Front Row Seats To NASA's Lunar Impact 132
itwbennett writes "Tomorrow morning at 7:30 EDT, NASA is going to crash a probe into the moon as part of its LCROSS (Lunar CRater Observing and Sensing Satellite) mission, the main purpose of which is to discover if there's any water on the moon. 'If you happen to have a 10-12" telescope (or larger) then you might be able to see the plume from your backyard,' says blogger Peter Smith. 'For the rest of us, the impact will be streamed live over the web in a few places. NASA will have a feed, beginning at 6:15 EDT. The NASA feed includes live footage from the spacecraft itself as well as expert commentary and other goodies. Astronomy service SLOOH is offering a double-shot of earth-bound feeds, with one feed from New Hampshire and the other from Arizona. The SLOOH feeds start at 6:30 am EDT.'" Update: Matt_dk adds a link to a viewing guide to the impact, writing that "Amateur astronomers need a 10-inch or bigger telescope to make observations."
LCROSS Observation page (Score:5, Informative)
NASA have set up a webpage for the LCROSS Observation Campaign: http://lcross.arc.nasa.gov/observation.htm [nasa.gov]
By the way, it is at 11.30 UTC for those who don't know how far their timezone is from EDT.
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I'll be at the Mauna Kea Visitor Information Station, either looking through their scopes (14-16") or trying to get some pictures with my cameras. Unfortunately, my shift up on the summit ended Wednesday morning, so I have no excuse (or desire, really) to go up top. I might wander up to the LCROSS comms center at Hale Pohaku at some point, though.
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And that was a good way to demonstrate that your sense of humor isn't funny.
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You're confused. But that's to be expected... you're a jock, right?
First, the nerds send a monkey. Then they send a jock. Then they send the nerds after the safety checks have been passed.
They don't send the jock first because he's so highly esteemed. They send the jock for the same reason they send the monkey.
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There's also a separate NASA mission site with some easier to understand info.
http://www.nasa.gov/lcross [nasa.gov]
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Kudos. /. shouls always use UTC. Always.
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No. TCB [wikipedia.org].
World Times (Score:2)
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Your own timezones? You mean those defined by the "time distance" to Greenwich time?
Look, it's a very simple concept - don't use local variables that are usefull only to you when communicating.
Lunarian race ... (Score:4, Funny)
Flash!!!
Re:Lunarian race ... (Score:4, Funny)
There, fixed that for you.
Queen of Corrections (Score:1)
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Gordon's Alive?!
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some ancient lunarian race
Cecil's on his way to take care of this, right?
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Think of the Mooninites! (Score:1)
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Never mind them. There's plenty of people who think this is a secret NASA project to turn the moon into an interplanetary bombing range. And various new-agey types urging us not to bomb the moon, and to respect luna, and who will be praying for the moon tomorrow. O Rly? Ya rly. Just google for 'bombing the moon'.
If the probe misses I would bet these types would think it was the doing of their prayers....
How often does a meteor this big hit the moon?
Re:Think of the Mooninites! (Score:4, Funny)
If the probe misses
Prayers would be the least of their worries, it would mean that NASA can't hit the broad side of a planet from 20 paces!
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If the probe misses
If the probe fails in its mission and instead makes a soft landing on the lunar surface, then I'll attribute it to the power of prayer.
I mean, wow, can you imagine?
WHO is protesting this??? (Score:1)
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According to The Register, it's "Treehugging, possibly lycanthropic web-2.0 campaigners" - http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/10/07/stop_nasa_bombing_the_moon/ [theregister.co.uk]
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According to The Register, it's "Treehugging, possibly lycanthropic web-2.0 campaigners" - http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/10/07/stop_nasa_bombing_the_moon/ [theregister.co.uk]
"lycanthropic web-2.0"? Who gave the furries their own Internet? I won several Internets on a forum, I want an Internet!
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Furthermore, NASA is aiming directly at their frozen water reserves!
Does anyone else have this wish? (Score:2, Funny)
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Preferably with them and their three oh-so-political-correctly-mixed underlings inside the probe.
It's amazing how boring, dragged-out and pseudo-sciency these guys can make a simple yes or no answer. And no, the way they get to that answer does _not_ interest me if it's presented in such a way.
Lets hope (Score:1)
that the aliens [examiner.com] wont get too upset at us.
Robots (Score:1)
Is it really so hard to set up an excavation robot on the moon that we have to keep dropping things on it?!?
Also...
Trying to get rid of mental image of Man on the Moon wearing a blindfold while smoking a cigarette.
Re:Robots (Score:5, Interesting)
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The reason it's so cold is that it's in a crater that doesn't let the sun in. As for freezing your robot, there is no atmosphere to leach heat off of your robot, so at the most you'd need to make up for heat lost through your highly insulated tires.
