Tune in to Titan 25
Scarblac writes "In a little over four days, the Cassini spacecraft will finally do its first flyby of Titan, the first of 46 such flybys planned for the coming years. There will be a broadcast on NASA TV. Titan is one of the most interesting objects in the solar system, the only moon with a substantial atmosphere. A few months ago, Cassini was able to spot details of Titan's surface from far away. It should be able to improve on this dramatically - what will be discovered this time?"
The link is wrong (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The link is wrong (Score:2, Funny)
ahh memories (Score:2, Funny)
Re:ahh memories (Score:1, Offtopic)
beer? (Score:4, Informative)
might be interesting. maybe i can finally do my extraterrestrial beerbrewing [slashdot.org] there.
Wow @ that image of details... (Score:2)
Re:Wow @ that image of details... (Score:4, Informative)
Venus's surface has also been mapped from orbit (by Magellen) using radar. And, of course, the Venera landers got some pictures very small bits of the surface.
So all in all, they're pretty equivelent.
Re:Wow @ that image of details... (Score:2)
huygens (Score:4, Insightful)
taking the moon, venus and mars, this would be (only) the 4th extraterrestrial body we land a probe on. if huygens [nasa.gov] succeeds.
aah. now get me as stunning results as the mars rovers did. and launch the JIMO [nasa.gov].
maybe were really "sending probes out here since the 70s and then suddenly everything goes whacko" [imdb.com] . well. except the monolith.
Re:huygens (Score:2)
got me (Score:1)
Re:huygens (Score:3, Informative)
While a successful mission, it (slightly disappointingly) didn't have any kind of camera on it . Although any pictures would almost certainly have been devoid of contrast or detail and would have overwhelmed the probe's limited communications capacity, they might have given the imagination a bit more to latch on to than the abstract instrumentation data that was returned. Probably why few people seem
What will be discovered? (Score:4, Funny)
daisy ... (Score:1)
Hmmm... black monolith theme for LXer? (Score:2)
Re:Hmmm... black monolith theme for LXer? (Score:2)
Playing with Celestia (Score:2, Interesting)
I assume the NASATV scedule takes into account transmission delays (both speed-of-light and possible store and forward delays through the deep space network), so that doesn't sound too far off by sch
Red Dwarf - Titan (Score:2)
Yes, sir, I've been around,
But there ain't no place
In the whole of Space,
Like that good ol' toddlin' town,
Lunar City Seven,
You're my idea of heaven
Out of ten, you score eleven,
You good ol' artificial terra-formed,
settlement...
The End.
Lets hope it all works! (Score:1)
Re:Lets hope it all works! (Score:1)
Of course the documentary could have been simplifying massively, but I got a sense that there were plenty of things being left unspoken in an effort to foster diplomatic face-saving between the various projec
Re:More info (Score:2)
IEEE Spectrum [ieee.org] has a nice article on this near-debacle. The problem was that the tests performed did not consider that the received data rate, in addition to the carrier frequency, would be affected by Doppler, and the receiver would lose bit synchronization.
The full system test, which would have detected the problem, was not performed because--wait for it--they wanted to save money.
A modern rarity - the truely unknown (Score:2)
Got to love the spirit of discovery - this flyby is the first time since Voyager or Magellan where a space probe has a shot of taking pictures of a planet we've never really seen before, and don't really fully know what to expect...
If you look just right.. (Score:2)