Mars Odyssey Completes Aerobraking 169
Cally writes: "Space.com reports that
Mars Odyssey has
completed aerobraking and is ready to begin its
main science mission. As the spacecraft has already produced exciting results before the start of the science mission proper, interesting data on the quantities of water in the Martian crust may be expected soon - not to mention that Odyssey provides another datapoint in the study of Gamma Ray bursts."
Before it gets slashdotted (Score:2, Informative)
January 11, 2002
MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Mars Odyssey Mission Status
January 11, 2002
Flight controllers for NASA's Mars Odyssey spacecraft sent commands overnight to raise the spacecraft up out of the atmosphere and conclude the aerobraking phase of the mission.
At 12:18 a.m. Pacific time Jan. 11, Odyssey fired its small thrusters for 244 seconds, changing its speed by 20 meters per second (45 miles per hour) and raising its orbit by 85 kilometers (53 miles). The closest point in Odyssey's orbit, called the periapsis, is now 201 kilometers (125 miles) above the surface of Mars. The farthest point in the orbit, called the apoapsis, is at an altitude of 500 kilometers (311 miles). During the next few weeks, flight controllers will refine the orbit until the spacecraft reaches its final mapping altitude, a 400-kilometer (249-mile) circular orbit.
"The successful completion of the aerobraking phase is a major milestone for the project. Aerobraking is the most complex phase of the entire mission and the team came through it without a hitch," said David A. Spencer, Odyssey's mission manager at JPL. "During the next month, we will be reconfiguring the spacecraft to begin the science mapping mission." The science mission is expected to begin in late February.
During the aerobraking phase, Odyssey skimmed through the upper reaches of the martian atmosphere 332 times. By using the atmosphere of Mars to slow down the spacecraft in its orbit rather than firing its engine or thrusters, Odyssey was able to save more than 200 kilograms (440 pounds) of propellant. This reduction in spacecraft weight enabled the mission to be launched on a Delta II 7925 launch vehicle, rather than a larger, more expensive launcher.
JPL manages the 2001 Mars Odyssey mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. Principal investigators at Arizona State University in Tempe, the University of Arizona in Tucson, and NASA's Johnson Space Center, Houston, Texas, operate the science instruments. Additional science investigators are located at the Russian Space Research Institute and Los Alamos National Laboratories. Lockheed Martin Astronautics, Denver, Colo., is the prime contractor for the project, and developed and built the orbiter. Mission operations are conducted jointly from Lockheed Martin and from JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., is providing aerobraking support to JPL's navigation team during mission operations.
Re:Before it gets slashdotted (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Before it gets slashdotted (Score:3, Interesting)
They have their own tap off JPL's isolation router. Coming into our isolation router are quite a few REALLY fat pipes.
Re:Before it gets slashdotted (Score:1)
Sometimes a server get a high load and gets offline for 5 minutes and people already consider it slashdotted. I have seen people that copied an article while I could still access the website. Props to the webmasters and system administrators for handling this situation by fixing bandwith and loading problems.
But, simply 'mirror' a text is not valid for positive karma points. Because you don't need brains to get these points. It's not something that adds up to the discussion. We have a user getting positive karma because he came first.
It's like if we continue with this, one day we might see instead of First Post! comments, something in the line of:
First Mirror!
// Follows text
Re:Dickhead moderators (Score:1)
Re:$3 Crack? (Score:1)
It is redundant because the entire article is in the link provided in the article summary.
Of Course (Score:1)
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:2)
Human colonization is quite unlikely due to the plant being so close to the Sun.
Mars is further from the sun, not closer, than Earth.
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:1)
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:2, Insightful)
Reduced gravity habitats
Alternate farming techniques
etc...
Some of the knowlege gained will help us go further from our home, still others will contribute to our lives here.
Astronauts are "test pilots".
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:3, Interesting)
Some have suggested that we colonize a small part of the sea as a training ground.
