Group Plans to Bring Martian Sample to Earth 84
sm62704 (mcgrew) writes "New Scientist has a story about IMARS (the International Mars Architecture for Return Samples) planning to bring samples of Martian soil to earth. The robotic mission would be a needed precursor to manned trips to the red planet. Also, international cooperation is necessary since the US has already nixed bankrolling manned Mars missions."
I wonder if we should. (Score:3, Funny)
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Agreed. I fear Earth will soon face an epidemic of The Andromeda Strain . After all Crichton was a doctor, he should know.
A lot of what's in Crichton's work is pseudoscience at best. Take Jurassic Park. None of the DNA that has been captured from dinosaur fossils is in good enough condition to produce a clone ... and all likelihood no sample will ever be found that could be used for cloning. It's also mentioned that all life is inherently female and that it's only the introduction of the Y chromosome that makes a zygote male. Not quite. What really happens is that there are X sperm and Y sperm. So, from conception, a zy
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That is horrible logic. Even if we ignore the fact that mars and the moon have some radically different environments, what you basically just said is "If I can stick my arm in this cow's mouth and not get bit, then I should be able to stick my arm in any animal's mouth without worry of getting bit.
There is a lot of stuff out there we haven't seen. And it's entirely possible t
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What really happens is that there are X sperm and Y sperm.
Actually, XY is only what happens in most mammals. There are at least three other prominent sex-determination systems among biological organisms, including X0 (females have two X's, males have one), ZW (W encodes femaleness), and Haplodiploidy (gametes develop into males, zygotes into females): See here [wikipedia.org] for more information.
Reptilian gender is environmentally, not genetically, determined. Of course, dinosaurs weren't strictly reptilian. Nevertheless, Crichton was not describing the XY system. He was using
How's the pie? (Score:1)
shades of (Score:2)
I am quite sure man has cooked up more virulent things than Nature will throw at us from space anytime soon.
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Roughly 99.9% chance you are right. But would you want to be the one taking a 0.1% chance of wiping out large chunks of humanity?
As Rumsfield would say, we don't know what we don't know.
iMars (Score:1)
uh? (Score:2)
citation please?
Last I heard this was planned for 2018 or something
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Just plain stupid (proposed) law. (Score:3, Interesting)
The House of Representatives version of HR 3093, the bill that determines NASA's funding for 2008, effectively bans the study of an entire planet:
Provided, That none of the funds under this heading shall be used for any research, development, or demonstration activities related exclusively to the human exploration of Mars.
The House committee report mentions the proposed prohibition: Finally, bill language is included prohibiting funding of any research,
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Yes, let's all start name-calling without knowing what we're talking about...
Posted November 28th, 2007 here - NASA's manned mission to Mars penciled in for 2031. http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/11/28/2029245 [slashdot.org]
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You'll note that the article, neither in the section that you quoted nor anywhere else (and yes I did read it, even though this is /.) never says that funding for a manned mars mission has been "nixed".
Thank you so much for your snide condescension, but you fail at life. Jerk.
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Since when is it considered a /. party foul to ask someone to back up a contentious claim?
Ty;e "mars" in that little search box thing at the top of th epage.
Ok, let's try that... the first relevant result is:
How To Beat Congress's Ban Of Humans On Mars [slashdot.org] Which references another slashdot story:
Subcommittee Stops Human Mars Mission Spending [slashdot.org] where the only citation is a press release from the subcommittee... not actually stating whether the bill had passed in both houses or if it had been signed.
A Thomas search indicates the status of the bill as: Last action: 11/8/2
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Never. But you found the references ok.
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Are you OK? I found references that clearly don't support the statement I am asking to be cited. There is vague reference to wording in an appropriations bill that may or may not pass as is, that may or may not allow research into a manned mars mission to go forward.
Glad to see that the slashdot editors are still busy keeping their Aerons warm.
Other worth subjects (Score:4, Funny)
Rocket engines (Score:2)
2. Where are you going to find that sort of power?
3. Where are you going to fix the engines?
4. Have you considered the seismic implications?
5. Are you insane?
6. It would be cheaper and safer to cut back now...
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2. Rocket store.
3. The ground.
4. Yes.
5. Maybe.
6. Says you.
Hmmmm..... (Score:2)
2. Of course!
3. Umm, yes, I was more thinking that you'd need to provide a consistent thrust but that the earth is rotating at high speed and it's not so simple as a result.
4. Ok, good, so pushing on one point on the crust (and of course moving the core) isn't going to cause massive changes to seismic patterns and pressures and drown half the planet in l
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Recycling costs less.... (Score:2)
But you've thrown me a bit there - I wasn't talking about recycling. Dumping rubbish, whilst wasteful, isn't anything much to do with global warming. Though recycling can, through its energy efficiency, reduce our carbon emissions a little.
