager 1. [nasa.gov]
Even the Mariner images shown on the linked BBC article appear to have grater clarity and detail.
Re:Whoa (Score:2)
It looks like a bad jpeg because that's exactly what it is; the 1024x768 "wallpaper" is only 161kB.
Re:Whoa (Score:2, Interesting)
The image I link to is a smaller gif image yet still contains much more clarity and detail than these deformed images.
They say first impressions count and the person who considered putting up these images instead of clear lower resolution ones needs a talking to.
Re:Whoa (Score:2)
Yes, I was actually trying to agree and expand upon your comment (it seems like it's been longer than normal since I've haven't had any mod points, so it's the best I could do). My apologies if it came across as any kind of disagreement.
Re:Whoa ..yuk (Score:2)
Puns (Score:1)
Notice, I call the physical word, not the mental exercise, puny. Puns are called puny by those that can't make them...
Space (Score:2)
It's definitely an interesting time to be alive...
Re:Nobody Walks! (Score:1)
Isn't it interesting, though, that the earliest private spacecraft have all had the characteristic of being reusable? Oh, wait... that was a condition of the Ansari X-Prize competition, wasn't it?
Re:Whoa (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Whoa (Score:1, Redundant)
well duh (Score:5, Funny)
Oh i dunno.. maybe the avergae temperature being on avg. 890F, for example?
Re:well duh or why Venus is Not Like Earth (Score:1, Troll)
Personally, I think it was a severe lack of Mint Juleps and Long Island Iced Teas.
That and having all one's wooden stir sticks light on fire.
Re:well duh or why Venus is Not Like Earth (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, but we've failed to keep up (Score:2)
Clearly, you have been touched by His noodley appendage.
Re:well duh or why Venus is Not Like Earth (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:1, Flamebait)
Yes but how did it get that way?
Re:well duh (Score:2, Funny)
Re:well duh (Score:1)
Re:well duh (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:3, Informative)
Well, for one thing, Mercury's atmosphere is extremely thin and contains things like sodium and potassium. Venus has a very thick atmosphere which helps keep much of the heat locked in.
Re:well duh (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:well duh (Score:2)
Venus is hot on the surface because of the intense greenhouse effect there. Something caused all of the oceans on Venus to boil off, leading to the current situation. That "something" was mysterious until we discovered that Venus basically doesn't rotate. That makes a huge difference in the amount of water vapor in the air (which is the dominant factor in the greenhouse effec
Re:well duh (Score:2)
The question with Venus is not why is it hot, but where did that atmosphere come from?
Re:well duh (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:4, Funny)
Re:well duh (Score:2)
If only they had a way to capture the methane like we do.
http://www.patentlysilly.com/patent.php?patID=698
Re:well duh (Score:2)
Re:well duh (Score:1)
Well let's see. Women are from Venus. Women are hot. Venus is hot. QED.
(Oh wait, it should be in the reverse order.)
Dept. of Redundancy Dept. (Score:1)
Re:Dept. of Redundancy Dept. (Score:1)
it is perfectly possible to have and average of averages
which is of course what i was referring to
Celsius (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Celsius (Score:2, Funny)
oh yeah? 1381 rankine
Re:Celsius (Score:1)
Re:Celsius (Score:2)
Or to convert it to laymen's terms...
The temperature of Venus is unfuckingbelievably hot.
(Just ask Mercury. I believe he was tasked with taking her temperature.)
Seeing the future of Earth (Score:1, Funny)
Getting back hi-res pictures of Venus under massive global warming
Realizing that this is what Earth might look at if we continue ignoring Global Warming
For everything else, there's Big Oil PetroldollarCard.
Re:Seeing the future of Earth (Score:5, Funny)
There are some people who take the time to learn about our environment. For everyone else, there's Envirobabble.
Re:Seeing the future of Earth (Score:2)
Re:Seeing the future of Earth (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe being 26.7 % [wikipedia.org] closer to the sun helps?
Re:Seeing the future of Earth (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Seeing the future of Earth (Score:2)
Re:Seeing the future of Earth (Score:2)
Re:One More Mastercard: (Score:2)
Vortices (Score:4, Funny)
If only ET would answer the phone, we could call them & ask which direction the water turns when they flush the toilet.
ESA is not a part of the EU (Score:4, Informative)
Obligatory FSM Statement (Score:4, Funny)
A few high-res images? Well, it's a start... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:A few high-res images? Well, it's a start... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, some would regard this outreach work as a waste of money, but it ignores the fact that exploration and research requires trained motivated persons, person who have been exposed to the subject since childhood. Persons who have seen exploration and research as an exciting and compelling profession. This means making the subject accesible to average children and thier parents.
