A Moment Of Reckoning for Cassini 36
No_Weak_Heart writes "The NASA/ESA Cassini-Huygens probe has caught sight of Titan and is now returning images that 'rival anything scientists have seen before - and that includes images from the Hubble telescope.' See more detailed images at the mission homepage."
Too Early!! (Score:3, Insightful)
But this is a fuzzy dot!Can't we just wait a few months untill it's there.
Re:Too Early!! (Score:5, Informative)
Then it'll be a fuzzy disc. It's Titan, proud possessor of the solar system's second smoggiest shroud. You're not going to see any detail through that lot.
Re:Too Early!! (Score:3, Informative)
Oil? Oil! OIL! (Score:5, Funny)
Americans! Invade!
Too close to capture all of Saturn (Score:4, Interesting)
This is one probe that promises so much that I have decided to enjoy the anticipation and appreciate the photos as they return, slowly and beautifully.
Saturn is the dream planet after all, all those rings, all that mystery. I can't say that I would like to live in orbit around it though.
Re:Too close to capture all of Saturn (Score:3, Insightful)
Suspense (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's hope they find something that gives the general public a run for their money; We need another space race or something to get people out of bed in the mornings.
When was the last time you saw a teenager staring at the sky in awe?
Re:Suspense (Score:2)
Now?
The only Big Enemy is "terrorism", and there's no single country you can hold up for that, no place likely to take part in dick-measuring games. Yeah, there's China, and that might help a bit, but essentially
Re:Suspense (Score:2)
At a UFO-watching party, people staring at Venus...
^_^
Re:Suspense (Score:1)
At a UFO-watching party, people staring at Venus...
I dunno, sounds like a better time than everyone sitting around staring at Uranus.
Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm not a LGM kook - I have no expectation at all that we'd find any sort of life there. Still, is there any particular reason why we seem to be so sure of that?
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:2)
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:5, Informative)
Some chemist correct me here, but I don't think there's any potential energy in just the hydrocarbons. You need oxygen to burn them in as well, which Titan doesn't have. I can't think of a way to extract energy from them alone.
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:3, Insightful)
No, just the oposite. If you want to have a thick atmosphere on a planet, you want to have very little energy at the surface. The smaller the planet, the lower ambient surface temperature (hence energy at the surface) required to sustain
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:2)
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:2)
I'm no planetary geologist, just an interested amature, but my understanding is that most of the minor satelites of the outer planets are predominantly made of light elements: ice and rock w
Off-topic: wheels in nature (Score:1)
Oddly, though, I did a quick search for it which turned up only a few informational tidbits, and no pictures of the spider in motion. Makes me wonder if this thing really exists. I'm certainly not aware of any other examples of wheels in nature, so you'd think the
Re:Off-topic: wheels in nature (Score:2)
A wheel is not a wheel without an axel. If you just count things that tumble head or heels (or do cartwheels, backflips, etc.) then I can think of any number of examples: pillbugs and tumbleweeds spring to mind.
There is one example of a rotat
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:5, Informative)
Spectrometry. We've looked at all of the local objects fairly carefully and haven't seen signs of chemicals related to organic life as we know it [astrobio.net]. For example, Earth's atmosphere is full of highly reactive oxygen (aka fire, rust, krebs cycle, etc) and should not be abundant unless something is constantly producing it.
If memory serves, the atmosphere of Titan is not so different from that of the Earth a few billion years ago, before life began. So if there's life there, either it's inconceivably unlike us or it hasn't gone much up the ladder.
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:2)
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:2)
Of course, that's just the rocky objects. It's hard to make an educated guess about life in a gas giant [google.com].
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:5, Interesting)
There is a much better chance that they would be either millions of years behind us (bacterial or so) or millions of years ahead. They would more probably or not be either Apes or Angels.
Btw, this is one argument to use to say why we have not found any aliens yet: No ways to find bacteria on a long range and perhaps if they are millions of years ahead they would be so strange to us that we would not now what to look for. All advanced technology looks like magic.
So the chances of finding a civilization close to here which is about 1000 year ahead or behind us is pretty much zilch purely from a statistical point of view.
Of course, the argument does not quite hold in the Solar System since all the bodies in it are about the same age per definition (they were formed at the same time). But then you could still be talking a million years give or take. No human-like organisms then.
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:1, Interesting)
Since the conditions for humanoid life (just the right gravity, surface temperature that allows liquid water) exist nowhere else in the solar system, any intelligence we find would most likely be radically different from ours, even if life did arise on another body at roughly the same time as earth. But then, the dinosaurs were a widely varied species, wiped out suddenly; who's to say intellig
Cosmic reboot event? (Score:2, Interesting)
Although
Re:Little Green Men in our neighborhood (Score:2)
Thanks again! (Score:2)