Next Mars Mission Will Look for Landing Sites 31
fenimor writes "NASA's next mission to Mars to be launched on Aug. 10, 2005 - Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter - will examine potential landing sites and provide a high-data-rate communications relay for for future surface missions. Weighing 2,180 kilograms, the spacecraft will be the largest ever to orbit Mars and with the largest telescopic camera ever sent into orbit around another planet, will reveal Mars surface features as small as a kitchen table."
Yea! (Score:4, Funny)
Kitchen tables!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:5, Funny)
Don't you just love all those funky measurement units americans spew in press releases? Volkswagens (haven't seen one in ages, how big is it again?), Rhode Island, Libraries of Congress and now freakin' kitchen tables. What's next, chevettes, twinkies, W's IQ (only for negative values)?
come_ON_!
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:2)
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:5, Funny)
As for LoC, I had a professor who had a pretty accurate opinion of using it as a unit of measurement: "The LoC is damn huge. You don't know how big it is exactly, because its just so damn huge. And its always getting bigger, so even in fifty years when our opinion of damn huge would be considered pretty damn small, it's still going to be damn big. So in effect, you use LoC as a unit to measure volumes of data so big that nobody cares anymore."
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:2)
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:2)
Re:Kitchen tables!! (Score:2)
A smoot is a unit of distance (or "length", as physical scientists say) used for measuring the Harvard Bridge. It is named after an MIT fraternity pledge at Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, Oliver R. Smoot (class of 1962), who in October, 1958 was rolled head over heels by his fraternity brothers to measure the length of the bridge. The smoot is equal to his height (five feet and seven inches -- 1.70 m), and the bridge's length was measured to be "364.4 smoots and one ear". Everyone wal
Nothing much to see here... (Score:4, Interesting)
300 days till launch
7 months to orbital insertion, and
6 months before it reachs a stable operational orbit.
so it's 2006 before we get a photo, and probably mid to late 2007 before a spot is chosen... and then they'll start planning a mission... guess we're going to miss that 2010 date...
Re:Nothing much to see here... (Score:2, Informative)
It's a pretty neat rover, too...too bad that the public site at JPL isn't very good:
http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/future/mRe:Nothing much to see here... (Score:2)
Like I was saying, a man on Mars by 2010 probably isn't happening.
Re:Nothing much to see here... (Score:1)
launch windows for Earth to Mars low energy trajectories are 26 months apart.
A manned mission to Mars isn't even in the planning stages yet. NASA is hoping to fly humans to the Moon before 2020, and a human mission to Mars sometime in the 2030s.
Of course, Burt Rutan will probably beat us there! :)
You can see NASA's Vision for Space Exploration at: http://www.nasa.gov/missions/solarsystem/explore_m ain.html
Correct link.. (Score:5, Informative)
here [physorg.com], rather than the Cassini/Huygens probe story that was linked to.
More proof that
Kitchen table? (Score:3)
Re:Kitchen table? (Score:3)
Link to the correct story (Score:2)
Re:Link to the correct story (Score:2)
Re:Link to the correct story (Score:2)
Karl Rove.
Typo in the headline blurb (Score:3, Funny)
I think you misspelled "impact (after another management decision results in trivial math errors going uncaught)" there.
Hmm, communications relay (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hmm, communications relay (Score:3, Informative)
Will they see the flag? (Score:2)
of that American flag that the astronauts left up there.
She's in congress fokes!
Re:Will they see the flag? (Score:2)
Re:Will they see the flag? (Score:1)
It is an indication of her (lack of) knowledge about mars, human spaceflight, and "current" news regarding the same topics.
I have no idea if she's democrat, republican or independent so I claim objectivity! I'm pretty sure she got voted in on other topics than space exploration though (sincerely hope so)
Re:Will they see the flag? (Score:1)
I think her lack of knowledge would be more forgivable if she weren't on the House Science Committee's space subcommittee [seds.org]!
I agree with your (implied) suggestion that such ignorance is non-partisan, although I wish it were the exception instead of the rule!