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me try to answer my own question:
Mars is a place with resources; there's an atmosphere and useful raw materials are present. You could make livable buildings, air, even grow food -- all you need is enough energy and you can do a lot of things based simply on what we already know is there.
The moon, on the other hand, is relatively barren. Living there would be a lot harder, especially in terms of the no atmosphere thing. You have to bring just about everything you need to the moon, but could live reasonably on Mars just by moving power there and investing a lot of elbow grease, building infrastructure and etc. Potentially, you could make the surface of Mars the second-safest place in the solar system, able to survive even thtough years of zero contact with earth.
Just a thought, though, that it you want *practice*, the moon's probably a better place to start.
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:1)
Someone's been reading Zubrin.
The moon is not a good practice for mars though. One point is on mars one of the major things to make the mission work is you need to produce resources on the surface rocket fuel, air, etc. On the moon there is no way to practice for this. Another point is that the spacecraft/landing craft would not need to be tested on the moon, its easier and a more accurate test to just put the space craft into earth orbit and test it landing on earth.
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:2)
With that being said, lots and lots of real estate that's easier to launch from (in both the surface-to-orbit and extra-solar senses of the words), as well as both known and unknown natural resources. Oh, and no tree-huggers if you want to get industrial up there.
Re:I'm all for exploration... (Score:1)
You are so right. The same could be said for all of science. Just replace the word exploration with science.
Also note .. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Also note .. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Also note .. (Score:2)
Re:Also note .. (Score:2)
Re:Also note .. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Also note .. (Score:2)
With Mars, let's take our time, and put together a mission that has enough people, equipment, and supplies to really accomplish something. That will be far too big to launch in one piece...
Re:Also note .. (Score:1)
The Mars direct Mission calls for a minimal stay of 1.5 years on the Martian surface far greater than the hours spent on the moon in Apollo. With a combustion powered rover which uses fuel produced on mars to allow about 24,000 ground kilometers can be traversed, ranging up to 500 km out from the base. Thus each mission can explore an area of approximately 800,000 square kilometers, which is roughly the size of the state of Texas.
Re:Also note .. (Score:1)
hmmmm... (Score:2, Flamebait)
You know, doesn't this mean that all this other searching for extra-terrestrial intelligence [seti.org] is pretty counter-productive? If there's water right there on Mars, chances are there would be intelligent life there within a few billion years too. (It's the initial part of the thing that takes awhile...once you've got cells, the growth is like, exponential man.)
Instead, we're sending probes up there when we KNOW there's no intelligent life yet. It's like barging into the prenatal ward every few minutes while your wife's about to give birth to say "are you done yet?" Believe me, when she's done, you'll know!
At this rate, within the foreseeable future we'll have groped every planet capable of sustaining life with these stupid probes. Ever consider that under these conditions, intelligent life won't want to evolve? People like to be left in peace (that's why they get all fussy about the anal probes they constantly imagine aliens violating them with)...don't you think other would-be life might feel the same way?
This is not off-topic.
Re:hmmmm... (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't seriously worry about destroying the possible chance of life evolving in a billion years time (not sure how serious the above poster is either), but I *do* worry about contaminating planets and moons before we have the ability to do a detailed examination.
That said.. I'd rather send people there than have it sit in pristine condition. Pretty, but useless.
I'm still sad we don't have a moon base. Oh well, back to Space 1999 reruns...
Re:hmmmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hello: we already douse all probes [google.com] in Dial antibacterial soap first, to make sure we don't give any other planets weird fungi that we later claim were the first life found on other planets! (Sorry I don't have a non-cached link, the page seems to be down.)
That said, as for your: I'd rather send people there than have it sit in pristine condition
Why? What's so good about having people there? I say go after the Earth-based problems, and don't do things like spend three percent of our government's money on a trillion-dollar program just to get humans in a place they aren't very suited for being in the first place. When we've got the luxury of having solved most Earth-based problems, then you go after the extraneous stuff like that. Until then, I'm happy if we just do information-gathering type things: for that, you DON'T need people anywhere but in their office-chairs, except for whoever actually has to slingshot the probes into space. (Or have things changed since then? I might be dating myself here....[in a strictly platonic way, of course.])
