Update: Mangalyaan's Main Engine Test Fired, Maven In Orbit 25
William Robinson writes Before the spacecraft is scheduled to enter Mars orbit, Indian Space Research Organization (Isro) scientists reignited the Mars Orbiter Mission spacecraft's main engine for four seconds as a trial. The liquid apogee motor (LAM) engine has been idle for about 300 days since the spacecraft left the Earth's orbit on a Martian trajectory on December 1, 2013. The short-duration test was to ensure that the engine is in good shape for the 24-minute crucial maneuver on Wednesday." In other Mars mission updates, NASA's Maven spacecraft arrived at Mars late Sunday after a 442 million-mile journey that began nearly a year ago.
I hadn't heard of Mangalyaan (Score:2, Informative)
The wikipedia page [wikipedia.org] for those as ignorant as I am. It's apparently almost entirely a proof of concept that India's space agency can manage an interplanetary orbiter. The mission's main profile seems to be "get into stable geocentric orbit around mars".
I'm sure the atmospheric monitoring tools are scientifically useful to someone though.
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Indeed. Now that KSP has a budget mode, safe missions to test feasibility with almost no scientific payload became more interesting.
bald-faced blue-planet invader propeganda (Score:2)
Re:I hadn't heard of Mangalyaan (Score:5, Funny)
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I'm sure he was thinking of a stationary or synchronous orbit anyway, which is a bit more specific than areocentric :P
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Yeah, I know. I "translated" the use of aerocentric from Wikipedia to geocentric on the grounds of familiarity to most people. Sue me.
Re:I hadn't heard of Mangalyaan (Score:5, Funny)
You are not authorized to orbit my nipples.
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Correct me if I'm wrong, and I'm sure I am, but doesn't modern abiogenesis theory cite methane as one of the precursors to live, not just a product of it?
Like wasn't it one of the ingredients in the Miller-Urey experiment(along with ammonia, hydrogen, and water)?
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It's a precursor, but not one that's stable in an atmosphere exposed to sunlight in the long term. Early Earth may have had some delivered by icy impactors. Titan has a significant quantity in the atmosphere, but even out in Saturn orbit there's enough sunlight that it's constantly being broken up and recombining into heavier hydrocarbons and other photochemical smog components. Titan is largely composed of ices and cryovolcanism is a likely source of replacement methane. There's no obvious sign of similar
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You say that as if excrement and public health aren't some of the primary targets of the Indian government to address right now. They can expend a little bit of money to be scientifically competitive in the future, while also addressing some of the more mundane problems their nation faces at the same time.
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India is both a rich and poor country... is acts like a rich country when doing big projects and acts like a poor country when requesting money and support. The true is that they have very rich people and very poor people... and the power usually don't care much about the poor (other than it is cheap labor)
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So, they put it on one of their smaller rockets. The net of this is that the orbiter itself had to use up most of its fuel just escaping Earth's orbit, leaving very, very little for the
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A test fire? (Score:2)
If they ran their test and discovered it didn't fire, what would they realistically be able to do? I mean either it fires on Wednesday and they insert it into their desired orbit, or it misfires and heads off into the Oort cloud. It's not like if it fails the test today they can send a repair crew up there to re-tighten the muffler bearings.
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If there is one thing India has a lot of experience in it is remote support.
Will Robinson. Seriously? (Score:3)
Gradle (Score:2)
This is why I use gradle for my dependency management.