This is a Journal entry by TRiG (Ireland) A dog, so bade in office

What's up?

Post 1

TRiG (Ireland) A dog, so bade in office

So a NASA craft landed on Mars. And I know nothing about it. Didn't follow the news at all. Haven't looked up video of the landing. Couldn't even name the craft without looking it up.

What on Earth is wrong with me?

Stress, probably.

I have a holiday at the end of this month. Discworld Convention in Birmingham. And then a few extra days off afterwards. I'm looking forward to it. I think I need it.

TRiG.smiley - sleepy


What's up?

Post 2

Effers;England.


The craft is called Curiosity. I love the whole thing of it, and searching for the possibility of Life existing outside earth. I think it will re-contextualise the whole way we look at ourselves..and might just save us all. (Effers...deluded fool....maybe? Nah smiley - biggrin)


What's up?

Post 3

Effers;England.


Oh and before anyone jumps on me and says it's not actually searching for life in the present..I know...but it might show that it once likely did, but died out.


What's up?

Post 4

Recumbentman

This is the animation of how it was to happen -- and it has! Quite amazing

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwinFP8_qIM


What's up?

Post 5

Recumbentman

Or maybe

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwinFP8_qIM


What's up?

Post 6

HonestIago

You only have so much RAM and you can't care about all things at the same time.

Since Curiosity landed I've lost some interest in the Olympics - I just think this is far more interesting. For me it gets even more stunning when you break it down: we fired a robot at Mars at thousands of miles an hour. Nearly 9 months later, it reaches Mars and hurtles down to the Martian surface and is slowed by a parachute. Then a second robot, this one nuclear powered, pops out and is gently lowered to the surface by a hover crane (something which I previously thought only existed in sci-fi) almost precisely where we wanted it to go.

Oh and we tasked another robot we've got whizzing around Mars to take photos of the first one as it landed. The photos were of such high resolution that we can see the design of the parachute and the discarded heat shield.

There are times when humanity is unspeakably awesome. This is one of those times.


What's up?

Post 7

HonestIago

Also smiley - hug for the stress.


What's up?

Post 8

Effers;England.


http://www.petapixel.com/2012/08/06/how-nasas-curiosity-rover-will-shoot-photos-of-mars/

Short links which explains a bit about about the photography/camera technology of the mission.

Good links at bottom to images.


What's up?

Post 9

Icy North

Did Curiosity land on a Martian cat?


What's up?

Post 10

Baron Grim

Here's one of the most amazing shots. Not only did we fling a car sized probe that far away and let it autonomously make the most complicated landing yet, we also managed to get a picture of it from another probe as it did so... in flight!

http://i.imgur.com/qDggP.jpg


What's up?

Post 11

TRiG (Ireland) A dog, so bade in office

Thanks, people.

Feeling better today. Also read up a bit about Curiosity in the Irish Independent over lunch.

TRiG.smiley - rocket


What's up?

Post 12

KB

I had a touch of the same recently. General loss of interest in things I'd normally be interested in, with a dollop of couldn't-be-bothered on the side. Aye, I'd recommend a holiday.

I blame the summer, or lack thereof. It feels like its been November since November! smiley - cdouble


What's up?

Post 13

Recumbentman

smiley - laugh (Icy) Ho ho.

This is truly awesome. We used to talk of a sky hook in jest.


What's up?

Post 14

Malabarista - now with added pony

Is that how they make Martian flatcats?


What's up?

Post 15

You can call me TC

I can't look at those pictures without thinking of that HP advert of a few years back. It was just so apt!


Key: Complain about this post

More Conversations for TRiG (Ireland) A dog, so bade in office

Write an Entry

"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."

Write an entry
Read more