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Mars NASA

NASA's InSight Successfully Lands on Mars (theverge.com) 175

NASA's latest Mars lander, InSight, successfully touched down on the surface of the Red Planet moments ago, surviving an intense plunge through the Martian atmosphere. From a report: It marks the eighth picture-perfect landing on Mars for NASA, adding to the space agency's impressive track record of putting spacecraft on the planet. And now, InSight's two-year mission has begun, one that entails listening for Marsquakes to learn about the world's interior. After six and a half months of traveling through space, InSight hit the top of Mars' atmosphere a little before 3PM ET. It then made a daring descent to the surface, performing a complex multi-step routine that slowed the lander from more than 12,000 miles per hour to just 5 miles per hour before it hit the ground. To get to the surface safely, InSight had to autonomously deploy a supersonic parachute, gather radar measurements, and ignite its thrusters all at the right time. Altogether, the landing took just under seven minutes to complete, prompting the nickname "seven minutes of terror." "InSight's view is a flat, smooth expanse called Elysium Planitia, but its workspace is below the surface, where it will study Mars' deep interior," Nasa posted Monday, sharing the first photo after the landing.
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NASA's InSight Successfully Lands on Mars

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday November 26, 2018 @04:28PM (#57703268)

    I'd say this has to be one of the most important missions in years in terms of space research.
    This will open the doors to future Mars missions by showing the internal geometry of the planet, potentially leading to liquid water, caves for future colonies and underground chemistry.
    Equally the Risk Assessment of space impacts to know for sure just how frequent they are.
    But as a bonus, also a test of deep-launch cubesats, which can be used to help massively improve the Deep Space Network as well as do experiments around lesser bodies like asteroids since they are so disposable with their cheap(er) development prices.

    I can only hope it doesn't go awry. It'll be crushing. Probably worse so than the Beagle2 failure.

  • by tsuliga ( 553869 ) on Monday November 26, 2018 @04:44PM (#57703398)

    I am glad the NASA commentators were not constantly talking during the 7 minute landing sequence. This is how you build suspense. By not talking and letting the time flow and the suspense build. Hollywood could learn a lot by watching this NASA landing event.

    Well done.

  • That's a hell of a thing to say! It's a desolate frozen rock!

    • That's a hell of a thing to say! It's a desolate frozen rock!

      Not so bad. If you look in the photo, off near the horizon, there's a Starbucks.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Whose gel-sacs will be ruptured this time?

  • That is a huge accomplishment to be able to do that. Good job by NASA!
  • NASA seems to have got Mars landings down nearly pat. Although the article didn't exactly say, it seemed like this descent was similar to other recent landers, will have to look for exact details...

    Also really cool to have two CubeSats orbiting Mars now as well.

    Still not out of the woods yet, the craft has to deploy solar panels - hope that works out! Great work NASA!

    • NASA seems to have got Mars landings down nearly pat. Although the article didn't exactly say, it seemed like this descent was similar to other recent landers, will have to look for exact details...

      Yes, it was identical to the Mars Phoenix in overall landing technique, which itself was (nearly) identical to the Mars Polar Lander of 1998 ("nearly" accounting for some corrections made to avoid the fate of Polar Lander, which crashed).

      different from Pathfinder and MER, which used the airbag technique, and from Curiosity (and the upcoming 2020), which used SkyCrane.

    • I liked the moment when they detected the parachute deployment from the sudden change in Doppler shift of the received signal.
    • by Burdell ( 228580 ) on Monday November 26, 2018 @06:13PM (#57703922)

      The CubeSats are not in Martian orbit - they didn't have engines to slow down or a heat shield to bleed off energy (only small attitude thrusters). They just flew by Mars, and will be in an elliptical orbit around the Sun.

      • Oh well! Slightly less cool then, but still an interesting idea.

        It looks like they won't last longer than a few weeks [wikipedia.org], after that just orbiting as you said in an elliptical orbit - it would be nice if they had planned that to just exit the solar system or hit the sun, you can't start worrying about deep space debris too early!

        They do have tiny engines it appears, but just enough for small adjustments. Interesting the reason they have two was just for redundancy but it seemed both worked.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Geology - the study of inner structure of Earth. "Geo" from "Gaia".
    Areology - the study of the inner structure of Mars. "Are" from "Ares".
    Hesperology - the study of the inner structure of Venus. "Hesper" from "Hesperus"...

    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      Geology - the study of inner structure of Earth. "Geo" from "Gaia".
      Areology - the study of the inner structure of Mars. "Are" from "Ares".
      Hesperology - the study of the inner structure of Venus. "Hesper" from "Hesperus"...

      From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      Planetary geology, alternatively known as astrogeology or exogeology, is a planetary science discipline concerned with the geology of the celestial bodies such as the planets and their moons, asteroids, comets, and meteorites.[1][2] Although the geo- prefix typically indicates topics of or relating to the Earth, planetary geology is named as such for historical and convenience reasons; applying geological science to other planetary bodies. Due to the types of investiga

  • by rsmith-mac ( 639075 ) on Monday November 26, 2018 @05:36PM (#57703692)

    Earlier this afternoon the The Council of Elders announced in triumph that they have once again detected and deflected the efforts of the blue world to land upon our soil.