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
Differences in people are what cause problems, and if we really want to foster a diverse world, then we're going to have certain world-views that collide.
If everyone was the same, there would be far fewer massive problems than right now. But I don't think most people would want to be like the rest of the world just because it would be a nicer place to live. No, the Muslims and Jews won't convert to Christianity to have a nicer place. The Democrats and Republicans aren't likely to get along just so that the world is nicer. VI and EMacs will never get along. Especially when all the above groups have an ideology to defend.
My opinion:
The only thing we have that could possibly bring us together is to once again have some sense of wonder about what's out there. Every step we take in the universe is a wonder, and if we wait . . . we're likely to be destroyed by our own differences.
Of course, that may be the right answer: make sure we don't infect the universe. That's awfully pessimistic, but it might be true. I just hope that through further exploration our differences even out because we realize that, really, Kashmir is just a little strip of land, and that there is a seemingly infinite amount of everything.
Idyllicly (I know that's probably misspelled), exploring and usage of space will allow us to have the material things that we desire and think we need, so that there are less things to fight about, and thereby solving problems.
Haves versus have-nots. It's all kind of pointless when you see how much is out there, and there is enough for everyone. Three percent of the budget seems rediculously (sp) small for that possibility.
My opinion, I could be wrong. . .
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
Why? What's so good about having people there? I say go after the Earth-based problems, and don't do things like spend three percent of our government's money on a trillion-dollar program just to get humans in a place they aren't very suited for being in the first place. When we've got the luxury of having solved most Earth-based problems, then you go after the extraneous stuff like that.
----
That argument is not valid. When you think about how much money the government blows on stupid crap, who cares about NASA? The world's problems will never be solved, even if we do get rid of NASA. I think the point of not spending money on space because of the problems here is not valid. Applying the same argument to you, I could say you bought that computer with the money you could of used to save 10 people's lives in Somalia. If we cancel NASA because we have problems here on earth, that would just be dumb.
A better place to cut the budget would be the department of defense. Remember that the money they spend on a squadron of stealth bombers is as large as the NASA budget. Things at the DOD could be cut down. Look at Afganistan: We sent just an infestimally small percentage of our air force and we still blew the shit out of them. If we cut DOD spending by a third, we'd still be the most powerful country by far and we'd save hundreds of billions.
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
I would tend to disagree with that point. I think that by far the best way to do science in space is to send scientists. A probe is limited to detecting whatever phenomenon its instruments are designed to detect, but a human scientist can improvise, notice trends, hack together equipment, go digging in rough terrain, follow a hunch, etc. Overall, a human being is an excellent explorer. Properly equipped, I'm sure you'd get superior science results to a string of probes.
Don't get me wrong - probes are very important, especially sample-return missions. I'm just saying that we could do MORE with people.
Re:hmmmm... (Score:4, Interesting)
As mentioned in the Odyssey mission objectives, "Mars today is far too cold with an atmosphere that is far too thin to support liquid water on the surface." Not an outright elimination of the possibility of intelligent life, but at least of intelligent life as we know it. The atmosphere is just way too thin, and things may only get worse on the surface from further bleed off without some form of intervention. I think the common view is that if there was higher (i.e., many cellular) life on mars, it was probably when back when the planet was warmer and wetter. Anything that might be left is likely barely eking out an existence in special environments.
And, in the few billion years you propose for intelligent life to evolve, the sun will have expanded to a red giant, and the surface of Mars will likely be nice and toasty. A bit too toasty perhaps for, again, life as we know it.
Finally, there's plenty of scientific value in studying Mars whether there's life there or not. The life issue is perhaps the most media friendly, and the one that most captures the pop cultural interest, but there's lots of other stuff to learn from that red rock.
-Wombat
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
Don't apply for any biochemistry positions.
