NASA Crashing Probe to Look for H2O on Moon 149
Echoloc8 writes "This article from Yahoo! News reports that NASA will be smashing the Lunar Prospector probe into the moon near the probable ice deposit discovered recently, trying to send a water-vapor plume high enough to be detected. They claim a 10% chance of success." It's a pretty cool idea-the probe has just about served all of it's usefulness, and while not finding liquid doesn't mean that it is not present, I like the notion of using every last dollar they can.
Sounds like the old Lunar Lander video game (Score:1)
Glad to see that things have not changed that much.
NASA Mission Planning Minutes (Score:1)
1st Nasa Scientist: Hmmm, you know, if there were some kind of meteorite impact in that region it might liberate some of the trapped water which we could detect.
2nd NASA Scientist: But we can't predict when a strike might happen -we could wait millions of years for such an event.
3rd NASA Scientist: Well, suppose we fire some kind of missile into the moon? That would do it, and we would know exactly where and when the impact would happen.
2nd NASA Scientist: Right! Say, we could even use the old probe that up there now.
1st Nasa Scientist: You mean, crash Lunar Prospector into the surface of the moon with an impact equivalent to a 1100mph car crash?
2nd NASA Scientist: Exactly...
Together: KEEWWWLLL!!!
Appalling ignorance of some alleged "nerds". (Score:1)
Some examples:
"Willy K." apparently posting from MIT (MIT? then that message must be a troll. Even the janitor would know better.):
Does it seem odd to anyone else that the first thing we decide to land permanently on the moon is a wrecked satellite?
Uh, hello? The US and USSR have been "landing" wrecked (and intact, but now inactive) satellites and spacecraft on the Moon for nearly 40 years now, this is hardly "first". In fact, Pete Conrad and Al Bean on Apollo 12 even brought back some pieces of one of them (Surveyor 3), to see how they'd held up to a few years of lunar exposure. There are literally tons of "space junk" on the lunar surface.
"philreed" mentions in response to somebody commenting that the orbit will decay that:
Uh, orbits degrade because of atmospheric drag. No atmosphere on the moon.
He's half right, there's no detectable atmosphere. However orbits also degrade because of perturbing forces such as the gravity of Earth and Sun, solar light pressure, and the irregular gravitational field of the Moon (mascons). Nothing stays in lunar orbit forever.
"Gumpu" worries that:
The problem is that space vehicles usually use nuclear fuel for their power generation. With this they will contamenate that place on the moon for future generations..
First, space vehicles only use nuclear fuel if they need a particularly dense power source (as some old Soviet radar sats), will be operating far from the Sun (as with trans-Mars spacecraft) or will need to operate during extended dark periods (as the Apollo scientific experiment packages that had to survive the lunar night). Since Prospector was doing gamma-ray spectrometry, the last thing they'd want is a nuclear power source aboard.
Second, the lunar surface is daily bathed with radiation both from the Sun and deep space (cosmic rays), it having no shielding atmosphere.
A little extra from a few spoonfuls of isotope in (usually) an RTG is hardly anything to worry about.
"nlucent" also seems concerned about keeping the Moon and Mars green (which they aren't, but facts aren't important if we're arguing feelings), and concludes:
and then we say, Hey, lets crash something into mars
Apparently ignorant of the fact that we've been doing that since the 1960s too, and as recently as a few years ago (remember Mars Rover? That at least was within your lifetime.)
There were a few others.
Fortunately the more intelligent slashdotters eventually showed up to correct some of the above misconceptions, but the mind still boggles...
Protests from a Native American Group? (Score:1)
In January 1998 NASA apologized to American Indians for including an ounce of ashes from the
cremated body of space scientist Eugene Shoemaker on the unmanned Lunar Prospector which will
ultimately crash onto the moon's surface. Navajo Nation President Albert Hale protested, "The moon is a
sacred place in the religious beliefs of many Native Americans. It is a gross insensitivity to the beliefs of
many Native Americans to place human remains on the moon." NASA promised to never again place
human remains on the moon without first engaging in a wide consultation.