    K'Nord, Speaker for the Council of Elders, told reporters in a lengthy and jovial press conference

    Fellow Citizens, the rumors are true: the insidious inhabitants of the blue world have once again attempted to land another one of their metal monstrosities upon our glorious red planet.

    However I am extremely proud to report that our defense forces, ever vigilant and ever ready, have once again managed to put a stop to the hostilities of the blueworlders.

    Less than an hour ago, our high-altitude defensive system intercepted a blue world metal vessel. Our attack was so rapid and so fierce that the vessel did not have time to respond. As a result of our attack, the device has come crashing down to the soil, rendering it unable to move.

    This spectacular failure of the blueworlders is yet another victory for the Martian Defense Force, and indeed our people. For try as they might over the last 40 years, the third planetâ(TM)s efforts to encroach upon our native soil always have and always will fail.
    Rejoice, podmates! For we are once again victorious!

    Shortly thereafter, a junior analyst in the room was overheard suggesting that the vessel was in fact designed to be stationary, and that it furthermore contained a drilling device designed to penetrate deeply into the planetary soil. Quickly reiterating the victory at hand, K'nord then had the analyst's gelsacs extracted and pulpified, to be used as a cleaning solution for the Council members' glasses.

  • by lazarus ( 2879 ) on Monday November 26, 2018 @05:40PM (#57703718) Journal

    I don't bet against NASA anymore. After Curiosity used the "Sky Crane" to land on Mars I had to sing the Star-Spangled Banner naked on the roof of an office building in Ohio. Which meant that it was just another day in Ohio, but I was certain that that thing was going to be a smoking hole in Mars...

    • by Anonymous Coward

      American "naked", aka "wearing underwear" or even "showing more than your ankles, hands and head".
      Or actually naked?

    • I don't bet against NASA anymore. After Curiosity used the "Sky Crane" to land on Mars

      That sky-crane was crazy. It's hard to believe there were not simpler alternatives. It was done in part to test technology to be used for more accurate landings so that rovers don't have to waste time and wear getting to the best targets. In the future, a hover-craft may take the rover/probe to the prime spot and then lower it down via a sky-crane.

      The traditional (Viking-esque) way has an error radius of roughly 20 miles.

      F

  • Congratulations, NASA, for successfully landing an $850 million USD cordless drill on another planet.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Yeah, like Musk could do anything like this. Give me a break. He can dig tunnels and put rockets into LEO.
    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      more interesting to land on, other than Mars. Some of the moons of Jupiter, for example. I guess that's just too hard right now...

      The problem with reaching the Jovian moons is that they lack atmosphere for aero-braking, which means you need to send not just a small probe, but a big rocket to stop it. A much better candidate for landing is Titan, the big moon of Saturn. Such a mission has already been done, launched 21 years ago, and landed in 2005:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      How soon we forget. And let's not also forget the Russian landings on Venus has some success.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by quenda ( 644621 )

          atmospheres, such as Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto.

          No. Near enough to vacuum. Mars atmosphere may be less than 1% of earth, but it is pea soup compared to those moons.

          > The surface pressure of Europa's atmosphere is 0.1 Pa, or 10^12 times that of the Earth.[9]

          • atmospheres, such as Ganymede, Europa, and Callisto.

            No. Near enough to vacuum. Mars atmosphere may be less than 1% of earth, but it is pea soup compared to those moons.

            > The surface pressure of Europa's atmosphere is 0.1 Pa, or 10^12 times that of the Earth.[9]

            A Pascal is 100th of a millibar or 100,000th of earth atmospheric pressure. So 0.1 Pa is a 1,000,00th of earth pressure, or 10^-6, not 10^-12.

            • by quenda ( 644621 )

              The surface pressure of Europa's atmosphere is 0.1 Pa, or 10^12 times that of the Earth.[9]

              So 0.1 Pa is a 1,000,00th of earth pressure, or 10^-6, not 10^-12.

              Slashdot swallowed the "mu" from 0.1 micro-pascals in my cut & paste. Sorry. Unicode .

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Monday November 26, 2018 @07:03PM (#57704234) Journal

    From the desk of his Imperiousness Qwerrfygrum:

    "Once again, the watery inhabitants of the Third Planet have assaulted our Beloved Homeland.

    25 Years ago, their attacks began, first with a suicidal crash, second with a landing that our Illustrious General Grogooglebarg (may his essences swim forever) disabled only moments after touchdown.

    We have managed over these years to maintain a strong success rate, with more than half their attacks being diverted, disabled, or destroyed before tainting our Red Fundament.

    Recently, some of their attack craft have landed and continued to roam. Those responsible for disabling these craft have been sequentially sacked until we've found the right Tentacle for the job! I believe I can say with confidence they have all been terminated finally.

    Unfortunately, however, the grim news of another lander cannot be refuted.

    The only way this could possibly get worse would be if this new attack craft actually drilled into Mother Mars, violating her sacred surface.

    STAY BRAVE, MARTIANS! We will triumph!"

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion

The key elements in human thinking are not numbers but labels of fuzzy sets. -- L. Zadeh

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