Re:hmmmm... (Score:2)
man touch finger mount pump fsck yes umount make clean sleep
Re:hmmmm... (Score:2)
Now you've got me dreaming about the sort of experiments that would have to be performed on captive spammers to confirm the first two claims...
Re:hmmmm... (Score:2)
Re:hmmmm... (Score:1)
Although many people believe that life is very common throughout the universe, and will spread rapidly anywhere it gets a foothold, there's no deterministic path towards intelligent life. The prevailing view is that intelligence is an accident, not an end-product, of evolution. Many scientists believe that intelligent life is extremely rare, and that we may be the first intelligent civilization to evolve in the Milky Way galaxy.
After all, if a large meteor hadn't hit the earth about 65 millions years ago, dinosaurs would still be roaming the earth. Humanity is here due to a freak accident, and in fact we may be very unique.
I'm sorry Dave... (Score:1, Funny)
Earth defence forces, etc. (Score:1, Flamebait)
But these seemed to have retreated to the asteroid belt, allowing our intrepid explorer to plant the flag of Earth, and stand guard as a lone sentry against the terrorists of the outer solar system.
Stand proud, little space probe!
NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:1, Funny)
No small feat, there. Too bad they didn't use regenerative aerobraking [nrel.gov]—we might have gotten the spacecraft back.
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:1)
No small feat, there. Too bad they didn't use regenerative aerobraking [nrel.gov]?we might have gotten the spacecraft back.
They talk about electric car breaking, I can't understand how it could apply to aerobraking. Do you have a better link?
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean, you could probably come up with a method of generating some mechanical energy in the process of aerobraking, but it seems to me that we're dealing with a mechanical energy which wouldn't do you a whole lot of good in space -- after all, fuel isn't the problem, it's a lack of something to push against.
So, am I missing something here, or did you just post that link to look smart?
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:1)
Perhaps gas can also be collected in the atmosphere so that no extra fuel is needed to brought along with the space craft. Thou, bringing Xenon gas maybe far lighter alternative than the collector that would need to be installed.
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:2, Insightful)
It would have to gather up reachtion mass plus generate power to use it. Perhaps a scoop and long cables to use the planets electro-magnetic field to store up power.
Nothing we have comes close to pulling off this sort of trick.
Anyway.. why bother about getting it back? Who would want it? I mean, my last car lost enough resale value in the past few years.. the trade-in value for a vehicle with a billion miles on it would really suck.
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:1)
To do this with a spacecraft, you would have to transform the heat generated by friction in the atmosphere into some form of stored energy. You won't ever be able to do this with anything like 100% efficiency, and the weight of whatever you use to do this conversion will almost certainly make this a losing proposition.
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:3, Insightful)
Regenerative areobraking? What do you want them to do - put paddle wheels on the probe?
Okay, your comment was stupid. You probably just had a twitchy "Submit" finger and wanted to get a comment in there early. I can understand that. What is ridiculous is that at least two morons out there actually thought is was "Interesting" enough to mod it up to +4.
Would whoever did that please smack the back of their head for me? Thanks.
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:2)
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:1)
Give a man a fish and he eats for one day. Teach him how to fish, and though he'll eat for a lifetime, he'll call you a miser for not giving him your fish.
Guys, I was making a JOKE... (Score:2)
Why anyone took the incredibly dry witticism at the end seriously is beyond me. Perhaps I should have used more vermouth.
Re:Guys, I was making a JOKE... (Score:1)
OK, I'll clarify why I took it seriously. There are plenty of total morons who post to slashdot who wouldn't have known that "regenerative aerobraking" is impossible. I'm very glad to hear that you aren't one of them, and I apologize for finding you guilty by association.
Re:Guys, I was making a JOKE... (Score:1)
But then mars doesn't have a magnetic field. Pity. It might be workable for Jupiter or some other magnetic-field-endowed planet though.