Footnote on lunar orbits (Score:1)
The Moon's gravity field is so irregular that vehicles in low lunar orbit can experience altitude transients on the order of tens of kilometers. Going to higher orbits helps some, but the effect of the Earth's gravity to increase the eccentricity without altering the semi-major axis. As a result, the altitude of the pericynthion drops. Either way, the orbital altitude will eventually dip below the surface.
Predicting orbital lifetimes for lunar satellites is a challenge because there are still a lot of uncertainties in lunar gravitational models. Given that the Lunar Prospector was placed into a polar orbit, I would guess that its lifetime could be fairly long.
Not all
Appalling ignorance of some alleged "nerds". (Score:2)
Some examples:
"Willy K." apparently posting from MIT (MIT? then that message must be a troll. Even the janitor would know better.):
Does it seem odd to anyone else that the first thing we decide to land permanently on the moon is a wrecked satellite?
Uh, hello? The US and USSR have been "landing" wrecked (and intact, but now inactive) satellites and spacecraft on the Moon for nearly 40 years now, this is hardly "first". In fact, Pete Conrad and Al Bean on Apollo 12 even brought back some pieces of one of them (Surveyor 3), to see how they'd held up to a few years of lunar exposure. There are literally tons of "space junk" on the lunar surface.
"philreed" mentions in response to somebody commenting that the orbit will decay that:
Uh, orbits degrade because of atmospheric drag. No atmosphere on the moon.
He's half right, there's no detectable atmosphere. However orbits also degrade because of perturbing forces such as the gravity of Earth and Sun, solar light pressure, and the irregular gravitational field of the Moon (mascons). Nothing stays in lunar orbit forever.
"Gumpu" worries that:
The problem is that space vehicles usually use nuclear fuel for their power generation. With this they will contamenate that place on the moon for future generations..
First, space vehicles only use nuclear fuel if they need a particularly dense power source (as some old Soviet radar sats), will be operating far from the Sun (as with trans-Mars spacecraft) or will need to operate during extended dark periods (as the Apollo scientific experiment packages that had to survive the lunar night). Since Prospector was doing gamma-ray spectrometry, the last thing they'd want is a nuclear power source aboard.
Second, the lunar surface is daily bathed with radiation both from the Sun and deep space (cosmic rays), it having no shielding atmosphere.
A little extra from a few spoonfuls of isotope in (usually) an RTG is hardly anything to worry about.
"nlucent" also seems concerned about keeping the Moon and Mars green (which they aren't, but facts aren't important if we're arguing feelings), and concludes:
and then we say, Hey, lets crash something into mars
Apparently ignorant of the fact that we've been doing that since the 1960s too, and as recently as a few years ago (remember Mars Rover? That at least was within your lifetime.)
There were a few others.
Fortunately the more intelligent slashdotters eventually showed up to correct some of the above misconceptions, but the mind still boggles...
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Orbits also degrade due to the mascons on the moon. It's impossible to get a truly stable lunar orbit. Every object in lunar orbit will either be ejected into earth or solar orbit, or will crash on the moon. Usually the latter.
This is a choice between waiting for an unpowered and useless craft to crash pointlessly on the moon, or for the craft to go out in a blaze of glory, with a 10% chance of getting reasonably important science at the end.
Which choice is better is left as an exercise for the reader.
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
No, it's not. It's LM (Lunar Module), formerly known as LEM (Lunar Excursion Module). I don't think that LLM was ever used as a name for the LM, at least officially.
Check out Chariots for Apollo [nasa.gov] by NASA history, and S/Cat Remembered [specdata.com], a site by one of the guys who worked on building the thing.
From the Earth to the Moon (Score:1)
*Sniff* brings a tear to my eye remembering the scene where the project manager just stands there looking at the first one, realizing after all those years it wasn't coming back.
That scene, if we're talking about the same one, was LM 5. (The first one to land on the moon.)
Apollo 9's LM burned up in the earth's atmosphere during (IIRC) the early 80s. 10's LM is in solar orbit, daring someone to find it. (Good luck.) The rest impacted on the moon, although 11 and 12 lost power before it happened, so NORAD's official catalog sentimentally lists them as still up in lunar orbit.
