Construction Begins on Beagle 2
Bonker writes "CNN reports that Beagle 2, a lander that's part of ESA's next Mars mission, is beginning construction in England. The lander will be constructed in clean-room conditions to avoid being contaminated with any kind of terrestrial life so that it can more accurately determine if there is or was any kind of martian life once it arrives."
By all means, do read Darwin's "The Voyage of the Beagle". Excellent reading.
e text97/vb gle10.txt
Gutenbeerg project
ftp.knowledge.com/pub/mirrors/gutenberg/
Who's they? This is the first UK mission to Mars and we stick to metric in science. The main worry is the launch system, as the last European Mars mission to be launched by Russia didn't make it outside of our atmosphere. :(
I just wanted to put in a quick advert for the Beagle 2 website at http://www.beagle2.com/. Many of your questions can be answered there.
-Karl
Dr Karl Mitchell
Planetary Science Research Group
Environmental Science Dept.
Lancaster University, UK
Now I may be as thick as a whale omelet, BUT how will they transport it to the rocket and then launch it and ensure that everything else is clean room ? The Rocket will have to remain sterile inside, the transport to the rocket will have to be sterile.
Surely there is a risk of contamination at lots of these phases ? Especially shifting it from the lab, into transport and transport into rocket.
I'm sure they can do it to a high degree of probability, but how can they do it with even 99.999% certainty
An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
I fully agree with this. The original poster (excluding a troll) may be mistaking this mission with the whole man-in-space mumbo-jumbo (I'm all for colonizing space, but not the ISS-billion-government-dollar way). However:
We excel in rocket science. Serious. The Ariane 5 can launch 6 tons in GTO, and the next version due this fall can do 8. Proton cannot do that AFAIK and using the horrendously exepnsive Shuttle to save money would be ludicrous at best. The next Atlas 5 and Delta 4 will match this kind of performance and are possibly easier to scale up, but are not there yet.
Firstly is wasn't collected from mars, the rock fell to earth and is believed to be from mars..
Secondly, it didn't contain bacteria, but what is claimed to be fossilised evidence of bacteria.
Thirdly, the evidence is merely suggestive, but far from incontravertable, of alien life.
Clickable link
> France alone is responsible for roughly half the ESA budget.
e sa.htm
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Ok, let's kill this particular French wet dream in the bud. It might make for a great sheep-counting alternative at night, but is far from based on reality.
CNES figures on a horrible chart:
http://www.cnes.fr/cnes/moyens/en/budget_
ESA figures:
http://esapub.esrin.esa.it/annuals/annu
Roughly half? Hmm...