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Space Science

Last Try for CONTOUR probe 13

Heartbreak writes "According to 'Last Wake-Up Calls to CONTOUR', mission operators at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory will try for the last time to contact whatever is left of NASA's CONTOUR comet probe next week. In case you've forgotten, the probe never checked in after its escape burn in August. A leading theory for the failure is that the solid-fuel booster engine (mostly buried in the body of the probe) exploded near the end of its burn. They will probably never be certain about what happened, since the burn occurred while the probe was out of contact with ground stations. Astronomers later found three objects near the expected course of the probe, presumably its remains. The plan of action for the attempted contact---aim for the biggest piece."
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Last Try for CONTOUR probe

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  • Star Trek: The Search for Contour ;-)
  • by 0x69 ( 580798 ) on Friday December 13, 2002 @05:44PM (#4883640) Journal
    The articles don't mention if anyone's tried to do a light curve (graph optical brightness vs. time) on the 3 pieces. If it was wrecked & broke up, all 3 pieces are probably tumbling at various rates.

    Tumbling (of anything without a very smooth shape & coloration) is obvious from a light curve, and it would be a pretty good indicator of "no hope - don't waste your time".

    Flip-side, a flat light curve (or an almost-always-flat one) strongly suggests a functioning attitude control system.
    • by WeaponOfChoice ( 615003 ) on Friday December 13, 2002 @05:56PM (#4883715) Homepage
      No offence meant to the hardworking folks at NASA, but the agency does not have a good history of checking this kind of thing in advance. In the time honoured tradition of geeks and eccentrics everywhere the simplest solution is often completely overlooked in favour of something more complex, interesting and likely to fail completely. I am, of course, fully with the aforementioned geeks and eccentrics on this one... the light-curve analysis will probably be trotted out later as a reason for why the attempt failed.
  • Man, these guys now lead the list for the 21st Century Optimist Award!! :})||
  • by uncoveror ( 570620 ) on Friday December 13, 2002 @05:59PM (#4883728) Homepage
    The Russian Space Agency already told them what happened to CONTOUR. [uncoveror.com] They even have a photo.
    • Article: "A flying saucer armed with a destructo-ray destroyed contour. Here is a photo from a Russian spy satellite sent to us by Boris Petrovich of the Russian Space Agency."

      The "photo" shows the craft in near-earth orbit. Contour was roughly the distance of the moon when the problem happened.

      Low quality BS. Their BS department needs a fact checker. The "spy photo" does not even look very convincing, like a PaintBrush paste-in.
  • by frotty ( 586379 ) on Friday December 13, 2002 @07:15PM (#4884218)
    I think the contour probe immersed itself in the comet's behaviors, undercover, & followed it closely. At first the comets were suspicious of this strangely shaped companion, but after an initiation rite of ordering the probe to collide with a nearby mass just to "fuck shit up with the business end" the other comets took in the countour as one if their own.

    Time went on, valuable data was collected by the clandestine probe... but then one day the probe found it didn't know who it was any more...

    had it become one of the comets?
  • Plan B: (Score:3, Funny)

    by Hubert_Shrump ( 256081 ) <cobranet@@@gmail...com> on Saturday December 14, 2002 @01:55PM (#4887655) Journal
    The plan of action for the attempted contact---aim for the biggest piece.

    Seeing as previous attempts to contact the probe by aiming at Sammy Hagar's hairpiece only succeeded in making him smoke and reminisce about being in Van Halen, scientists finally relented and tried this.

  • Is this probe that unimportant, that even /. geeks have rejected talking about it?
    • by Trane Francks ( 10459 ) <trane@gol.com> on Monday December 16, 2002 @01:20AM (#4896649) Homepage
      Is this probe that unimportant, that even /. geeks have rejected talking about it?
      The problem isn't so much the importance of the probe, but that the mission itself is now about clean-up and little more. Assuming that the chances of contacting CONTOUR are somewhere between slim and none, there's not much about which to get excited.

      The probe itself -- or, more correctly, the study of comets -- is absolutely significant. Various theories suggest that the very seeds of life itself were brought to earth by way of comet impacts. Being able to get close-up and personal with a comet could prove to be very informative if not enlightening.

      The problem with this story is that the communication attempts on the 15th and 17th represent NASA's obligatory "last-ditch efforts" and offer no real new hope.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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