From the Earth to the Moon is a great series, and I highly recommend it to everyone here. It's like they extended Apollo 13 to cover the entire campaign. (Indeed, many of the sets and props were reused.)
Re:It's the moon! (Score:1)
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
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"Plus, tag-team robot wrestling! It's the mighty robots of
What's the harm? (Score:2)
Besides, we need to get off this Muddball just in case Mother Nature decides to pull something. Personally, I'd prefer another star system (just in case there's a reason we're not detecting as many neutrinos as we should be from our middle-aged sun), but baby steps are a start.
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Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:2)
Besides, this is maybe 300 lbs of metal and plastic -- you or I put out more trash than that in six months. It was going to eventually crash into the moon anyhow (what goes up...), so we might as well do it in a way that'll eventually help us build a base up there.
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Not a bad idea (Score:4)
These recent "faster, cheaper, better" probes are really a big contrast to the older "big waste" programs like the Space Station (motto: Now $20 billion over budget). The Lunar Prospector, the Mars Rover, DS1... These are some really exciting programs. This is just a really good illustration of the whole "think better" paradigm in action.
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Inconsistency (Score:1)
How can 'following it's own instinct' be considered 'evil'? Doesn't evil require intent? Is it evil for the lion to kill the gazelle?
...phil
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Uh, orbits degrade because of atmospheric drag. No atmosphere on the moon.
...phil
Re:It's the moon! (Score:1)
Those craters have formed over a time period of upwards of 4 billion years, which means there was typically a long time between impacts. IIRC, there is only one reported probable sighting of a meteorite impact on the moon, and that was several hundred years ago.
Micrometeorites (impacts of dust particles) may be a low level, but frequent danger. I don't know how bad.
It's the moon! (Score:2)
I want to respond in general to all the people who are transferring the "save the planet" ideas over to the moon. If we eventually settle on the moon and make a big mess what would be the loss? On the earth there is something special (i.e. life) but on the moon there is nothing! We are way off in the bonnies in the universe and I don't think where going to get a ticket if we throw a few bottles out the window. Get real people!
Re:Oh Joy (Score:1)
"They"? Are you not a member of mankind then?
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
There are multiple reasons that an object's orbital trajectory might change, including changing in such a fashion that it strikes the orbited object.
The most prevalent in this case is the presence of other significant gravitational fields, namely those of the Earth and the Sun. Just as the moon's presence makes the Earth's trajectory around the sun "wobble" (basically the center of mass of the earth/moon system has a smooth orbital path), an object orbiting the moon would have its trajectory perturbed as it neared the Earth or the Sun. Each subsequent orbit approach would be different due to the previous perturbation. Because the Earth's influence is so significant, this means that lunar orbits tend to be highly irregular, and preturbations that result in orbiting objects leaving orbit of the moon or crashing into the moon are quite common.
Orbiting objects may also collide with other objects, and such collisions will have some effect on the orbital pattern. An atmosphere means that such collisions are much more likely and uniform in their effect on the orbiting object.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:1)
I have had the opprotunity to work with NASA engineers. I am not too easily intimidated intellectualy. These guys intimidated me with there intellegence.
Ah!....uhh...no, I can't...(but four!)...Oh, OK, just forget it :-)
dylan_-
--
Not scary, cool, or is it hot?!?!? (Score:1)
Re:Spreading out (Score:1)
Deserts on earth are very different from the moon, in that even the deadest ones have ecosystems. Life on earth is very pervasive. So the comparison isn't really a good one.
There's a lot of space. There's a lot of planets. Probably there's very little life, in comparision. Our priorities should reflect that.
--
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Considering how often a rockets "decide" to blow up during take off.. I'd rather have someone burry the stuff in my back yard.. then shoot it over my head and have it rain down on me.
Mabey when they find a 100% reliable method of geting it up there... but right now I'd rather not have them try.
Ex-Nt-User
We missed our chance... (Score:1)
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:2)
If we develop a more efficient method of propultion to lift craft out of our atmosphere, this idea may become viable. Rocket technology is very effective, but requires an amazing amount of resources. The cost of the fuel may not justify powering a "garbage truck."
