Phoenix Mars Lander Hits Halfway Point 83
It doesn't come easy writes "There is a nice write-up over at Space.com about Phoenix, NASA's next Mars lander. The article includes a few more details about the steps NASA is taking to ensure a successful mission." The Phoenix project was first given the green light earlier this year and hopes to benefit from some hard lessons learned on earlier projects.
They need tricorders (Score:3, Funny)
Interesting article, though, especially on the steps they're taking not to contaminate the landing site with fuel exhaust and other substances the lander will bring with it. OTOH, it might be interesting if they did some experiments where they purposefully contaminated the landing site, particularly with stuff like "extremophile" organisms that might have a chance at surviving on Mars.
- Greg
Re:They need tricorders (Score:2, Interesting)
Or a portable DNA Microarray [the-scientist.com]
Re:They need tricorders (Score:2)
Re:They need tricorders (Score:1)
Hence the assay I mentioned looking for the chemicals used to build RNA/DNA (altho I'd hate to try to do Crystallography on mars
Re:They need tricorders (Score:1)
I doubt they have enough server farms there.
Besides, since it takes days to work, I'm sure we can cope with the time delay from Mars
Re:They need tricorders (Score:1)
(I like cats BTW but not enough to think that this -http://catsinsinks.com/ [catsinsinks.com]- site is cute )
Nothing to see here... (Score:1, Offtopic)
In Search of Martian Water (Score:2, Funny)
Looks like a useful mission.
Now if only they could include a robot penguin that hops on it
Inviting Disaster (Score:2, Funny)
Who wants to be it explodes on entry.
Re:Inviting Disaster (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, because the Borg will come and attack it before you launch.
Re:Inviting Disaster (Score:2)
Re:Inviting Disaster (Score:1)
From TFA (Score:1)
Why an immobile lander? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:1)
The "deck" of the legged lander is 4 feet (1.2 meters) across--about the size of a breakfast table--and is loaded with science equipment.
It's possible the mission planners did not want to sacrifice instrument weight in favor of wheels and motors.
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:3, Interesting)
1.5 meter (4.9 feet) high by 2.3 meters (7.5 feet) wide by 1.6 meter (5.2 feet) long, according to this site [marsinstitute.info].
I'm thinking NASA is trying to save money by not sending somthing with mobile capability. Its a pity, as the dev work's already been done... may as well use it.
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:1)
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:1, Insightful)
On mars, the price is in W/m^2 of daytime solar input. And this solar input is significantly less (or significantly more variable) than on the equatorial band... so you might as well spare energy for the instruments.
Plus of course the actual total mission weight requirements imposed by the choice of launch vehicle and trajectory...
Why not pay the price with Pu RTGs instead? (Score:2)
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:2)
How much energy does an electric motor consume when not being used? Couldn't they dedicate most, if not all, of their power to the science instruments at one site, and only direct power to the motors when moving to another site?
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:2)
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:2)
Why send humans to space when you can send a probe?
Why send mobile probes when you can send probes with long range sensors?
Why send landers when you can just send satellites?
Why send satellites when you can just observe from Earth?
Re:Why an immobile lander? (Score:2)
There's more to it than the abov
Subsurface water (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Subsurface water (Score:2)
No, it would simply provide a means for crackpot pseudo-scientists to complain about us ruining the precious Martian ecosystem ("Where there's water, there's life! Proof of life on Mars!1!!!").
Now if you'll excuse me, I gotta go register the www.redpeace.org domain to head them off.
Re:Subsurface water (Score:2)
What the liquid water will really tell us, is there a possibility of Life. Quite honestly, water provides the best chance of life, where as MOST earth bacteria will not grow (salmonella being
Oh, thank goodness... (Score:2)
I had to look at that one twice. The first time, all I saw was "Phoenix Mars Lander Hits..." and my brain filled in the rest with "Object, Is Lost".
I wish they'd include a microphone (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I wish they'd include a microphone (Score:4, Insightful)
You can already hear what Titan sounds like... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:You can already hear what Titan sounds like... (Score:2)
I'm talking more like a real mic, sending the actual sound. Even the sounds of the instruments moving and working would be neat.
Re:I wish they'd include a microphone (Score:1)
"Get your stinking primitive junk off my planet!
Wasn't Beagle II obvious enough for you?"
