Beagle 2: Mars Landing On A Shoestring 24
dr3vil writes "A great article in The Guardian about the development of Beagle 2, the Mars lander due to start the search for life on Mars on Christmas day. Some great stories about the struggle for funding, and technical details about using a coat handler antenna and a dentist's tool for grinding rock samples. Obviously this was a great project for the hackers."
Begun on a Beer Mat (Score:4, Interesting)
....and possibly ending up a beer-mat (Score:2, Informative)
Don't count your chickens until they are hatched. It hasn't landed yet. Mars is a probe-eater. It ate NASA's Polar Lander, and several Soviet landers, plus some orbiters. NASA won't be very interested in copying a design or budget approach that fails.
Re:....and possibly ending up a beer-mat (Score:2)
I thought that was Uranus.
Sorry about that one...
Earthlings go Lo-Tech (Score:2, Funny)
4 out of 5... (Score:2, Funny)
Shoestring is the right word (Score:3, Interesting)
25 million quid is not a lot in astronomical terms. Plus the ESA have had to cancel / downgrade a couple of other missions due to lack of funds / problems with the upgraded Ariane 5. [bbc.co.uk]
Fingers crossed Beagle lands safely... Colin (the guy wrote the book the article's lifted from) always seems so enthusiastic when he's on TV - it'd be a shame to see him disappointed.
When are the other probes due to land?
Re:Shoestring is the right word (Score:5, Informative)
Spirit Lands: January 3, 2004 between 8-9 pm PST
Opportunity Lands: January 24, 2004 between 8-9 pm PST
From the rover homepage [nasa.gov]. Also check the Athena science package [cornell.edu] homepage, and read the news archives to get an idea of how much work went into the instruments alone.
really sad... (Score:4, Insightful)
Or better yet, I hope he gets stinking rich from it!
Re:really sad... (Score:1)
The probe's had a fair amount of good publicity in the UK - getting Blur and Hurst in on the project was a great move. Scheduling the landing for Christmas Day was another, although I think that was upto the ESA team on whose probe Beagle is piggybacking a ride. I'm sure the British government would step in with a large dollop of cash if it felt it would make it look good^W^W^W^W^W was necessary.
missing link (Score:4, Informative)
Note to children and foreigns (Score:1)
Guradain is a (so called) humorous reference to the frequent typos in the Guardian's newspaper, something that has not been a problem for the last 15 years
Watch the news on the 25th of December (Score:2)
A short Media briefing can be found here [pparc.ac.uk].
That's awfully agile! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:That's awfully agile! (Score:2)
Microscope? (Score:5, Interesting)
They already have a steerable camera on board, so all they needed else was a pair of lenses at the ends of a tube, and a flash. That would have fit within the 100g they had left in their mass budget.
Next time, I guess.
Re:Microscope? (Score:5, Informative)
You could try adding some Mars soil to a nutrient media and wait for something to grow, before looking at the liquid under a microscope. But, unless you knew the right pH, salinity, and chemical composition that the Martian bacteria would like to eat, you would be more likely to drown (or explode by osmotic pressure) any bugs living in the soil. And again, since we don't know the morphology of the bacteria we hope to find, we would see lots of soil particles, some of which might be enticingly bacteria-like (remember the Martian meteorite and its "microfossils"?) but we would have no proof that they were biological in origin.
As a biologist, I believe that if life is detected on Mars, it will first be "spotted" by ultra-sensitive mass spectrometers, either on a lander like the Beagle 2, or more likely, in an laboratory after a sample is returned to Earth in a decade or two.
Now, this doesn't mean that we shouldn't put microscopes on landers! I'm sure there are some geologists that would be fascinated by the microscopic composition of native Martian soil. But if life on Mars is abundant enough to pick up with a microscope, then we should see clear traces of it with experiments like the one on the Beagle.
Gaia (Score:3, Interesting)
But one would think that if there is life (on the surface) that it would have left its imprint on the environment, and there is little evidence at that. The only hope is if stuff is living underground.
Re:Microscope? (Score:2, Informative)
This is very true, If you took a spoon full of earth soil you would not be able to grow 90% of the microbes (1) in it, as the correct growth conditions are not known. You could lob in some sort of generic nutrent broth, but this would not support the majority of bugs in the sample. When the Viki
Re:Microscope? (Score:3)
Re:Microscope? (Score:1)
Just a question. (Score:1)
Re:Microscope? (Score:3, Informative)
The Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity do have a microscopic imager [cornell.edu] on board.
Re:Microscope? (Score:1, Informative)