Re:Guys, I was making a JOKE... (Score:3, Informative)
After the mission, the tether was examined on Earth, and was found to have been melted through. Turns out the core of the cable was a porous material that had atmospheric-pressure air trapped in it during manufacture. The air leaked out through pinholes in the outer insulation and was quickly converted, by the high voltage (~3500V) of the tether, to a plasma far denser and more conductive than the surrounding ionosphere. Instruments indicated that the plasma diverted a full ampere of current (at 3500 volts) through the insulator pinholes, enough to melt through the cable.
That's why they don't let astronauts EVA any more without gloves.
OffTopic: That last line was a feeble joke, similar to the one in my original post [slashdot.org]. That post was modded up three points (by those who took "regenerative aerobraking" seriously) before being modded down five (by those who take mismoderation seriously). Is there a record for the number of mod points, both up and down, assigned to a single comment?
Re:Guys, I was making a JOKE... (Score:1)
Hee hee... (Score:2)
How about regenerative ferrobraking? Shoot iron slugs from an accelerator at the spacecraft, and have it catch them in a magnetic field and throw them back to the accelerator. No propellant loss, spectacular efficiency, works for starting as well as for stopping. Accuracy is problematic.
Re:NASA [aero]brakes... for the environment! (Score:1)
Could anyone explain (Score:1)
Could, anyone explain why we are going to Mars? Or, why we are even bothered taking pictures of it? What's the point of going to Mars, when most of the powers in this planet are at the brink of nuclear war? I don't see any short-term necessity to go to Mars. If anyone wish to give constructive remarks contrary, please feel free to do so. I understand the ghist of this site, but should we not worry about the amount of human lives being lost in the name of established religions that dictate nothing but outdated virtue?
Thank you.
Javid O'Hare.
Citizens Commission on Human Rights [cchr.org]
Multitasking (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, spending the resources we currently expend on space travel isn't going to contribute substantially to work peace (nor hunger, nor overpopulation, nor keeping people from being laid off).
On the other hand, the greatest points of human progress have historically taken place in two times -- exploration and war. Both of them create necessity, which is (of course) the mother of invention. I assume you'd rather avoid war, as would I, so exploration seems like a good investment.
Besides, its our nature to do this sort of thing. That's why people weaved reed boats, why they sailed before they could figure their position with any certainty, why we, as a race, have always struggled to see what's over the next hill.
The small-minded idea that you could solve disease, hunger and war by supressing the instinct to explore and becoming universal xenophobes is both juvenile and foolish -- at no time in history has anything like this proven true. Indeed, the worst times tend to be those where we stopped being curious -- dark ages, anyone?
I don't mean to be too brutal, but your half-thought-out assertion in this area offends me.
Re:Multitasking (Score:2)
Re:Multitasking (Score:2)
Take #4: "You can wear a shirt during summer in Mars." You *could* wear a shirt, but even on the equater you'd die of the bends (and be very cold) -- the atmospheric pressure is very low on Mars, so walking out into it would be like bringing a sea creature used to an ocean trench up to sealevel.
6: "Mars can be easily terraformed (I know the word is sickening)." Mars is really cold and has a very thin, non-oxygen atmosphere. These are rather challenging, especially considering that humans have never done this sort of thing before.
#7: "Mars is a chance for us to start a world without infuence of religion (what c reates war?), since on Mars, no one would be able to utter (.. And so God create d the world and put adam on it..)" Huh? Where are you think the initial colonists are going to come from? Or do you think people will abandon faith just because they fly to another planet?
This is getting absurd.
#9: "Mars has enough water to sustatin the population of humans on earth." Maybe, but if there is, we sure haven't seen it.
Anyhow, just like I said: No call for name-calling, asshead.
Re:Multitasking (Score:1, Informative)
Given the following photograph of Mars, and knowing that the estimated albedo of the Earth's atmosphere, estimated from its composition, is of 0.75, try to predict the value of atmospheric pressure on the surface of the Red Planet.