Present Day Life? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Present Day Life? (Score:3, Funny)
IANA-NASAS (I am not a NASA Scientist), but I would expect that the odds of finding "present day life" today would be pretty damn good. Finding "life as we know it" or "our current expectation of life" may be less likely, but I wouldn't expect the "present day life" to have died out this morning.
Unless it had a bad breakfast burrito. Or forgot it's emergency pants. Do
halfway, yea, right (Score:3, Insightful)
UNITS! (Score:1)
Re:halfway, yea, right (Score:2)
Well, at least some of what we're spending is on educational measures that hopefully will make sure you can't get a high school degree without knowing how to use "it's" vs. "its" (perhaps you can apply for a grant and learn it anyway).
Lot of thinks can happen
But not a lot of "think
Re:halfway, yea, right (Score:3, Informative)
The president, through veto power alone, has at least as much power as congress (if they don't like it, they veto, and congressional supermajorities are very rare). However, it doesn't end there: the administration sets their party's political agenda in congress. As if that's not enough, they have the huge bludgeon of media attention to their statements to help shove it through. Then, their cabinet is in charge of the implementation of the passed legislation. We have
Re:halfway, yea, right (Score:3, Informative)
But the whole point is that if the majority of the country doesn't like the way that, say, congress is doing things (along partisan lines), the administration will only be able to set the agenda for the minority in the house. That leaves the presi
Re:halfway, yea, right (Score:3, Informative)
* Veto power (I.e., still a base 50% of control)
* Introduction of whatever legislation and amendments he wants
* The "bully pulput" of having all of their talking points reported.
* The ability to choose how to enforce all of the details of legislation that gets passed which aren't explicitly stated or are open to interpretation.
I.e., the office of the president, even in a minority-party situation, is the biggest infl
Re:halfway, yea, right (Score:2)
Lysdexious me read this as opening and closing braces (not the kind that Lisa needs), and wondered why they are big ticket items.
Then, looking at coders' salaries and the number of braces that end up in their correct location in code, I realized they really are.
Re:halfway, yea, right (Score:2)
It's the Phoenix Mars Lander. It's currently Landed in Phoenix, so that's 2/3 the way there!
Mars Lander... what happened to the penguin? (Score:2)
PDA & Smartphone Optimized Sites [mobileoptimized.com]
Replacing my laptop with a Treo [mobileoptimized.com]
Phoenix Mars Lander Hits Halfway Point (Score:4, Funny)
Well... (Score:1, Funny)
Get your ass back to Mars... (Score:1, Redundant)
How soon (Score:2, Funny)
Re:How soon (Score:1)
When NASA realise they are guilty of trademark infringement.
If we're building a robot out of discarded parts.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If we're building a robot out of discarded part (Score:2)
"I'm going to sing the doom song. Doom doom doom doom..." (different episode, but...)
A new form of pollution (Score:1)
But seriously, let's wish the Phoenix luck, it will need it with all of that burning down to ashes and reincarnating itself that will be doing these next few years. (:
Humans (Score:2)
Re:Humans (Score:1)
You might want to set up some supplies of potable water, edible food, breathable atmosphere, energy stores, and some living quarters first.
No Brain, No Headache (Score:1)
Re:NASA scared of detecting life on mars? (Score:2)
My thoughts? an actual bona-fide "life-detector" is still too complicated to attempt. all of the proxies that we try to measure are just that, proxies, and can represent chemistry that we simply weren't aware
No liquid water? (Score:4, Interesting)
From the article:
and...
If the ice is retreating in spring/summer then it's melting, right? Where's the liquid water going?
Re:No liquid water? (Score:2)
The atmospheric pressure on Mars is just a little too low to allow liquid water to exist.
Re:No liquid water? (Score:5, Informative)
It sublimes, which means that it goes directly from a solid to a gas.
This is more to do with pressure than temperature-it doesn't mean the ice is melting becasue it's 200 kelvin or anything.
Re:No liquid water? (Score:5, Informative)
in other news (Score:2)
Phoenix Mars Lander Hits Halfway Point (Score:1)
Dammit! I said go left!
Why are they not using the Airbags again? (Score:1)
Why?? Why use a system that has no success history instead of using a system that has succeeded 3 times already?
I just don't get it.
Breakfast, anyone? (Score:2)
You know, the lander *does* look like a breakfast table. Maybe the NASA budget problems are worse than we thought, and they had to use furniture from the break room.