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Mars NASA Space

"Splat" of Schiaparelli Mars Lander Likely Found (spaceflightnow.com) 106

Long-time Slashdot reader Tablizer quotes Space Flight Now: Views from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter released Friday show the crash site where Europe's experimental Schiaparelli lander fell to the red planet's surface from a height of several miles, leaving a distinct dark patch on the Martian landscape...The image from MRO's context camera shows two new features attributed to the Schiaparelli spacecraft, including a large dark scar spanning an estimated 50 feet (15 meters) by 130 feet (40 meters). Schiaparelli's ground team believes it is from the high-speed impact of the lander's main body... A little more than a half-mile (1 kilometer) to the south, a bright spot appears in the image, likely the 39-foot-diameter (12-meter) supersonic parachute and part of Schiaparelli's heat shield, which released from the lander just before ESA lost contact."
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"Splat" of Schiaparelli Mars Lander Likely Found

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 23, 2016 @12:44PM (#53134637)

    on Mars today

  • Splat is reserved for the sound of meatbags smearing across the surface.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      In order to show up in the images, the pattern probably resembles that of the crash-landed Genesis probe. [spaceflightnow.com] (Earth desert)

      It's also possible its landing fuel, which appeared to be under-utilized based on telemetry, sprayed about upon impact.

    • by Nehmo ( 757404 )

      Splat is reserved for the sound of meatbags smearing across the surface.

      Correct. It's an onomatopoeia. This is just a wreck.

  • They got within 5 miles of the intended target. From here to mars that is a bulls eye. They should get points for that.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday October 23, 2016 @01:06PM (#53134759)

    Kaboom. There's always a Kaboom.

    On a more serious note, what's with all the anti-science prats showing up on Slashdot recently ?

    At one time, the community here used to be the one championing new experiments as a positive learning curve even if the immediate experiment ended in failure.

    Seems like there's a bunch of prats around here who don't realise that all the things they take for granted these days came about as the result of many experiments, including the failed experiments.

    • On a more serious note, what's with all the anti-science prats showing up on Slashdot recently ?

      Just trolls mostly. Nothing new and they've always been here. We only notice them because the traffic on Slashdot isn't what it used to be.

  • War Crimes! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Areyoukiddingme ( 1289470 ) on Sunday October 23, 2016 @01:13PM (#53134801)

    Stop the orbital bombardment of Mars! White cis-gendered males are attempting to continue their colonial exploitation of indigenous peoples! They're trying to buy Olympus Mons for a handful of beads! #martianlivesmatter

    • ( Homer Simpson voice) "Mmmm...Indigenous people." And, I really don't understand the "cis" part. "Male" is by genetics or choice. It does not state who you sleep with. Merely an attempt to get attention and look smart. Gets the wrong kind of attention, does not look smart.
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Sunday October 23, 2016 @02:31PM (#53135077)

    First of all, I don't see much mention that they still have a new satellite in orbit around Mars so the mission is at least partly successful.

    But with a string of failures to land on Mars from the ESA, and a string of successes from NASA you have to start to wonder - what is it that is lacking in the ESA program that is not able to get landings right? Is it just different approaches to the problems of landing that are not panning out over a few attempts? Is it some kind of engineering process failure that they just are not accounting for some possibilities? I was wondering if anyone had any insight.

    I wish the ESA the best of luck and really want to se them succeed, as the more craft studying mars the better (though they are all a handful of beans in comparison to the first human to land and study there).

    • by janimal ( 172428 )

      It's probably, because ESA uses the metric system.

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )

      what is it that is lacking in the ESA program that is not able to get landings right?

      In this situation they were originally going to use NASA's landing system, and worked with NASA for a few years on it, but then had to develop their own from scratch after a diplomatic pissing contest led to NASA's support being withdrawn. Even worse they couldn't use any good ideas they had picked up from NASA for I.P. reasons.
      Their new system didn't work first time. It's not a matter of fucking up on attempt three after

      • I appreciate the explanation, but isn't it more that the new system was added in rush (to replace the old ones) as opposed to it being the first time used? It seems like the NASA successes were first time uses of those landing systems also, from what I remember.

        Also, I really don't understand how IP applies since these are not products for commercial sale nor used for commercial purposes. I don't see where NASA could even bring a suit.

        • by dbIII ( 701233 )

          Also, I really don't understand how IP applies since these are not products for commercial sale nor used for commercial purposes

          Even if only NASA buys a specific component from Boeing (for example) it's still a commercial product. While NASA has I.P. sharing arrangements with it's suppliers the diplomatic pissing contest excluded the ESA from that.
          The ESA did it quickly, got Russian help and thought it would work but it was still the first of it's kind. NASA was building on stuff going way back to Viking

      • Huh? Are you sure that nasa would not share our landing system with ESA? That just sounds off.
        • by dbIII ( 701233 )
          Initially NASA did. Then others outside of NASA stepped in. There has been a bit about it but a recent BBC world service radio program summed things up better than others I've read/heard. It was in the last week so probably available for download.
          • that really sux. I would think that ESA is close enough for us to share some of our tech without fools jumping all over it. It is a very sad waste of money and time to not have this rover.
            • by dbIII ( 701233 )
              From http://www.spaceflightinsider.... [spaceflightinsider.com]

              ExoMars project began to materialize in July–August 2009 when ESA signed contracts with NASA and Roscosmos to develop the mission. However, due to budgetary cuts in 2012, NASA terminated its participation in the project. One year later, Roscosmos became the main partner for ESA when the agencies signed a deal obligating the Russian side to deliver launch services, scientific instruments for TGO and landing systems, together with rover instruments, for the mission

    • NASA picked up a lot of experience putting landers on the moon [wikipedia.org]. The Soviets also sent a lot of moon landers, but never really ironed out the bugs (had a lot of failures). Those problems followed them to Mars [wikipedia.org] where they went 0 for 6 (well, 1 for 6 but the single success ceased communicating after 14.5 seconds [wikipedia.org] with no useful data received).
    • ... what is it that is lacking in the ESA program that is not able to get landings right?

      One of the contributing factors is probably that there is less redundancy; I think ESA are trying to pack as much science as possible into a limited budget. I think also, the lander part of the program wasn't necessarily the main ambition, although it would have been very, very nice to our own vehicle down there. I think everybody agrees that space missions are unsustainably expensive, so we really do need to find (safe) ways to reduce the costs a lot; this is no doubt another important part of ESA's space

    • NASA has has 6 failures on mars missions.
      The ESA has had 1.5. The most recent of which was not one. Remember what this mission was called? "ExoMars Trace Gas Orbiter (TGO)" and the "Schiaparelli EDM lander"

      The key word there being Orbiter. The orbiter is working just fine. The other key part is in the acronym EDM "Entry, Descent and Landing Demonstrator Module" The key word there is being Demonstrator. Schiaparelli wasn't on any major science mission.

      The only purpose of the lander was to test and provide

    • QA is the problem. They refuse to do majorly expensive testing on earth to check all subsystems. They really need to fire a 'mars test' system into space and test it landing here. In general, the same system that will land on Mars will land on earth, though not the other way around. Btw, this is exactly what America nasa and new space does. Prior to sending red dragon, they will make it land on earth first from helicopters, then aircrafts, finally a test space shot.
    • by Zoxed ( 676559 )

      AFAIK the lander is Russian built: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
      (Schiaparelli being the test/demonstrator version)

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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