Messenger Flies by Mercury 170
Riding with Robots writes "Today, more than three decades after the last spacecraft visited Mercury, Messenger buzzed just 200 kilometers above the planet's surface. During the encounter, the robotic spacecraft conducted a range of scientific observations, including imaging swaths of Mercury's surface that have never been seen up close before. A few of the first pictures are now available, with many more to come in the next few days."
Again? (Score:2)
Cant wait (Score:1)
Never know
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Re:Cant wait (Score:5, Informative)
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You forgot to add:
You can look up rhetorically in Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhetorically [wikipedia.org]
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Yeah, but the emo nights are the worst. Planets can be so bipolar!
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Re:Cant wait (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Cant wait (Score:5, Funny)
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Yes, it does. All planets in the solar system have one. It's called "night".
Re:Cant wait (Score:5, Funny)
Or... a Predator! *ducks*
Re:Cant wait (Score:5, Funny)
Sorry.
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Re:Cant wait... At first, I thought I saw... (Score:2)
Re:Again? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Again? (Score:5, Informative)
Part of the problem, too, is that it's really tricky to get to Mercury due to the amount of delta-v you need to shed Earth orbit, plus unlike Mars, Mercury has a negligible atmosphere which makes aerobraking useless. That's why they did three slingshot maneuvers to get there. The navigation team at JPL has really outdone themselves with this flight, and are to be commended.
It actually takes more delta-v to get to the sun than it takes to leave the solar system from here. This is why that whole "send dangerous waste to the sun" is a really bad idea. It takes a huge amount of fuel and if you miss, you've got a dangerous payload in a highly eccentric orbit that almost certainly crosses the Earth's. What could possibly go wrong? :-)
And maybe it's because I'm a space nerd, but I think MESSENGER is glamorous as hell.
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And a solution to send garbage safely would be to aim it a bit high or low (perpendicular to orbit of Earth). The slingshot would almost never send it back towar
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If you point it right at the Sun from ground perspective, it will just come back to circle the Earth unless propelled really hard. One needs to find a way to bleed sun-orbiting speed off of it. There's no free lunch.
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Solar sails do not use the solar wind (i.e. charged particles) for propulsion, but the light pressure (photons). Also, you can actually control the direction of the thrust gained from from the solar sail by changing the direction in which the photons are reflected (at the expense of absolu
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moot.
Also, you can actually control the direction of the thrust gained from from the solar sail by changing the direction in which the photons are reflected (at the expense of absolute thrust, since the effective area of the sail drops if it does not reflect the photons straight back at the sun).
Yes, but only within the "outward 180 degrees" range. You can't -propel- yourself towards the Sun using
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(the sail does not propel you as such towards the Sun. Solar gravity does, and the sail only propels you against orbital speed, so you drop to a lower orbit in effect.)
Re:Again? (Score:5, Informative)
With regards to you second question, unless the highly inclined orbit was altered again at perigee and apogee with respect to the sun, your payload would return to the Earth's orbit.
Note: I am not a rocket scientist, at least not for a while, but I have done a bit of interplanetary stuff like this. All the numbers come from google. And it is entirely possible I'm quite mistaken, but I hope this was a bit helpful.
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Escape speed from Earth is 11 km/sec and you end up barely moving relative to the Earth once you're reasonably far away (say past the Moon). So you share the 30 km/sec orbital speed with the Earth. That means that you're moving *sideways* to the direction of the Sun at that gawdawful speed. If you try to move toward the Sun, you'll still slip to the side and miss it. You've got to kill your sideways orbital speed first, and then you (automatically) drop down closer to the Sun. (Ir
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Imagine you are in an aircraft travelling over a target on the ground, and you have to drop some small projectile to hit that target just as you pass over it. If you just drop the projectile, the speed of the plane will cause the projectile to have a horizontal velocity equal to the speed of the aircraft, and you will miss your target by a wide margin. To make the projectile fall vertically, you have to throw it backwards from the aircraft with a backwards veloc
Re:Again? (Score:4, Interesting)
Interestingly enough, the navigation of this flight was outsourced to Kintex [kinetx.com]. The mission itself is managed by APL... AFAIK, JPL wasn't particularly involved.
