Is Europa Too Prickly To Land On? 140
astroengine writes "A deadly bed of icy javelins — known as penitentes — could be awaiting any spacecraft that tries to land on some parts of the ice-covered world Europa, say researchers who have carefully modeled the ice processes at work on parts of the Jovian moon to detect features beyond the current low resolution images. If the prediction of long vertical blades of ice is correct, it will not only help engineers design a lander to tame or avoid the sabers, but also help explain a couple of nagging mysteries about the strange moon. 'This is a game changer,' said planetary scientist Don Blankenship of the University of Texas in Austin. Blankenship has been involved in NASA's planning process for sending a reconnaissance spacecraft and eventually a lander to Europa."
Re: Hmmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
Unless of course it is ice, in which case you've just made a nice warm bath.
Is this what passes for geekdom these days? (Score:4, Insightful)
I now expect at least Samzenpus (if not every Slashdot editor) to turn in their geek card, in addition to the submitter being banned from all further Slashdot submissions. How on earth (or in space) do you make a reference to landing (or not) on Europa and NOT put in a Clarke reference? What kind of geek are these people?
Re:BOOM!, problem solved. (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't this particular comment fully reflect the opinions of the JCS? Just sorta seems to be their thing.
I'm Not A Rocket Scientist (Score:4, Insightful)