To start with, an overall albedo of Mars should be estimated, upon observation through a telescope (a photograph is not good enough in this case) and measurements of the intensity of the light reflected off the surface of Mars as compared . It is important to understand that in the calculation process students need to assess which of their assumptions and estimations is more inexact and thus impacts more the accuracy of the model. This assigned value of a global albedo of Mars with the given elements is, of course, quite uncertain, but it does not invalidate the method.
In order to provide a working example, let us accept an overall albedo for Mars of 0.25.
The next step is to appraise what percentage of the planet is occupied by the dark green vegetation like areas and how much of it is made up of the desert type of soil. Once this is determined we have to approximate a value for the albedo of each type of terrain.
For example:
- Dark area: 60% of the planet albedo 0.15
- Desert area 40% of the planet albedo 0.06
Weighted average 0.6*0.15+0.4*0.06=0.114
If we estimated in this example that the overall albedo of Mars was 0.25, then the part of light absorbed by the atmosphere should be 0.25-0.114=0.136
Considering then the albedo as a measurement of the ability of the atmosphere to scatter sunlight and as such proportional to the specific mass of the atmosphere, we could relate the mass of the Terrestrial atmosphere to that of the Martian atmosphere:
Specific mass ratio = albedo of Martian atmosphere / albedo of Terrestrial atmosphere
= 0.136 / 0.75 = 0.1813
Now we can finally relate to atmospheric pressure. The atmospheric pressure can be defined as the force per unit area exerted by the mass of air on the surface, or in other words, the weight of the column of air on a unit of area. Having estimated the mass of the Martian atmosphere as a fraction of that of the Earth's atmosphere, we can easily relate it to the weight of the atmosphere by multiplying by the Martian gravity (0.38g)
Atmospheric pressure on Mars = 0.1813 * 0.38 g = 0.0689 of the atmospheric pressure on Earth
It is interesting to notice that from merely observing the planet we can go as far as to predict that the atmospheric pressure on Mars is approximately 7% of that on Earth.
Even though this last value is not more than a rough estimate, it still yields very important information that allows us to conjecture about the climatic situation in the Red Planet. Regarding temperatures, if the atmosphere is quite thin and thus unable to sustain any warming greenhouse effect, given that Mars lies in a much colder region in the Solar System than the Earth, it must follow that Mars should be a very cold world.
The apparently low atmospheric pressure has a profound impact on the climate of Mars and, in turn, on the possibilities of finding life on the surface. At such low atmospheric pressure added to very low temperatures, it would be very unlikely that liquid water could exit, even in trace amounts, on the surface. In effect, as pressure goes down the boiling point of a liquid descends, and even at very cold temperatures any liquid, including water, would vaporize instantly. Bearing in mind that liquid water constitutes, in a way, the operational definition for life as we know it, we can say that it would be improbable to find life on the surface of the Red Planet.
I would say, if humans could live on mount Everst without a shirt (provided the weather is not cold enough), then they could do the same on the surface of Mars. But, at the same time, I would say that they'd die very soon. Not of bends, or anything to do with pressure. But of radiation overdose. (Read Red, Blue, Green Mars).Re:Multitasking (Score:1)
Makes one smile a bit when you see actors in movies get ready for an emergency space walk in 5 mins
Re:Multitasking (Score:2)
World peace and hunger are not technological problems; they are entirely political. The only way to solve them is to eradicate all bullshit republics and regimes from planet Earth. This isn't a matter of spending; it is a matter of political will. To accomplish this, we must stop granting sovereignty to these bullshit regimes, declare self-determination to be a fundamental human right, and make all soverign nations sign a mutual-defence pact with the U.N. (in part as a condition of sovereignty). This would legally allow and require the U.N. to interdict if, for example, a coup was made against the government of Afghanistan (such as in 1996). When all nations are signed on, this would be the end of war.
We could feed everyone on Earth today if we really wanted to (or at least, we'd be able to within a short number of months). Mostly, it's bullshit regimes, war, and third-world political corruption that prevents this.