NASA
Re:A few high-res images? Well, it's a start... (Score:2)
According to the copyright note that pops up on their site, the might not used to "state tate or imply the endorsement by ESA or any ESA employee of a commercial product, process or service, or used in any other manner that might mislead." Otherwise: "You may use ESA images or videos for educational or informational purposes. The publicly released ESA images may be reproduced without fee." OK, you have to give E
Re:Difference between NASA and ESA (Score:1)
Re:Difference between NASA and ESA (Score:2)
No taxation without representation! Let history repeat itself!
Re:Difference between NASA and ESA (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry, you're going to have to explain the difference there. NASA is funded by a single government and so has a duty to the public whose money it receives, while ESA is funded by a number of governments, and so doesn't?
I can't say that I really see the difference...
Has it found any chicks? (Score:5, Funny)
The runaway global warming was probably caused by all their yaps going nonstop, a stream of hot air about "doing the dishes," "mowing the lawn," and "come look at this cute house I built in 'The Sims.'"
And, yeah, that dark vortex? That costs $15.99 a month, billed to your credit card under the name "OMFGSONOTPR0N.COM"
Thankfully my wife doesn't read slashdot or I could so get my ass...
Oh dear God -- CLOSE, CLOSE, CLOSE!!!
Re:Has it found any chicks? (Score:2)
Was burning like a silver flame
The summit of Beauty in love
And Venus was her name
REFRAIN:
She's got it yeah, Baby, she's got it
Well, I'm your Venus, I'm your fire
At your desire
Her weapon were her crystal eyes
Making every man mad
Black as the dark night she was
Got what no-one else had... Wa!
REFRAIN
She's got it yeah, Baby, she's got it
Well, I'm your Venus, I'm your fire
At your desire
Re:Has it found any chicks? (Score:1)
Re:Has it found any chicks? (Score:1)
Lucky for you that it's returning images (Score:2)
Otherwise, I was going to destroy the Earth.
It's blocking my view of Venus.
Re:Lucky for you that it's returning images (Score:1, Funny)
Images are fine (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Images are fine (Score:1)
Re:Images are fine (Score:2)
No, it was definitely Venus. I'm 36, and the OP brought back perfect images of Steve Austin being chased around by a big, sloping-sided space probe. The reason it was nearly invincible on Earth was because it was designed to stand up to Venus' harsh conditions.
Re:Images are fine (Score:1)
Re:Images are fine (Score:2)
It's worse than you think. The reason the ESA is only releasing a few selected images is because it found a planet full of people who were so pacified, they were unwilling to do anything about global warming. Eventually they just lay down where they were... forgot to go to work, forgot to breed, forgot to eat...
Except of course, for the 1/10 of 1% of the population that had the opposite effect... and became politicians!
High rez my ass (Score:1)
Re:High rez my ass (Score:1)
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mro/gallery/calibration/
(click on the "full res" link at your own risk!)
Re:High rez my ass (Score:2)
I have an idea! (Score:3, Insightful)
Lets keep burning stuff like oil, and coal, and once that gone lets start chemically freeing carbon from limestone. Im sure at some point. With enough methane added in the mix we too can be like VENUS!
Yay,.
I propose we let our cars all idle..even when we are home! Hey..get involved! Its for America!
Re:I have an idea! (Score:1)
I don't like these image taking satellites (Score:2)
Re:I don't like these image taking satellites (Score:2)
High Res Images (Score:2, Informative)
What's that vortex? (Score:2)
Re:What's that vortex? (Score:2)
Sorry to be pedantic, but the proper adjective (despite what you may have heard on the 6 o'clock news) is Venereal. So what you are talking about is the Venereal greenhouse gas factory.
And don't you dare mod this as funny.
Runaway greenhouse effect? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Runaway greenhouse effect? (Score:2)
Re:Runaway greenhouse effect? (Score:2)
Ozone hole (Score:3, Funny)
Venus Orbit Insertion (Score:2)
Awesome pictures... (Score:2)
Kinda puts things in perspective when you see a vortex that appears to be covering half a planet...
Has to be green house gases (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Has to be green house gases (Score:5, Informative)
Well, let's see
Now, if distance to the Sun is all there is to explain it, someone messed up really bad with our basic knowledge of the Solar System, for Venus is the hottest inner planet and should obviously be the closest to the Sun. No way it could be about twice further from it than Mercury.
