Mars Orbiter Launch Delayed 98
Mictian writes "NASA's newest Mars probe, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), was originally scheduled to be launched from Kennedy Space Center Wednesday morning atop an Atlas 5 rocket. However a potential problem with the Atlas' Redundant Rate Gyro Units (RRGUs), that are part of the vehicle's flight control system, detected at Lockheed Martin's factory has caused the engineers to make sure that the two RRGUs in MRO's rocket are working, thus delaying the launch at least until Thursday morning. There is a 1.5 hour launch window daily until the end of the month."
Late Breaking News: (Score:5, Funny)
K'Breel, Speaker for the Council, was on hand to address the jubilant masses:
During the question-and-answer session that followed, when asked by a citizen whether rumours were true that the device damaged was only a minor inconvinence to the sickening inhabitants of the evil blue planet, and that in all probability the craft would be launched within a day, K'Breel ordered the citizen's summary execution. The remainder of the question-and-answer session passed in a remarkably subdued manner.
Re:Late Breaking News: (Score:2)
Re:Late Breaking News: (Score:1)
Re:Late Breaking News: (Score:1, Offtopic)
Random names on /.? (Score:2)
Someone who takes the time to investigate *who* the 'random names' are.
Sometimes you just might be surprised...
Re:Late Breaking News: (Score:2)
If you looked at YOUR posting history, I should say.
+5 Best use of "noisome" (Score:2)
Good job!
DG
I've come to look forward to these (Score:2)
Yours are the best first posts ever, may you get a million more and frustrate hundreds of slimey trolls in the process.
Re:Late Breaking News: (Score:1)
Overheard (Score:2, Funny)
Mission Controller 2: Redundant Rate Gyros Of Unusual Size? I don't think they exist.
R.R.G.O.U.S: GRAAAAAAAAAAARRGGGHHHH!
Re:Overheard (Score:1)
Mission Controller 1: What about the R.R.G.O.U.S.'s?
Mission Controller 2: Redundant Rate Gyros Of Unusual Size? I've never heard of them.
R.R.G.O.U.S: GRAAAAAAAAAAARRGGGHHHH!
Its just a minor delay (Score:4, Insightful)
But its better to wait one dya, than loosing a big rocket, just to stay on shedule. Better be safe, than sorry.
Re:Its just a minor delay (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Its just a minor delay (Score:2)
Re:Its just a minor delay (Score:2)
Re:Its just a minor delay (Score:1)
Re:Its just a minor delay (Score:4, Insightful)
That's okay... they'll wait one dya, fix the porblem, and then let loose the rocket.
Meteor Shower? (Score:2)
Re:Its just a minor delay (Score:2)
And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:1)
Thank god to that engineer who figured out "let's have a Redundant Rate Gyro Unit".
The thing I don't understand is as long as it gets to outer space on the right course isn't that good enough? They arn't recovering the shuttle as this is going off into the far ether (well Mars far)
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:5, Informative)
So it's important that your rocket goes in the right direction. This is actually very hard to do. A rocket is inherently unstable, as the thrust isn't ever perfectly aligned with the center of mass, and any errors in position tend to magnify themselves.
Ever blown up a balloon and released it? Notice how it flew every which way like crazy? Mostly NOT toward Mars?
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:1)
Dude, I am SO inventing and patenting balloon gyros! Oho, Timmy will bear that smug birthdayboy smirk no longer when all balloons are gyro-guided directly at his face!
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:1)
Yes, I need that many...
and maybe a Balloon Safe pair of googles, because what happens when my enemies gets your balloon gyros.
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:2)
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:2)
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:2)
The gyro is what makes it go where it is supposed to go. Primary gyro failure, and no redundant unit = big splash in the Atlantic and/or range safety destruct. So you save $250,000 on a second gyro, and risk a $400 million+ dollar program.
Brett
Re:And to think they might of not noticed. (Score:1)
Hopefully Thursday (Score:5, Informative)
Oddly enough, the Atlas V acually uses Russian engines in the 1st stage. Ironic for a rocket that was originally an ICBM.
Re:Hopefully Thursday (Score:4, Interesting)
One thing I've always wanted to seen done. Take all the US and Russian engineers, put them together, give them a blank check and the goal of colonizing space along with permission to use any and all knowlege (including classified) that they posses. And just wait to see how long it is until I'm living in orbit.
Re:Hopefully Thursday (Score:2, Insightful)
The best way to get a horrible result is to remove all restrictions.
Re:Hopefully Thursday (Score:1)
One thing I've always wanted to seen done. Take all the US and Russian engineers, put them together, give them a blank check and the goal of colonizing space along with permission to use any and all knowlege (including classified) that they posses. And just wait to see how long it is until I'm living in orbit.
With all of the ships adrift in the solar system from broken russian equipment and american software failure, you'd basically have the setting of Space Hulk... minus the space marine power armor...