Overpopulation seems to me to be linked to general poverty. Industrialized nations naturally curb the birth rate, as it seems that only the poor can afford to have children. I'm guessing that a higher standard of living is realized in an industrialized nation without or with very few children, and with lots of children in third-world countries (since, if they live, they are your retirement security). Your retirement security in the first world is your career savings, if you manage to save, and public welfare if you don't.
"People being laid off" is a very vague description of a problem. People are laid off for many reasons, normally, of course, because they are not actually doing something that is profitable (or even break-even-able). Preventing layoffs by subsidization is a waste of money and keeps people making unimportant things for no reason that people don't want, instead of having them do something actually useful. Basically, it's micro-scale communism, and communism succeeds best at equally distributing poverty.
[After reading the whole of your message, I guess the highlighted idea is from someone else.]
Re:Multitasking (Score:1)
As for "self-sovereignty", I suggest you also rethink that. Where do you draw the line? We yell and scream about "exclusionist" Turks oppressing Kurds, "exclusionist" Iraqi's doing the same, "exclusionist" taliban (who are more multi-ethnic than the "northern alliances") oppressing others, I mean, where do you draw the line and how? Whom gets the pie? States based upon RACE and FUNDAMENTALISM should be frowned upon and not supported, as both are intolerant of just about every other group except their own. Do we foster racism at the expense of *freedom*? Because that's exactly WHAT we are fostering when we support Israeli and/or Palestinian statism. Jews vs. Arabs. If I'm not mistaken, Israel has a very "exclusionary" government that prohibits native Palestinians from participating in the government process, hell, I'd be pissed, too. Unfortunately for the Palestinians, they want to create a sovereign nation to exclude JEWS (many of whom have been in the region for centuries) from the political process. Get rid of religious fundamentalism and refuse to support racist regimes (including those that advocate slave labor), quit giving them our money, quit building slave labor factories or contracting to slave labor factories, and you dry up their wells. Money is the factor here, as much as I sometimes hate to admit it. People, regardless of what they say, are greedy bastards. Anyway, this is waaay to involved for a slashdot posting, so I'll leave it at that.
Astroturfing (Score:2)
I've seen astroturfing on Slashdot before, but this is a pretty lame example of such.
Re:Could anyone explain (Score:1)
When the world powers are throwing their nuclear pencils at each other, wouldn't it be handy to go somewhere else after the aftermath?
When you have read the Mars trilogy by Kim Stanley-Robinson (Red Mars, Green Mars, Blue Mars), you will realise that it is only a matter of time that we start to utilise the resources of space. Mars appears to be the closest candidate for colonization.
Personally, I'm still waiting for someone to discover the planet Rupert. :)
why not venus (Score:1)
Probably would be more complicated than that but Venus interests me more than Mars.
oh well
Re:Could anyone explain (Score:1)
2. We take pictures of Mars to do Science, and because it's fun and they look cool.
3. Astrophysisists are not not much better at politics and foreign-policy than the rest of us, so I say let them stick to their chosen persuit of Science.
4. Some of us try to look beyond what we may presently believe to be short-term necessities. This has probably saved Mankind's ass many times in the past.
5. Addressing the proposed problem of lives lost in the name of established religions is (once again) not really a good use of your typical Astrophysicist's time. He or she is most likely to look at you rather quizically and say something like "What do you mean exactly?" while not-so-secretly hoping that you will leave soon.
There's lot's of folks in the world, so we can (and will) all do lot's of different things. Is that hard to understand?
You wish it were otherwise? You wish you could enact policy so that we would all have to address 'urgent world issues' as labeled such by folks like yourself?
Hey, Good Luck to ya!
Gamma ray bursts on Nova now (Score:2)
Anyway, PBS tends to re-run Nova episodes quite a bit where I live, so check your local listings - you might be able to catch it again real soon if you missed it the first time.