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:2)
Don't be wasteful. Learn from nature and reuse everything. When we create our own environment on the moon, we will be forced to learn this lesson.
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
OTOH we could drop this whole planet in the sun and it wouldn't even notice. It's a good spot for nuclear waste if you can get it there cheaply enough to be worthwhile.
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Ohhhhh, ice cream sandwich... (Score:1)
Yikes! I sure hope not! I'd sooner believe that Ren and Stimpy's "Space Madness" was a prophetic vision.
Re:Probably Hard to Detect on the Ground (Score:1)
This is definitely a good use of the probe. As many others have pointed out, it's mission is over and there is a chance (a small one, but a chance nonetheless) that a major scientific discovery could be made. I'll be eagerly waiting for any results.
And this is completely off-topic, but I really wish that the Russian space agency would get it's ISS components finished...
Sorry for the editorial.
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
you're forgetting that the earth's atmosphere extends beyond the moon's orbit (not very dense of course). there's also drag from tidal forces, solar wind, drag from cutting through magnetic fields, etc, etc.
even if it was just cutting through interstellar hydrogen it would eventually stop.
Re:Spreading out (Score:1)
No, it wouldn't --- you can never relieve population pressure by expanding to new territory. You can't transfer people fast enough. There will always be orders of magnitude more people being born than you can ship to the lunar colonies.
You may be able to get resources that will help the situation back home --- but it wouldn't work as a population relief valve.
Second, in the case of the moon, it is already dead. What possible damage could we do that would make it any more dead?
Just because it's dead doesn't mean that it's worth preserving. Deserts are dead, too, mostly --- and we preserve those. There's no ecosystem, so it's a lot harder to make a mess (you don't have to worry about upsetting any kind of balance), but the counter to this is that any mess made on the surface is permanent. The Apollo hardware is still there. There are metal-lined craters from the hard-landed Luna probes, still there. If you strip-mine the surface of the moon, the scars will remain for millions of years.
That said, I do think that hard-landing Lunar Prospector is a good, if rather drastic, idea.
Efficiency (Score:1)
There's nothing wrong with dumping garbage on the moon. It's pretty hard to create ecological problems on a lifeless rock that doesn't have an ecology to start with. I say we dump all our garbage on the moon, and maybe relocate Newark and Cleveland there while we're at it.
Wow!!! (Score:1)
Burial was planned (Score:2)
And...
They knew it was going to crash from the beginning, so they don't need to slam it into the lunar poles to bury him. But they ARE trying to continue Shoemaker's research by hurling the probe containing his ashes at a specific place. Way, way, way cool. Gotta love those NASA guys. Let's hope the experiment is a success.
Re:Spreading our littering ways (Score:1)
Here's an example. A big corporation wants to dig an open copper mine about 100 miles from where I live. A byproduct of that effort would be a large holding basin of toxic material - a byproduct of the copper extraction method. Those toxins are already in the earth there, and the environment/ecosystem isn't the least bit affected by it -- tons and tons of the stuff. The toxins are not dangerous because they are chemically "fixed" in the ground. Now we come along and isolate those toxins in the process of isolating the valuable metal ore. We have the ability to re-process the toxins into a safe(r) state, but to do that would make the entire effort un-profitable. So instead of cleaning up the mess, we just leave the concentrated "toxic waste" lying in an open pit. The elements that were harmless, possibly beneficial, in diluted/fixed states are now free to wreck havoc with the ecosystem. It is this continuing behavior that is killing the world and us.
Commander Koenig here... (Score:1)
Moonbase Alpha torn out of Earth's orbit by nuclear explosion...
...perhaps caused by NASA crashlanding a nuclear probe on the moon and
>The moon's just a barren rock
not turning out to be true after all? Perhaps Space 1999 was a prophecy not just a scifi series? Shame we haven't built a base up there already though.
:-)
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Re:Spreading out (Score:1)
Actually, while this is true in principle, not having off-earth settlements would still be worse. Population pressure will increase regardless, and if we have no other relief for that pressure, we will overwhelm earth that much faster, and with far more permanent results.