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Zoom? (Score:2)
Re:Zoom? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Zoom? (Score:4, Funny)
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-- there, fixed that for you.
Re:Zoom? (Score:5, Informative)
And even without getting a lot closer, this is *huge*. Fully 55% of Mercury's surface has never been imaged by spacecraft (and cannot really be imaged well from the ground), so we don't have a very good idea what more than half the planet looks like. This flyby, I'm told, well see about half of the un-imaged area.
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The Planet?
They just took a few shots of the moon if you ask me.
Re:Zoom? (Score:5, Funny)
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Three Cheers for NASA! (Score:5, Insightful)
Hats off to the folks who put this together. I was in high school the last time we saw any closeup pictures of Mercury. Every time we send probes to other panets we find out really cool stuff. Messenger should be no exception.
If we can't go there ourselves, we can send robots. Robots are cool. :-)
...laura
Re:Three Cheers for NASA! (Score:5, Funny)
cool stuff? Now come on, this is Mercury.
Re:Three Cheers for NASA! (Score:4, Funny)
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Not only is it Insightful, it's also Underrated. :-)
Do we need -1 Mods on Crack?
:-)
...laura
Correction (Score:3, Informative)
>A few of the first pictures are now available, with many more to come in the next few days.
Actually, only a few approach images are available. The first images from the close approach will not be available until 01/05/08 when Messenger has finished data collection and points its antenna towards Earth and begins to transmit data. Can't wait for images of a very harsh environment.
Oops... (Score:5, Informative)
The first images from the close approach will not be available until 01/05/08
Re:Oops... (Score:4, Insightful)
In Quîndecimber?
14 months is a long time to wait.
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In Quîndecimber?
14 months is a long time to wait.
Either way it's not really so long to wait, since this would be the thirteenth month. :-)
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Re:Oops... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Correction (Score:5, Insightful)
Could we please use unambiguous date formatting?
Something like YYYY-MM-DD?
I guess you actually meant 2008-01-15 with a typo.
Re:Correction (Score:5, Funny)
Plus, the Mercury citizens have learned to simply abbreviate as '08' on their paper calendars-- if you write all the zeros, the paper calendars usually catch fire before you are done-- so it's important to write quickly!
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Re:Correction (Score:5, Insightful)
ISO 8601.
Additionally, I'm completely unaware of anyone or anyplace using
YYYY-DD-MM as a date format, and my googleing seems to confirm that.
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Standardization and unambiguity are different beasts.
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YYYY-DD-MM as a date format, and my googleing seems to confirm that.
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which sanity is erased by common use of imperial reign (this is year Heisei 20).
Matt
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The commonly accepted standard is YYYY X M X D X where the X's are kanji characters. These are translated into dot notation commonly. It works in descending order which makes sense.
I am not aware of any Europeans who use year first. The ambiguity to which you refer is due to the difference in order M-D or D-M used when writing out the full month name in the western world. I submit that by using a dot notation it is simpler and
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It's no biggie really, it's just a thing to make trade easier. And, as an engineer, it makes our lives easier too! People take such pride in the metric system - it's kind of weird. It's just a somewhat-less-arbit
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RS
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And writing the month in letters is language-specific.
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Or, better suggestion, write the month's name: 15 Jan. 2008.
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I know the following post was less vague as there aren't 15 months, but for clarity sake can we ask for ISO dates?
2008-01-05: No mistakes.
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Dang it all, even I can't keep from laughing at that page.
Re:Photos are FAKE (Score:4, Insightful)
great flyby animation (Score:5, Informative)
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It's a FAKE! (Score:5, Funny)
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Not only that, but if you look closely enough, you can see it's just one of the faked moon photos upside down! Definitely a hoax!
A good quick read (Score:4, Informative)
After they found the Face... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:After they found the Face... (Score:4, Funny)
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when (Score:1)
How about crater level imaging?
Global warming on Mercury (Score:5, Funny)
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Actually true on Venus (Score:2)
Am I the only one... (Score:2)
I hope they packed lots of sunscreen ... (Score:2)
(Just kidding. I know the probe actually has a physical sunscreen that keeps it from being toasted).
Extremely Close (Score:4, Interesting)
While you can't scoop up the dirt, being that close for visuals has to be nearly as good as landing there...
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