I recommend Diaspora... (Score:2)
...a truly excellent hard-SF book, in which a gamma-ray burster plays a major role. The math gets deep at times; just keep slogging through it and your mind will be expanded. (Possibly painfully.)
NASA Feels the Heat at Latest Mars Launch (Score:2, Informative)
NASA: [nasa.gov]
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/odyssey/
Space.com: Space.com [space.com]
exciting results (Score:4, Funny)
Don't be so hard on them! (Score:3, Funny)
They have to launch these fragile robots through the harsh interplanetary void, always mere inches -- no wait, was it centimeters? maybe cubits... fathoms? -- from disaster...
Re:This is all good, but... (Score:2, Informative)
Scientific goals (Score:2)
So they are at least investigating if (and when) human colonisation is feasible.
For the more general question of why NASA is mucking about in space, have a look at some of the FAQs [nasa.gov].
It seems one of most common questions is 'Can I apply to take a ride on the Space Shuttle?' (A very polite 'No' in case you were wondering. Presumably the Russian Space Agency have a different answer to this one
Not quite... (Score:1)
NASA isn't interested in colonising Mars, they're a US goverment organisation that has to look reasonably credible in the scientific community, not just some ad hoc space colonisation advocacy organisation a la SSI.
Obvious difference (Score:2)
Why the Russians will sell space rides and NASA won't: the Russians aren't worried about being sued if the thing explodes.
Re:Scientific goals (Score:2)
The same old space exploration posts... (Score:5, Funny)
1.) If you have difficulty understanding exploration for it's own sake then you aren't "all for exploration."
2.) If we knew of all the ways we could use and develop (insert name of celesial body here), then we wouldn't need to explore it, now would we?
3.) Yes there are people dying in (insert Third World country here) of (insert Horseman of Apocalypse here). The reasons for these deaths are purely political in nature. Money is not the solution to all problems just as it isn't the root of all evil. If anything it becomes a scapegoat for the real causes of strife. I don't see how not spending the money on space exploration and letting Congress (of all people) spend it on (choice of one or more of the following: junkets, political campaigns, television commercials, Jesse Jackson, economic incentives, UN resolution, Jimmy Carter, "peace-keeping" expedition) to "make the world a better place" is really going to change a damned thing. (Name of two opposing ethnic, religious, or political groups here) need to talk to each other, and dangling money in front of their noses isn't going to get them to do that, it will just get them to chase that money.
4.) As for education reform, go talk to your state and local governments. If you don't know why you should be talking to them instead of the federal government, then you are an example of how badly we need education reform.
5.) Do you have any idea how small a percentage of the federal budget is spent on space exploration?
6.) We are NOT on the verge of nuclear war! At worst, the only countries on the verge of nuking each other are (names of two nuclear powers that didn't sign non-proliferation agreements)! And they aren't the ones sending up these probes, are they?
7.) With all the problems there are in the world today... why would you want to live in the world today? (name of celestial body) looks like a damned good alternative to me!
Re:The same old space exploration posts... (Score:1)
Re:The same old space exploration posts... (Score:2)
Anyway, option 7 needs a bit of tinkering. (name of celestial body) might be "Sun", and while that would be a damn good alternative for some people I could think of...
Re:The same old space exploration posts... (Score:2)
CAVEAT (Score:2)
Re:Nuclear war? (Score:1)
Yes, because Bush and Putin are getting along better than even Reagan and Gorbachev did in Iceland, and anybody else with ICBM capabilities doesn't have the number of boosters, warheads, or nerve to go against the US arsenal.
Darn.. we missed! (Score:3, Funny)
Mission planners are uncertain how to proceed now that the mission has been officially declared a failure. "We now have a $250 million piece of equipment uselessly orbiting the planet." A small group of scientists has declared the mission "not a total loss" as this might present a rare opportunity to study the planet before the orbiter crashes into the planet naturally at some later date.
-Restil
Aerobraking - 8 years early (Score:1)
*f*
Re:Aerobraking - 8 years early (Score:1)