Just because it's dead doesn't mean that it's worth preserving. Deserts are dead, too, mostly --- and we preserve those. There's no ecosystem, so it's a lot harder to make a mess (you don't have to worry about upsetting any kind of balance), but the counter to this is that any mess made on the surface is permanent. The Apollo hardware is still there. There are metal-lined craters from the hard-landed Luna probes, still there. If you strip-mine the surface of the moon, the scars will remain for millions of years.
Agreed. However, at some point, we still have to make the decisions that give us the best chances to preserve humanity. We can only hope that we learn enough of our lessons to use future resources wisely.
Spreading out (Score:5)
There's no logic in the argument that this kind of experiment is going to lead to more destruction of some 'natural' environment by man.
First off, any eventual settlement we put on the moon (or mars, etc.), will only aid in alleviating the effects of human population pressure on earth. If we find water in some form on the moon, it is an additional aid to forming a settlement that can eventually be self supporting (admittedly quite a ways into the future, but a good goal, nonetheless).
Second, in the case of the moon, it is already dead. What possible damage could we do that would make it any more dead? On the other hand, if we settle it and make it habitable at least in some degree, we gain a great deal. For example, one thing to consider is the potential for some sort of global catastrophe on earth. Unless we spread ourselves out a bit onto other planets, a global catastrophe *could* cause the complete end of the human race. Settlements on other planets would give us at least some chance of avoiding complete extinction.
Finally, if we argue that we should avoid any efforts to settle other planets in the name of preserving their pristine characteristics, we would actually open the door to furthering the damage we already do to earth. Like it or not, human population is not going to diminish (barring a catastrophe), and as it expands, the drain on existing resources will only get worse. By offloading some of this drain onto other planets (and their associated resources), we have the potential to halt (or even reverse) the ecological damage we do to earth, and, if we have learned our lessons, we might even be able to use all of our resources (including those on other planets) more wisely, and maybe we can avoid repeating our mistakes.
To close off any avenue of expansion to our poplulation will eventually result in the extinction (or mortal damage) of the human race, either through population pressure, resource depletion, or a global natural disaster.
Re:Oh Joy (Score:1)
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Re:Forty pounds? (Score:1)
Wow! What a novel idea... (Score:1)
-- ----------------------------------------------
Vive le logiciel... Libre!!!
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:2)
The astronauts installed seismometers on the moon as part of the ALSEP project. The seismometers detected the seismic waves produced when lunar modules and Saturn upper stages hit the Moon. This produced data on the structure and composition of the Moon. Scientists on Earth have done similar work using the seismic waves produced by earthquakes and nuclear weapons tests.
The USA and USSR have landed/crashed a large number of probes on the Moon. Here [moonpage.com] is a list of the missions.
Re:Oh Joy (Score:1)
When we all move off this rock we can leave you and your progeny behind.
If the human race does not further explore the realms of the Universe, you have to wonder why we are here. It would be an awfully big waste of space.
Time for a return visit any one? (Score:1)
One thing you have to say about the cold war with the USSR. We at least tried to keep up with the Joneses.
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:1)
BTW, this is a legitimate feature request. How hard could it be to implement?
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Unfortunately, the public would probably take a dim view of any transport of radioactive material into space, no matter how safe. Remember the arguments about the Cassini space probe which contained a couple of grams of plutonium? Our nuclear waste is probably here to stay.
Damn people (Score:1)
Re:Spreading out (Score:1)
I would be VERY supprised if the moon could EVER support enough people to take even a small amount of population pressure off of the earth. I think that the only solution to our population expantion problem is what china is doing at the moment (I personally believe that they are being a tad conservative). I believe that if we need to go to the moon (or another planet) for the sole reason that we have too many people, then it will be too late.
Re:ever hear of the JASON project? (Score:1)
Except John Glenn never went to the moon.
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
use nuclear fuel for their power generation.
With this they will contamenate that place
on the moon for future generations...
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Re:NASA Mission Planning Minutes (Score:1)
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:1)
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:2)
That's why the mission to Saturn raised such a stink. It was the first nuclear-powered mission since 1979. Pretty much any missions that are staying inside the orbit of Jupiter will be solar powered.