If you have the weird idea that more recyc
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I'm sure this would work without an atmosphere. But inside one I'm not sure about the physics. Will the opposite force 'get stuck' and disperse in the air rather than result in a net transfer of momentum?
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Wouldn't the power output needed to move 60,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 Newtons of mass (maybe I should have used tons
By the way, a Saturn V rocket weighs around 3,000 tons (30 thousand Netwons, approximately). That's just for comparison.
If we used enough rockets to make a sizeable difference to Earth's orbit (which we do
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Depends on the exchange rate, of course. If we can get a rate of 1 to 1 or better, we can just slap it onto the US deficit. What's another trillion at this stage?
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If there is life in comets or asteroids, it would probably be deep down in order to hide from cold and radiation. Thus, it would probably require expensive drilling. On Mars, one would only have to dig a few feet at the most.
But I think a bigger problem is the risk of contamination of Earth with a deadly disease that we have no immunit
It's Robotic! (Score:5, Informative)
This is a robotic mission, so would be perfectly fine under the NASA funding rules. If you're pissed about the rule, go complain in the thread we already had about it. Don't inject it into stories where it has no real bearing.
The actual article itself contains this completely different and more appropriate explanation for the need for international efforts:
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JPL is no better than the rest of NASA at estimating and controlling costs - they've frequently come under fire from both NASA administrations and Congress
Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:5, Informative)
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To amplify a little on what you said: the results from the Viking experiments were ambiguous. They set criteria in advance, and said, "If the experiment does X, it means there's life, otherwise there's no evidence for life in the sample." The experiment actually did X, but some other aspects of the results were different than anything that was anticipated, which made the entire thing hard to interpret. At the time, th
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Viking collected samples, but didn't bring them back to earth for human inspection. The popular view of the Viking programs was that the tests performed on the samples were inconclusive.
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The problem is that by the time you have hardened a sensor for space use, got it approved and then got it to mars it will probablly be over a decade behind the technology we have on earth and if you want to retest with better sensors you have to send a whole new mission.
By bringing the sample back here it can be studied with the latest equipment we have and we can retest as new equpiment becomes avail
Send a Mars Rover and pieces to make a catapult (Score:5, Funny)
The only problem could be the rover exceeding his expected lifetime thirteen times and burying us in Mars pieces.
Phew! (Score:2)
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Thanks for clearing that up submitter! I'd hate to think it was being done in a spirit of international cooperation to advance the sum of human knowledge.
Right, we all know it's the US's job to supply the funding, while leaving the actual decision making to "international cooperation." You know, the old "we want to play, we just don't want to pay."
Hell with it. Let somebody else foot the bill for once.
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Because the US always pays for everything and never starts things then leave others to clean up the mess... like, say, Afghanistan where the party line recently switched to pressuring NATO to "do their part"
Yep, and it's about f'ing time the non-US part of NATO started doing something other than sitting around with their thumbs up you-know-where.
Piker.
Wanker.
Braaaains......... (Score:2, Funny)
ahem (Score:3, Funny)
Evolution (Score:2)
Just have lots of Head & Shoulders cans ready and we'll be fine!
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But science fiction isn't meant to be primarily a prediction method for the future. It's a way of showing the contemporary issues in society, but getting away with being close-to-the-bone by wrapping it in sci-fi. Just look at how Star Trek did it through its history. Kirk kissing Uhura, Dax kissing another woman because her symbiant used to be in a male, countless discussions about greed and drug use and equality given in a setting that
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lol (Score:1)
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-GiH
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There, fixed it for you. Because if oil is discovered there in the near future, it would be there now too.
Titan has oceans of oil (Score:2)
i know how this work (Score:1)
Mars bacteria on earth= bad idea
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It'd also be handy just to check out the exact composition of the rock/soil.
Let's hurry up and go already. (Score:2)
The robotic mission would be a needed precursor to manned trips to the red planet.
No, it wouldn't. We know enough about Mars to send a human or three there on a mission now, especially with a plan like Mars Direct [wikipedia.org]. (Short version of plan: send an automated small chemical plant there with a hydrogen cargo. Turn the hydrogen plus martian CO2 into methane + oxygen. When the return vehicle is fully fuelled, send the human crew along on the next ship. They don't launch until they have a confirmed return
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Yeah, but we have billions of people on the planet, and only couple are needed to go on the mission. I'll go, anyone else?
EASY; Falcon9 heavy and Armadillo (Score:2)
Species I (Score:1)
Man on Mars (Score:4, Informative)
Read NASA's site and NASA watch for the real news.
Obligatory (Score:1)