The main advantage of using a robot (other than "you've got a robot on the moon") is that you can study the structure / layout of the minerals in place rather than just their composition...
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The main problem is probably powering a robot on the moon without solar power.
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This is at most a green wackos problem, not technical one. We've been using RTGs when there's not enough solar power for a long time.
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Take some science class. Things lose heat in vacuum by emitting radiation (typically infrared at our temperature). You might also learn that crashing is easier than landing (less delta-V), kinetic energy is a bitch at that kind of speed and will create an explosion, and people here on Earth actually use explosions to excavate material, not robotic spoons.
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Take some science class. Things lose heat in vacuum by emitting radiation (typically infrared at our temperature). You might also learn that crashing is easier than landing (less delta-V), kinetic energy is a bitch at that kind of speed and will create an explosion, and people here on Earth actually use explosions to excavate material, not robotic spoons.
Heat, by definition is Radiation. We won't get into the specifics of convection and conduction.
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This probe impact is going to kick up vastly more material than a practical robot could ever dig. If your goal is an existence proof of water, and you don't know how common it is, then you want to go through as much material as possible. Phoenix barely scratched the surface of Mars. If signs of water had been more than a few inches deep, it wouldn't have found them before it died.
Maybe once we've confirmed there's water in those craters, it'll be worth sending a robot of some kind to take a closer look.
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I'm saying that if we blow up the moon [youtube.com], we can really see what it's made of!
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So what you're saying is that we need to bomb Mars?
What did Pennsylvania [wikipedia.org] ever do to you?!
It would be horrible. Carnage, death, destruction. Martian law might even be declared!
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> Is it really so hard to set up an excavation robot on the moon that we have
> to keep dropping things on it?!?
Yes, it is. It is particularly hard to soft land things on the moon, especially in awkward places such as polar craters that we cannot see into.
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Crashing the more-or-less useless remains of existing missions into a planet is free. Sending an excavation robot is not. Also note that they had the booster hit first and the actual payload hit later so it could still measure & report while flying through the plume of debris.
Bad Weather (Score:1)
That'll teach the Lunar People who owns this solar system!
More seriously, I was looking forward to watching this in my telescope, but it looks like it's going to rain for the next 24 hours straight.
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Remember, this is not a bombardment, but a "police action"
More NasaTV feeds (Score:5, Informative)
100k/s, 320/240 [yahoo.com]
200k/s, 320/240 [yahoo.com]
500k/s, 480x360 [yahoo.com] (I think)
100k/s, 640/480 [yahoo.com]
All Windows Media format
Real media format [nasa.gov]
Quicktime [nasa.gov]
For those of you who need to watch it in absolute realtime, I've found that all the yahoo feeds (windows media) whilst being the best video quality are generally about 1-2 minutes behind realtime. Realmedia is normally about 5-10 seconds behind realtime.
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The real feed is at
137W 4060 V tp 18 SR 26665 FEC 3/4
119W 12355 L tp 10 SR 20000 FEC 5/6
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It will never be in "real time". It takes 2 seconds for the image to beam back to earth.
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So by your standards I guess nothing is real time.
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As another poster wrote, everything is affected by this delay. If there would be "0 seconds" delay, the feed would arrive in the past.
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Some of my friends and I are planning to drive down to the set in Arizona where they'll be filming it.
When I was a boy, blowing up the moon was just... (Score:1)
3 .. 2 .. 1 .. Cue the loonies (Score:2, Interesting)
I just saw this video on CNN [cnn.com]
There are also a bunch of videos on you tube
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(How has this story gone this long without a Mr. Show reference, anyway???)
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NASA, king of acronyms! (Score:1)
Utu-class planetoid (Score:1)
Mutineer's Moon
http://www.webscription.net/10.1125/Baen/0671720856/0671720856.htm [webscription.net]
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Maybe we should think twice before launching an attack against an Utu-class planetoid? Mutineer's Moon http://www.webscription.net/10.1125/Baen/0671720856/0671720856.htm [webscription.net]
Dahak didn't mind so much being attacked - it kidnapped the person attacking it, gave them a complete body upgrade, and they ended up ruling. Not seeing any negatives :)
It is a conspiracy, (Score:5, Funny)
Looks like NASA has launched a large white glass plate and placed it in near earth orbit. It is sitting exactly in the line of sight from Earth to moon. People normally see through this the real Moon. But at the appointed time, NASA will project an image using lasers and create an illusion of a spacecraft crashing into moon, and then turn off the projection. Ha, haa, NASA, we got you. We got you all figured it out. Your jig is up. We will not be denied our meal ticket no matter what you do.