Also, could you please enlighten us how can it be that the temperature difference between night and day on Venus is so small in spite of the rotation period being about 243 Earth days? wouldn't ~4 Earth-months worth of night be enough to cool that side of the planet? after all, Mercury's day is almost 4 timers shorter than Venus' and the max. temperature is close, but the min temperature on Mercury is low enough for high Tc superconductivity.
Re:Has to be green house gases (Score:2)
Re:Has to be green house gases (Score:5, Interesting)
You've got to be a true red Republican to deny the greenhouse effect on Venus.
If you do the math, since temperature goes as the 1/4 power of the recieved radiation and the recieved radiation goes as the square of the distance, with all else being equal 25% closer gets you about 15% hotter. In other words without a greenhouse effect venus would be about 45C hotter than earth.
If you put the Earth at the location of Venus, the oceans wouldn't boil. Not immediately at least. What would happen is that the evaporation rate would increase which would put more water vapor in the air. Since water vapor is a greenhouse gas that would increase the temperature which would evaporate more water. That's an example of positive feedback. Eventually it would get hot enough for the oceans to boil.
Without the oceans to absorb CO2 and without the life forms in the ocean which take CO2 and turn it into rocks, the CO2 released in volcanos (not to mention the forests catching on fire) stays in the atmosphere where it adds further to the greenhouse effect.
The CO2 and all the water vapor combine to form carbonic acid which increases the weathering of carbonate rocks releasing still more CO2. Meanwhile UV radiation (sunlight) in the upper atmosphere dissociates the water vapor into oxygen and hydrogen. Because it is light, the hydrogen escapes into space. The oxygen oxidizes any unoxidized materials on the surface. If any of those materials contain accessable carbon, you've just released more CO2 and increased the greenhouse effect.
Plate tectonics continues on for a while releasing more CO2 until the point where the water bearing minerals that enable plate tectonics on the Earth have disappeared. Plate tectonics stops. At this point you've got... you guessed it... Venus. Not that you'd be caring. You died long before the oceans started boiling.
This is what would absolutely happen to the Earth if we were to raise its temperature by 45C. What we don't know is where the dividing line is. Maybe it's 25C. Maybe it's 5C. And so we've decided to raise the temperature by 3C in the next 100 years or so.
The main difference between the Earth and Venus isn't the temperature. It's where the CO2 is. In Venus, it's in the atmosphere. On Earth, it's in the rocks. Pour some vinegar on some limestone if you don't think it can come out again. The oceans are already becoming acidic enough to cause difficulties for some shell building organisms....
Re:Has to be green house gases (Score:2)
* ie head-in-the-sands, not
Solution: ?
Escaladin
Any undoctored images? (Score:2)
Re:Earth days? (Score:2, Informative)
A single day on Venus takes 243 of our days.
Re:Earth days? (Score:2, Insightful)
Well then now I am confused. The last sentence of the article asks why the Earth and Venus evolved so differently over the last 4.6 billion years. Are they talking Earth years or Venus years? They didn't specify. Or do you only have to do it once, like the trademark symbol? You know, just use it at the first instance and it's implied for the rest. Is that how it works?
Re:Earth days? (Score:1)
The Earth is 6,000 years old...just which 'year' wasn't explicity stated...so if we use Xena
oh wait, that still a lil short
Re:Earth days? (Score:2)
If you define a day as, say, the time between two sunrises, ie how long it takes the sun to return to the same place in the sky, then Venus' day is (-0.9)-1 = -1.9 days per year according to Fuller's law. -1.9 days/year means that the sun rises in the west. Venus' year is 225 days so it's sunrise
Re:Well, yes. (Score:1)
(I finished your sentence for you.)
Re:Venus 'days' are long ... (Score:3, Informative)
Venus has no "days" or "nights", at least not any perceivable by human beings. If you were standing anywhere on the surface of Venus (ignore for a moment a few minor environmental complications that would make such a tad unpleasant), all you would see was a very murky and very dark twilight with no discernable light-source other than perhaps a very very faint glow from all directions. It would look like this all the time, no matter what time of the "day" or what day o
Re:Europe or something interesting (Score:2, Offtopic)
I'd have a lot more respect for that type of fanatic if they'd just practice what they preach.
Re:Europe or something interesting (Score:1)
Re:Europe or something interesting (Score:1)
Re:Europe or something interesting (Score:2)
Re:Heh-heh... (Score:1)
Re:Heh-heh... (Score:2)
Re:We want more Pics! (Score:2, Funny)