While we're at it (Score:2)
Re:Hopefully Thursday (Score:2)
So, there's a parallel manned spaceflight program going on in the US under wraps. That's a resource that your plan could leverage if it were politically feasible.
Re:Hopefully Thursday (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hopefully Thursday (Score:3, Interesting)
It would be like saying your current Pentium IV PC is anything like the Pentium you had 10 years ago. ISA bus is gone, RAM is different, video cards are AGP instead of ISA or PCI, floppy dr
What the heck is a launch window? (Score:3)
Wikipedia to the rescue (Score:5, Informative)
It takes almost 5 seconds searching the term in the Wikipedia [wikipedia.org].
Launch window is a term used in aerospace to describe a time period in which a particular rocket must be launched. For trips into Earth orbit almost any time will do, but if the spacecraft intends to rendezvous with another (or a planet, or other point in space) the launch must be carefully timed so that the orbits overlap at some point in the future. If the rocket does not launch in the "window", it has to wait for the next one before it can be launched.
Re:What the heck is a launch window? (Score:1)
In this case its Mars. In the Shuttle's case it was to be able to meet the ISS in its orbit, AND be daylight during the launch.
Launch windows (Score:2)
Re:Launch windows (Score:3, Interesting)
However, even that is not pertinent here. When launching a spacecraft, it is beneficial always to launch eastward, because then you get an extra 400m/s boost due to the Earth's rotation, which can save a considerable amount of rocket fuel. (Fuel is exponential in the speed boost you need.) The 1.5 hour-per-day launch window represents the
Re:What the heck is a launch window? (Score:1)
Spheroid Earth and Launch Windows (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Spheroid Earth and Launch Windows (Score:2, Informative)
Rumor has it... (Score:5, Informative)
shoulda used... (Score:2)
Mod Gyroscopes... (Score:5, Funny)
Use it on the recently discovered surface ice? (Score:2)
Re:Use it on the recently discovered surface ice? (Score:2)
Re:They'd better hurry this up (Score:1)
live in domes there, live in domes here... and if we can teraform mars, we'd most likely be able to fix earth much more easily
just failing to see the connection between reaching a dead world and the fate of our own
Re:They Still Use Atlas Rockets, huh.... (Score:3, Informative)
1. The early Atlas rockets were known for exploding on the pad when they had a Mercury capsule mounted on them. You see, the spacecraft was a far heavier payload than the Atlas was designed to carry. They were originally intended to carry a modest nuclear warhead, not an astronaut and all the things needed to keep him alive. All the weak points in the Atlas were eventually strengthened, and it went on to lauch 4 guys into
Re:They Still Use Atlas Rockets, huh.... (Score:1)
Actually, I was born about the time Apollo was finishing up... reading history is where I get my information. Quoting the book I mentioned above, page 106(second paragraph of the "Delta Seven" chaper in case editions are different: "Both MA-6 (John's flight) and MA-7 (mine) were intended to last for three orbits. In the original planning for Mercury, that had been intended as the culminat
HiRise camera (Score:5, Informative)
This mission will carry the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRise), which is "the largest camera ever sent out of Earth's orbit and will deliver the highest resolution images of Mars yet" according to an article [digitalcamerainfo.com] that adds "The camera utilizes a series of mirrors and lenses that project the image onto a cluster of CCDs rendering images with a resolution up to 20,000 pixels by 40,000 lines, an image so large that it would take 1,200 typical computer screens to fully display. The camera's high resolution will enable the identification of objects as small as a coffee table while the camera orbits 300 kilometers above the planet's surface."
Back in January 2004, there was an interesting article [space.com] at Space.com about the high quality of the 1-megapixel camera used by the Spirit rover; I assume this is manufactured to similar quality control standards (although by a different team), but the article doesn't specify and the cameras are not manufactured by the same groups. The Spirit PANCAM has two CCDs whereas this has at least 14 (28?).
NASA website for HiRISE (Score:2)
Re:HiRise camera (Score:1)
And the (back of the) envelope please... (Score:1)
That's a lot of data. If it has to get back here in a year or so
Re:And the (back of the) envelope please... (Score:2, Informative)
Resolution at 300km altitude is 30 cm per pixel for targeted observations (one of 3 modes). I beleve the 1% number is for targeted imaging only.
For the high gain, the pipe to Earth is up to 3.5 Mbit/sec (receiving at a 70m antenna) and about 2.4 Mbit/sec for a 34m antenna.
Expected total data volume for the prime mission only, (through 2010) is 34 terabtes!
Re:And the (back of the) envelope please... (Score:1)
Re:And the (back of the) envelope please... (Score:2)
Ok, I'm being a smart ass. But, come on, we have great compression technologies, why wouldn't we use them?
skeptical (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:HiRise camera (Score:2)
SB
you have to be kidding me? (Score:3, Funny)
They got the iraqi information minister?