Life's Secrets From A Comet's Tail
An anonymous reader wrote to mention a Guardian report on the return trip of the Stardust mission, which has snatched material from the tail of a passing comet. From the article: "Scientists are particularly interested in comets because they believe they are rubble left over from making the solar system, which later played a profound role in the development of Earth. They probably delivered most of the water for Earth's oceans and bombarded our planet with complex organic compounds that could have been crucial to the evolution of life here. For these reasons, researchers have sought a source of comet molecules and designed Stardust to provide it." Wow, this thing has been out there a long time. When I Googled to make sure this wasn't a dupe, I ran across CmdrTaco's post about the Stardust probe entering the comet's tail - almost exactly two years ago.
Least entertaining article ever to contain the words "Snatch" and "Tail" in the first sentence...
OMG OMG! This is a du-...... Errr, nevermind.
Freedom would be not to choose between black and white but to abjure such prescribed choices. -Theodor Adorno
to that space dust collecting module that sort of crashed into the ground (parachutes failed to open) last year? I guess it was supposed to be caught by a helicopter but the damn chute screwed up. Wasn't that supposed to have collected some of this magic dust?
DON'T CROSS THE STREAMS
Was it...
a. No more dupes.
b. Use Google more.
c. More commentary in story submissions.
no, sorry the answer was CowboyNeal.
The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
Why is it that so often the discussion of a story is about some silly technical detail, the fact that the story is a duplicate, or some side issue?
This article isn't a dupe; its a followup.
Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/
http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/
http://www.livejournal.com/users/metricmusic
PS: I'm aware this article isn't duped.
Yet.
Slashdot actually has a search function built-in! There is a little search box down in the lower left of the webpage that anyone can use. It is especially usefull when searching for dupes. Check out this example:
http://science.slashdot.org/search.pl?query=stardu st
You can see that this very story was posted twice already on the 22nd, not to mention all of the older references.
And as you tread the halls of sanity, You feel so glad to be, Unable to go beyond. I have a message, From another time..
You are one of those rare individuals who make satire superfluous. I thank you, for you make the world a more joyous place in which to live.
Didn't this qualify?
Stardust to Return January 15
Ooops, I already violated my New Year Resolution not to be a total bastard!!
Sorry.
Isn't that what science is all about: regardless of your religious beliefs? See Newton and other scientists who considered their quest for knowledge as learning about God. Which in my case, has a lot more meaning than the myth in the Bible and other scriptures.
Screw the secrets of the universe. Someone checked to make sure it wasn't a dupe!
"I'm going to f***ing bury that guy, I have done it before, and I will do it again. I'm going to f***ing kill Google"
When I Googled to make sure this wasn't a dupe
Zonk, it's January the first, not April! Guess someone's still under the influence from last night's celebrations...
It's official. Most of you are morons.
Stardust to Return January 15 On December 23rd, 2005 with 143 comments
accessdeniednsp writes "Seven years ago, the Stardust probe was sent to intercept Comet Wild 2, gather dust particles, and return to Earth. Stardust is...
Dust Samples Returning to Earth at 28,860 mph On December 22nd, 2005 with 48 comments
DjBenBen writes "After a 2.88 billion mile round-trip journey, NASA's Stardust mission is nearing Earth with comet and interstellar dust particles that could...
Voyager has been out there a long time. Pioneer has been out there a long time. This spacecraft has 128MB of memory on board. In my day, we made probes with 64K of memory, and we liked it.
Dood, no disrespect (not caring that i'll be rated offtopic) but I believe in allot of things and i'm not saying what you claim is false but one thing i've also learned in my own experiences its sometimes best just to keep your mouth shut and let the world go by, that way you seem to be liked a whole lot more by everyone else around you and you never have to worry about being reported to your local psychiatric facility for a brain scan to make sure your not certifiable.
...
Okay yeah it sounds nasty but then again, the development for the inner self should just stay with the inner self
> I have intense religious experiences on a frequent occurance
Dude, that's your hand, not God's.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
http://stardust.jpl.nasa.gov/photo/comet3d.html -
Stardust's mission has gone relatively smoothly- I've been checking in every few months because I can't help but be impressed by scale of this experiment. And this time, they ever thought to put a parachute in the return capsule, unlike that other probe which captured solar wind particles, then smashed into the desert floor when the stunt 'copters didn't make the catch. (The sun must've been in their eyes...) The comet pass-through two years ago might have been overshadowed by the Mars Rover(s) story- one of 'em landed just around the same time as Stardust's Wild 2 encounter.
I came, I saw, I left. It looked better in the brochure.
With spending like this, exactly what are "conservatives" conserving?
It's not like the editors would notice the difference. :)
/.? :D
And since when did writing skill have anything to do with
comets appear to contain much more deuterium than the concentration we find in earth's water (even allowing for half-life of deuterium). See: Blake, G. A., Qi, C., Hogerheijde, M.R., Gurwell, M. A., and Muhleman, D. O. "Sublimation from Icy Jets as a Probe of the Interstellar Volatile Content of Comets," Nature, 398, 213 (1999).
My guess is that because the editors see a *ton* of submissions, they often forget which ones they actually posted. Think about it: Do you remember every post you've modded up or down?
http://outcampaign.org/
Shh, don't let the W find out, or we'll be invading the Kuiper Belt. Talk about a long deployment!
All snarky (provided for my new years resolution to stop grammar nazis. Yes I realize that just begs for more flaming) comments aside I thought this was a cool idea then, and still think so. That thing's been up there for so long, and still working. NASA gets a lot of press (and I makea ton of jokes) about bad comversions and other matters that make their studies fail, but if this is pulled off, with a good landing, it'll be an amazing feat! I hope lots of good studies are done of the material we bring back, and that no Andromana Strains emerge.
Want to find other gamers to play board and role playing game
There are a lot of things about comets which it's fun watching armchair philosophers and myopic my-theory-fits-everything scientists trying to explain.
For a few interesting examples:
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
If the comment, it's a pre-emptive dupe. (-:
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing
...was there any specific point to your post beyond the (obvious) emphasis of the lack of concrete answers? I'm left with a very I'm-being-blonde feeling that I missed something.
Got time? Spend some of it coding or testing