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> Looks like NASA has launched a large white glass plate and placed it in near
> earth orbit. It is sitting exactly in the line of sight from Earth to moon.
"Earth orbit"? No, no. That's all a fake too. Nothing has ever been more than a few miles above the surface of the Earth.
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What a load. Of course we can get a rocket to the moon now. It is landing men on the moon and getting them back that is impossible. I mean if it was possible would we have stopped doing it for all these years? I mean if we could really land men on the moon forty years ago then we should still be doing it now.
Yes I am kidding but when I actually think about it is start to cry.
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NBC Airing on Today (Score:1)
Go Long! (Score:1)
If the water is that difficult to get to... (Score:1)
If water on the moon is so difficult to get to that one has to throw a satellite at the surface at 5600 mph [nasa.gov], how likely is it that man will be able to inhabit the moon?
Never mind the issues of building vacuum-sealed living quarters and getting mining equipment to the moon and the current low-power density of the solar energy generation mechanism most likely to be used on the moon, how would you get water up there if you have to send a satellite the mass of a full-sized SUV to dig a hole as deep as the lengt
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It raises the question of why we're spending any time at all on the moon. It can't be lived on, it's unlikely to harbor life, its geology has already been explored. Someone tell me what the point is...
Its surface geology has been explored, but not what's beneath. As for why to explore it, it's the closest heavenly body to the earth, so it's a good place to start. It's cheap and easy to get to, and a good stepping stone to future missions. Do you think the Viking or Mariner missions would have been successful if not for the Surveyor moon missions? If we ignore moon science, we make all future space missions more difficult and expensive.
If you don't think astronomy isn't important, then you must hate
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Mankind is something of an odd creature. Our inquisitive nature allows it explored areas that are too hostile even for us to survive. We do this exploration and observe what happens in order to satisfy our other primary curiosity, knowledge. From this knowledge and experience, we gain valuable insight that helps make out lives a bit easier, safer, and perhaps more challenging at the same time. It's in our nature to push the limits of about anything in order to achieve a goal or satisfy a challenge. This is
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This brings me to the next step. Water on the Moon isn't valuable because it's water. Water on the Moon represents energy. Using solar power, it can be split into hydrogen and oxygen, and then burned back into water vapor (or just use
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Because its cheaper to take stuff from the moon into outer space than it is from Earth, by virtue of its much lower gravity and nearly non-existant atmosphere.
Perhaps actually living on the Moon's surface won't ever be feasible, but there's no reason why you couldn't just, dunno, grab a chunk of it then process it in your theoretical spaceship.
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you suggest that it's not worth finding out.
Frankly, you're oversimplifying my point. To reiterate, what I'm suggesting is that it's not clear to me what the point is. We know right now that it would be difficult as hell to get water. We know right now that it would be difficult as hell to get equipment up there. What we know right now is that it's going to be expensive.
If it's expensive and its worth it, fine. But I wonder: what is the point? I don't see the point. Tell me.
Give me a a cohesive, comprehensive vision for space exploration and then we
The Time Machine (Score:1, Interesting)
Protest Terrorism on the Moon! Oh Noes! (Score:2)
Moon's Orbit? (Score:2)
I know this impact will be very small compared to the total momentum of the Moon in its orbit with the Earth. But it will have some effect. How much more quickly (or slowly) will the Moon and Earth escape each other's pull and travel apart, ahead of (or behind) the original schedule?
Nasa, They are good at crashing things. (Score:1)
Now, let us see if someone made a math error, and they miss the moon entirely.
I can't believe it... (Score:1)
http://www.imao.us/docs/NukeTheMoon.htm [www.imao.us]
Live Viewing at Moffett Field (Score:1)
...and other places. Viewing parties across the country in fact.
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/LCROSS/impact/event_index.html [nasa.gov]
It would really suck... (Score:2)
It would really suck if the lunar substrate turned out to be far more rigid (what with the cold of space) than we thought, and this impact set up a resonant frequency that shook all the surface lunar dust OFF, and the Earth's gravity drew it all in, causing the Ultimate Lunar Winter. It's The End Of The World As We Know It.
Holy crap! I think I just invented the next Michael Bay movie!
I do hereby claim 25% of the movie revenue. If only to make it too unprofitable (to stop the madness).
Linux users only have the telescope option (Score:2, Informative)
Maybe (hopefully) I'm not looking hard enough but at first glance their is no linux support.
Good thing I have a telescope.
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If you have cable the NASA channel will also have a live feed.
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If you have cable the NASA channel will also have a live feed.
cable? thats still a thing? ;)
Hurray for the NASA channel.