See this link [nasa.gov] and look toward the bottom for "...surface mounted solar cells..."
Or this one [nasa.gov] for more info on the vehicle. Or, finally, the FAQ [nasa.gov], which says:
Oops... (Score:1)
-- Keith Moore
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
For an interesting take on this, read "Steel Beach" by John Varley (and anything else you can find by him!) There's a park and museum built around the lunar landing sites, but few people bother looking at it... Great book, anyway.
something else (Score:1)
:)
Re:Forty pounds? (Score:1)
Lunar Prospector recently dropped from it's mapping orbit of ~100Km to something like 25Km. Orbit time is around 1hr 40min, so I figure a speed of ~6500kph. It should leave a dent.
Garbage on the Moon! (Score:1)
Re:It's the moon! (Score:1)
Some kind of stellar mining operation maybe, even a fuel depot for your trips to Mars but I don't think you'd want to by Lunar realistate and build a big geodesic dome house.
I say pollute it, if we can safely get our pollution there, which we cannot do yet.
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Just a thought.
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Rest assured the sun is *much* larger than the moon.
Folks, it's a god-damned star!
The Earth would fit in to the sun about a million times over.
The previous poster is either on crack or another sad example of the scientific-illiterates being produced by the American education system.
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
But the sad truth that sort of thing wouldn't be too surprising - take a look at the number of people who are worried about ruining the lunar "environment".
It's no excuse. I must flame.
Re:Forty pounds? (Score:1)
I've got this from the BBC News [bbc.co.uk] site:
The impact - equivalent to smashing a heavy car into a wall at a speed of more than 1,100 mph - is an attempt to confirm the presence of ice at the lunar poles.
what happens to water/ice in a vacuum? (Score:1)
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Best thing to ever come out of HBO, IMO.
One whole episode, Spider, is devoted to the design, and construction, of the LMs.
*minor spoiler*
*Sniff* brings a tear to my eye remembering the scene where the project manager just stands there looking at the first one, realizing after all those years it wasn't coming back.
Re:From the Earth to the Moon (Score:1)
ObOnTopicStuff:
I think NASA reusing there probe to search for water is a great idea. I don't mind my tax dollars spent there (Who wants a "contribute 5 dollars to space exploration" checkoff on their tax forms? I do, screw the presidential campaigns), but it's cool they thought up this way of using it. As far as trash/using up the water goes:
1. It's not going to be trash people. Think about it. 4k km/sec will turn the probe into its constituient atoms. They're not gently landing, after all. I do wonder how big the crater it's going to make will be. Maybe they could gain some extra science off of that? Crater generation dynamics or something.
2. If there is so little water, that the impact of Lunar Prospector coudl possibly use up a significant fraction of it, then it probably isn't worth using.
Re:Lot's the harm... (Score:1)
Forty pounds? (Score:1)
of course "grammer" (Score:1)
Re:Oh Joy (Score:1)
It's only an awfully big waste of space if you assume the universe was built explicitly for us... While I fully support exploring every facet of the unknown, I don't do so because I think it's mankind's destiny... I think mankind as a whole has no great purpose. We are here, we breed, and we die. Purpose is something for the individual. BTW, nice handle..
Geek-grrl in training
"Give a monkey a brain, and he'll swear he's the center of the universe."
Re:what happens to water/ice in a vacuum? (Score:1)
Geek-grrl in training
"My body is a temple. Want to come over for midnight mass?"
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:2)
Um, Is this brain on? ... testing (Score:1)
Re:Forty pounds? (Score:1)
Re:What about the Lunies? (Score:1)
LP not nuclear (Was: Re:Not such a good idea?) (Score:1)
Pendants might note that some of the Mars probes (like the crashed Russian one) used RTHs (Radioisotope Thermal Heaters), which keep the landers warm through the cold Mars night, but generate no electricity.
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
While I tend to agree that we should not "export" nuclear waste (or reactors) or undesirable lifeforms from this planet, I'll have to admit, as someone else commented above, it seems a very fitting end for Eugene Shoemaker (i.e., that he gets one last try to discover water on the Moon, and an extraterrestrial burial).
