Antique Fridge Could Keep Venus Rover Cool
Hugh Pickens writes "In the 1970s and 80s, several probes landed on Venus and returned data from the surface but they all expired less than 2 hours after landing because of Venus' tremendous heat. It's hard to keep a rover functioning when temperatures of 450 C are hot enough to melt lead but NASA researchers have designed a refrigeration system that might be able to keep a robotic rover going for as long as 50 Earth days using a reverse Stirling engine. NASA has not committed to a Venus rover mission, but a 2003 National Academies of Science study recommended that high priority be given to a robot mission to investigate the Venusian surface helping to answer such questions as why Venus ended up so different from Earth and if the changes have taken place relatively recently."
I've got an easier solution. Don't make the robot out of lead.
If your going to have a Venus probe there is always the chance it will land on the earth and go berserk. So you need a bionic man or woman to fight it. Actually, why are we making Venus probes at all for a bunch of stupid textbook companies. Let them pay for th probe. what we need is to make fembots. I want fembots dammit. Affectionate fembots that can make flapjacks... Now that would be a worthwhile implementation of science.
Yeah, an engine, sure: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:BetaStirlingTG4web.jpg
So you'd get a planet full of people predisposed to have big appetites, and have them breed.
I'd get pretty scared once they get a taste for Terran ribs and start hunting us for food from their flying saucers.
With apologies to obese people. I suck.
(And I taste bad.)
Yes, but can this device provide adequate cooling for a pair of NVIDIA 8800's in a brutal "room temperature" environment?
We at Venus welcome your cool beer-carrying roverlords. We're damned thirsty over here.
Table-ized A.I.
Wouldn't that be veneraformed or something?
Also, you forgot: 7. ??? and 8. Profit!
-Mike
I'm sorry; I don't know what I was thinking!