Re:Linux users only have the telescope option (Score:4, Informative)
The site linked to in this story doesn't appear to support OS's other than windows and mac for streaming video.
Maybe (hopefully) I'm not looking hard enough but at first glance their is no linux support.
Good thing I have a telescope.
If you mean the link to the NASA TV page doesn't support Linux, viewing the source shows URLs for the video streams.
All the video streams worked for me after saving the file provided by the URL, and opening it with VLC.
Channels
*Public Channel
Live Events, Mission Coverage
http://www.nasa.gov/55644main_NASATV_Windows.asx [nasa.gov]
http://www.nasa.gov/ram/35037main_portal.ram [nasa.gov]
http://www.nasa.gov/qtl/151335main_NASA_TV_QT.qtl [nasa.gov]
*Media Channel
Video file, other resources
http://www.nasa.gov/145590main_Digital_Media.asx [nasa.gov]
*Education Channel
For students and teachers
http://www.nasa.gov/145588main_Digital_Edu.asx [nasa.gov]
http://www.nasa.gov/ram/145589main_Digital_Edu.ram [nasa.gov]
*Live Space Station Video
Earth Views and More (Details)
http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/isslivestream.asx [nasa.gov]
*Mission Audio
(may be silent at times)
http://www.nasa.gov/178952main_Mission_Audio_UP.asx [nasa.gov]
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Linux option:
You can use the yahoo links listed above and paste them directly into VLC under the File / Open Network Stream option - works wherever VLC is supported I suppose.
Allows for higher resolution then I could find on the site.
Notice (Score:2)
As is the norm for 99% of all astronomical events like comets, meteor showers, space station flyovers, etc. this one, too, will be obscured by dense cloud cover for anyone living in the Chicago area. (Argh!)
screwed in South America (Score:2)
I think I am going to be screwed in South America where i live. The days are getting longer, so it will still be day light out even though I am in that EDT time zone.
What's wrong with you guys and gals? (Score:2)
Nearly 90% of the US films end up in an explosion, either it is a building, or a ship, car, mountain, some people, but something always to be exploded.
I was in the USA and I noticed there other strange things. It is considered to be shameful to walk. The sidewalks are narrow, the green light for pedestrians light up just for about 10 seconds, so that one has nearly to run to cross a street. Automobile roads look like the rivers of steel, like a new geographical phenomena.
If one does not spoil nature, does n
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after considering your post I believe we need a "blow this post up" button next to the "reply" and "parent"
Hahaha, what a anticlimatic letdown!!!!! (Score:2)
The boffin-hyped"plume" wasn't visible with ten inch nor twenty inch amateur telescopes. It wasn't even visible with 200 inches telescope that Palomar Observatory has! PR nightmare, bwahaha.
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Well, Marshall is kind of the redneck branch of the NASA family. Imagine you suspect that lighting a fart will blow the door off the out house, and all you get is a barely visible blue flame. It's still cool, just not as dramatic as you thought it might be.
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When that probe hits deep within the crater, it will finally puncture the Moon's skin and we all know what happens to a water balloon!
Come on now, we all know that the moon is filled with cheese [theregister.co.uk].
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Don't feed the trolls, but how about moderating them?
This particular program, like most NASA programs, was funded and largely paid for a long time ago. To put a stop to this project simply because of a problem in our economy today would erase the benefits of these sunk costs, and instead only eliminiate a small portion of costs that remain - the launch and analysis. That'd be like building a car, and then driving it into a lake simply because you couldn't afford the gas. Sure, it makes sense on the surface
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Don't forget that if you're laying off everyone working on the project you're increasing unemployment and decreasing the amount those people are spending -- while I don't usually take that as a good argument for maintaining federal programs, maintaining useful programs that happen to maintain peoples employment seems like a decent idea, particularly for an administration that takes a fairly Keynesian view.
Of course, I'm a spacecraft engineer and not an economist so my view may be a little skewed.
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"we don't know if there was any effect on Earth as a result of large impacts on the moon."
Large impacts? What do you mean, large impacts? The probe is the size of a car, man!
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Yours is 14 inches in diameter?! Wow, that's... something, I guess. I would say "sorry for your inability to have sex, ever", but I doubt that your girth is the primary obstacle.
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:( my Japanese telescope only 3 inches :(
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No, this is the redneck center for NASA - it's par for the course down there.
The reason it doesn't make sense is that it's not the way we(they) usually do things. However, this is a cheap way of doing it. Instead of comping up with a bunch of mechanisms, they're going just doing it on a macro scale. I suspect - but have no proof - that someone made the conjecture if we could observe a small asteroid hitting the moon, we could observe the debris and get data from a good depth below the surface. Somebody els