(Yikes. Got an internal server error from
Re:Not a bad idea (Score:1)
is getting done with these small missions. NASA
has always had people that can work smarter and
cheaper. The real change is in managment. I have
had the opprotunity to work with NASA engineers. I
am not too easily intimidated intellectualy. These
guys intimidated me with there intellegence.
BTW, The "big waste" projects aren't. While the
small missions are getting real science done, they
are not usually breaking new technological ground.
The massive projects teach us how to do things.
The benifits are harder to see. The whole computer
age is a great example, and so is digital comms.
Much of the technology we use today was pioneered
by either the military or NASA. Personally I would
rather spend the money on NASA.
Big projects are not "bad" as long as they do not
tie up all the resources, and prevent projects
that actualy get something done. NASA seams to
have a good mix right now. I hope it lasts.
gime a brake (Score:1)
to work very hard to improve my spelling ablity.
It has never come easy. And very late at night
after a 10 hour work day, and several hours being
a single parent to a cocky teenager, I get a
little tired, and my concentration waivers. The grammer was also weak and the thought progression
stank. SORRY!
I have worked with people whos spelling was
perfect. They couldn't program worth shit.
This is so cool (Score:1)
Crash it! (Score:1)
+--
Given infinite time, 100 monkeys could type out the complete works of Shakespeare.
Re:Eugene Shoemaker's Ashes (Score:1)
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Untrue!Untrue!
You are forgetting that really short flagpole accompanied by a tattered flag just like the one hanging off the mobile home of my up the road neighbor. See we like to start small and classy first.
Plus I think they left a pair of Neil Armstrong's shorts up there too, the landing was a liitle bumpy
Re:Garbage on the Moon! (Score:1)
There is also the possiblity of an "Adopt a Moonway" program. You get a little sign next to your big pile of aluminum and plastic. Great tax write off dontchathink?
This could also be a good place for friend of Presidents to find Government Jobs for worthy interns. I bet Vernon Jordan wishes he could get Monica first dibs on crashing into the moon.
Does Jar-Jar work for NASA? (Score:1)
flaming reporters (Score:1)
(point of information: my father is a lawyer, so don't start being mean to them)
Re:Not such a good idea? (Score:1)
Re:galactic lanfill (Score:1)
Re:Spreading out (Score:1)
Re:We missed our chance... (Score:1)
Re:What about the Lunies? (Score:1)
Re:Oh Joy (Score:1)
Besides, if it bothers you that much to think we're leaving our "trash" on the moon, we CAN retrieve the darn thing that way. Plus, this may be a way to start colonization on the moon, which might be a wonderful solution to earth's overpopulation issues (i.e. China, Japan, etc.)
Yes, the human race may spread like a virus a-la-The-Matrix-quote, but we also reason and can think consequences out. I have faith in NASA that this may be the first step to truly exploring the moon in depth.
-- Shadowcat
Re:Eugene Shoemaker's Ashes (Score:2)
http://condor.lpl.arizona.edu/~carolyn/tribute.
I read an article about him recently. His studies of impact geology changed the basic foundations of modern geology. Previously geologists frowned apon geological theories that involved major catastrophies, instead assuming everything important happened through slow, gradual processes such as plate tectonics. All the craters on the moon were thought to be volcanic in origin. His studies suggested that exterrestrial object impacts happened on a periodic basis and greatly affected the landscape.
His studies also greatly affected biologists, who adapted evolutionary theories to account for periodic impact catastrophies and resulting extinctions. Since then paleontologists and geologists have worked together to try to determine when major impacts took place and where.
Eugene Shoemaker's Ashes (Score:3)
It's rather fitting, though. He tried to become an Apollo astronaut, but failed due to health problems. He became one of the first experts on lunar geology and impact crater geology, and spent much of his later life searching for comets and Earth-crossing asteroids. He was the co-discoverer of the Shoemaker-Levy comet that struck Jupitor a few years back.
I'm surprised NASA's not playing this up more. I know they had some protests from a Native American group a while back for sending his ashes up, but I'm not sure the details of that.
Here's an article about the ashes:
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/sl9/news82.html