Cassini Can See Cleary Now 22
EccentricAnomaly writes: "Well, it looks like Cassini's camera problems have been fixed according this story at CNN and this Cassini mission status report. The haze first appeared on the camera lens somewhere between Jupiter and Saturn. Personally, I can't stand it when I get crud on my windshield -- especially when I'm 750 million miles from home."
Cute (Score:1)
Now back to taking purty pictures.
Re:Proof that Cassini can see Cleary now,. (Score:3, Funny)
Awesome! (Score:4, Funny)
cleary (Score:2)
Cassini, and it's headlines, inside story history (Score:4, Insightful)
Page 7 : It didn't.
Page 1 : EARTH COULD BE HIT BY PLUTONIUM PROBE FLYBY AND KILL EVERYONE
Page 9 : Missed us.
Page 1 : BILLION DOLLAR PLUTONIUM PROBE BLINDED
Page 11 : We fixed it.
Re:Cassini, and it's headlines, inside story histo (Score:1)
Sorry for the long URL.
This documents the history of Radioisotope Thermalelectric Generators, including accidents (Such as Apollo 13) in which the RTG has actually been splashed. In one case, the RTG was recovered and its fuel reused.
Re:Cassini, and it's headlines, inside story histo (Score:1)
Re:Cassini, and it's headlines, inside story histo (Score:2)
(From the mission update referenced in the story, the camera had built-in heaters to warm up the lenses in anticipation of this very problem, since warming the instruments had worked on previous missions. So the comment that suggested windscreen wipers wasn't totally off-beam....)
Nice pics (Score:2, Informative)
Why Not Windshield Wipers? (Score:2)
I know it sounds like a dumb joke, but really -- why not a set of high-tech, NASA-designed windshield wipers for when stuff like this happens again to the optics on a satellite?
Other satellites are sure to run into interstellar crud in the future, so they could possibly have a lens-cleaning apparatus as well as a lens cover, like for Hubble.
I'm sure some engineer up there has already thought of this but I'd figure I'd toss it out there.
Re:Why Not Windshield Wipers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why Not Windshield Wipers? (Score:3, Insightful)
2) There's no space for wipers when the condensate is somewhere within the lens system and you would need a seperate wiper for each surface.
3) The surfaces of optics are not flat but probably spheric or have some different form. It would be difficult to build a wiper for that geometry.
Re:Why Not Windshield Wipers? (Score:1)
4) If you have moving parts they will release tiny particles when they move due to friction (and you have a lot of friction in vacuum), causing more problems. Keep in mind that there is no gravity forcing those particles down, so they would fly around and not necessarily adsorb on the surface to be wiped away.
Re:Why Not Windshield Wipers? (Score:3, Informative)
NASA anticipated the problem - see the paragraph about lens heaters in the mission update referenced in the story.
Not quite windshield wipers, granted, but the agency did anticipate the problem from ealier experience, and built in a solution that had worked before and which worked this time, too.