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Space Science

Galileo Nearing Its End 33

Anonymous Coward writes "Mission operations for the Galileo space probe, currently orbiting Jupiter, are scheduled to be shut down at the end of this month. Once a month thereafter scientists will check on the probe until September when the probe will be ordered to crash into Jupiter. The $1.5 billion mission met 70 percent of its science objectives and made a number of serendipitous discoveries along the way -- despite a range of problems."
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Galileo Nearing Its End

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  • Why crach it into jupiter? Why not just send it out there. who knows? Maybe it could attract 'attention'. Of course if the Irken Armada shows up I never said this...

    • I doubt it has the fuel to escape Jupiter.

      They want to crash it so that it won't contaminate one of the moons by accidentally crashing there, possibly releasing earthly microbes.

      That possibility seems like a long shot to me. It also makes me a little sad to see a spacecraft crash, even intentionally, but that's just a sentimental spot I have.

      On the other hand, maybe the Jovian atmosphere will finally open the high gain antenna, if only for a moment. ;-)

      • I hate the thought of crashing too.. I do have strong tendencies to develop emotional attachment to things.. even machines - especially ones that have done what this one has.

        Jupiter is a "gas giant".

        I wonder if it will ever find a solid surface to "land" on, or just sink deeper and deeper into ever higher compressed gases.

        Wasn't Voyager powered by a nuclear-powered thermopile generator? If so, what kind of chance is there that we may ignite Jupiter's compressed core (thermonuclearly speaking). If so, we may have another distant sun in a few months.

    • by Froze ( 398171 ) on Monday February 10, 2003 @06:10PM (#5274341)
      R...T...F...A...

      And I quote
      " Galileo could be allowed to simply remain in orbit, but scientists feared it might collide with Europa and contaminate that body with microbes from Earth, possibly damaging its environment. "

      This is an entirely valid concern, think the andromeda strain only inverted.

      • It would seem to me that there are lower orbits the craft could be put into, where there would be no chance of a crash with the larger moons.

        On the other hand, such an orbit would probably soon decay anyway.

        Any speculation on whether the crash will yield any data that we didn't get from the probe sent into the atmosphere earlier?

      • I just wonder how much we might have "contaminated" already. Dozen of probes have been to Mars and Venus.
        • I just wonder how much we might have "contaminated" already. Dozen of probes have been to Mars and Venus.

          Well, yes. But with Europa, there's some (perhaps miniscule) chance that there could actually be life there...

          According to Nineplanets [nineplanets.org], Europa may be the only body besides Earth that has significan't quantities of water.

        • contaminating venus would be rather interesting.

          If we put stuff on those probes that can withstand an atmosphere of sulpheric acid and temperatures hot enough to boil lead I think we would probably be using them here for research already.
    • ST (Score:5, Funny)

      by QEDog ( 610238 ) on Monday February 10, 2003 @06:50PM (#5274826)
      they have to crash it... haven't you seen the Star Trek movie about Vger?
  • I'm not going to debate cost effectiveness or anything (space science is quite over my head), but it is interesting that 30% of 1.5 billion dollars is 450 million dollars (imagine what I could do with even 1 percent of that...).
    • Re:Expensive. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Monday February 10, 2003 @08:35PM (#5275652)
      > I'm not going to debate cost effectiveness or anything (space science is quite over my head), but it is interesting that 30% of 1.5 billion dollars is 450 million dollars (imagine what I could do with even 1 percent of that...).

      Cheap.

      $1.5B - three shuttle launches to put some ISS modules together. Of the three ISS crew members, 2.5 person-days are required to keep the thing up, leaving one guy able to spend four hours a day... doing very little science.

      $1.5B - plunk a probe into Jupiter's atmosphere, find out what's below the cloud tops, make multiple passes by every moon, and get pictures/magnetometer data of everything around Jupiter and each of its moons. Prove the existence of liquid water beneath Europa, demonstrate a liquid/slush ocean on Callisto, observe volcanoes on Io, and if you're just after pretty pictures, keep in mind that had Galileo's high-gain antenna actually worked, we'd have gotten thousands of times as many pictures as we did.

      Naw, scrap that science stuff. It's only good for a couple of years of billion-dollar pork while it's under construction, but once it's in the air, it's just a few million bucks worth of lousy scientists. Screw that. We need more shuttle/ISS flights, because they're the only things that can keep that gigadollar NASA contractor pork flowing for decades.

  • by devphil ( 51341 ) on Monday February 10, 2003 @06:28PM (#5274533) Homepage


    ...the way my cars usually go. They run and run and run, and eventually start falling apart so fast that I just check on them once every so often, and eventually crash them into something just to finish the damn thing off.

  • by jak0b ( 649446 ) on Monday February 10, 2003 @07:04PM (#5274957)
    I just know that this is going crash into the mayor of Jupiteria's house and start an intergalactic war. (or would that be inter-solarsystemic war?)
  • He's dead, Jim.

  • I'm tired of hearing of all these 'scientific' missions being carried out by robots! We need real people at the controls! That's way more sexy than being able to have multiple probes that can do remote research. After all, who applies for the patent when a miniature front-end loader does all the work?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Gotta make *2010* really happen....perpetual light for mankind...and more tax revenue for California!

All life evolves by the differential survival of replicating entities. -- Dawkins

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