NASA Extends Rover Occupation of Mars
iocat writes "Reuters reporting that NASA is extending the Rover missions on Mars by another five months. However, they point out that while the rovers look poised to greatly exceed their planned life cycle, they could basically die at any time. Still, it will be cool to see a little more exploration."
I wonder how much terrain these rovers can explore in 5 months, or if they're basically useless because of range limitations?
Its always good for future missions if the current ones exceed expectations.
Looking at Mars, now a distant orange glow in the sky, it amazes me that we have intelligence there.
Good job NASA.
Pasadena's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) has done it again, it would seem. When the Voyager 1 and 2 missions were launched in 1977, they estimated that they would only last until the encounter with Saturn roughly four years later. Now, in 2004, they are still returning useful data, at a distance of over 90 AU from the Sun (in comparison, Pluto is only 40 AU from it). Sure, they had their problems during the mission, but it looks like Spirit and Opportunity may share a similar quality construction. It's definite that they won't last 27 years, but with how well they are functioning, I think the only limit will be the Martian dust collecting on their solar panels. When they Next Generation Rover lands on Mars in the latter part of this decade, it will hopefully use nuclear power, and overcome this obstacle.
I hate to argue with your logic, but here goes:
... if a robot gets a little hole in a hydraulic tube, it'll leak until it's empty. A human would clot that blood and carry on. If a human breaks a leg, you can bet they'd figure out a way to complete the mission with just one leg... I wouldn't give a robot those odds, even if they lost only one of six legs.
Robots can run basically forever, until something breaks or they run out of juice.
Somehow running out of this consumable is better than a human running out of their consumables (food and air)? If you want to be accurate, there are mechanisms for both to regenerate these consumables -- solar cells and plants.
One unique thing about people (besides their intelligence) is their self-healing characteristics
But, I agree.. unmanned missions are great, just for totally different reasons: low cost and hence, the ability to many missions to many different areas, each with new instruments designed to test theorys proposed by the results of previous missions. A human mission would blow the whole budget with just one trip.
HIV Crosses Species Barrier... into Muppets
This is an old discussion, so I would recommend you do a search to fully answer your question. Basically though, it came down to several facts:
1. The dust would most likely be statically charged.
2. Wipers would tend to damage the panels.
3. The extreme environment is slowly degrading the panels anyway.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Justin, who names the rocks? You guys are clearly having too much fun in that department.
/.ers will reply to this post with possible names, I'll put in one of the highest moderated ones for consideration.
:)
Actually, my friend Merideth considers herself to be the feature-naming goddess for Spirit, so if
No promises though
Cheers,
Justin
Here is my list (they are even slightly descriptive)
1. First Post
2. Troll
3. Hot Grits
4. The Insensitive Clod
5. Anonymous Coward
Mode (3) smart-aleck mode. Press * to return to main menu.
Mozilla is red like Mars. Mozilla is strong like a rock. Scientists know Mozilla. Mozilla will go to Mars, and followers of Mammon will cower in horror :-)
However, you wouldn't exactly want it lying around and getting thrown in landfills, either, so I can't imagine it being used in consumer products any time soon. At least Pu-238 can't be used in nuclear weapons (a big enough piece of the stuff to make a bomb out of would be too hot to be stable).
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
--Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
Hi Justin,
How about we get the ball rolling by naming a rock 'Tux', after the Linux mascot penguin?
# grep slashdot access.log | grep html | sort | uniq | wc -l 2604
Well, given the forum, here's some ideas:
/. humor. :)
- Beowulf
- Soviet Russia
- Natalie
- Dupe (if you find two adjacent rocks that are extremely similar)
- Profit
- Overlord
I think that covers the bulk of common
"Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased