First Pictures From Mars Phoenix Lander
Now that the solar panels have been deployed, the Mars Phoenix Lander has begun sending back pictures of the red planet to the hungry space geeks of earth. In just a few weeks the claw will deploy and they'll start digging a hole. The scientists expect to use the dirt to construct a little sand castle which they will defend with several GI Joe action figures, and a bald barbie stolen from their sisters. Oh, and maybe find water or bacteria.
Why are the photos black & white?
Those are some amazing shots. I was just looking at them with my 5 year old son. Hopefully by the time he is my age, pictures from Mars will have people in them.
It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
I was never so excited about pictures of dirt. It isn't dirt.
Rocks yes, but not dirt.
And I can't just remember what the other stuff is called, but it ain't dirt.
I wank in the shower.
There is a repeated error on http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/phoenix/images.php: The caption used for many images should read Team Members Celebrate and not Team Members' Celebrate
(Unless they really meant to write Team Members' Celebration?)
Let's just hope there are no misplaced apostrophes in any of the wee beastie's code. Especially in the firmware update upload controller. That would be delightfully ironic....
I'm here EdgeKeep Inc.
While Europa is certainly well worth studying, I think mars makes a lot of sense for a couple reasons. First, there's still plenty to learn about it. Second, when you're talking about planetary distances, mars is pretty close, so you get feedback on your missions much quicker. Not only scientific data, but also about how your spacecraft did/didn't perform, which should help improve the designs of future spacecraft. And third, there's a decent amount of satellites already orbiting mars, and the newer landers and such can utilize those satellites to facilitate their mission.
Basically, I think you get a lot of bang for your buck with mars. Europa would be great, no doubt, but it's likely that for the same cost, they'd only be able to send a smaller probe with less instruments on it, and would get significantly less data out of it. But hopefully we'll get there one day.
One time I threw a brick at a duck.
Just so peoples know... a color camera is not as good as a set of Black and White Cameras which only capture light from specific light spectrums... ie: think of it as 1 Red camera, 1 Blue, 2 Green and probably 1 pure Black/White camera, where camera == CCD.
Look up CCD for more details on what it is/does and why using 3 separate CCDs for imaging will get you the highest quality image.
A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
Because that could irrevocably contaminate Mars before there was any proof of life that may have arisen independently. Besides, we already know what the surface conditions are like from the various probes, landers, and rovers sent there. We can duplicate Mars' surface conditions in labs here on Earth and get a good idea of what would happen to various kinds Earth-based living things.
Impetuous! Homeric!