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Groundbreaking Solar Mission Faces Chilly Death

iamlucky13 writes "Over 17 years ago, the Ulysses spacecraft was launched aboard the space shuttle Discovery for a unique NASA/ESA mission. While nearly all other probes travel along our solar system's ecliptic plane, Ulysses used a Jupiter gravity assist to swing 80 degrees out of plane, carrying it over the sun's poles for an unprecedented view. During a mission that lasted four times longer than planned, it has flown through the tails of several comets, helped pinpoint distant gamma-ray bursts, and provided data on the sun and its heliosphere from the better part of two solar cycles. Unfortunately, the natural reduction of power from its radioisotope thermal generator means it is now unable to even keep its attitude control fuel from freezing, and NASA has decided to formally conclude the mission on July 1."

2 of 134 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Mission's over? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Did you see that big dish on it? "Floating around aimlessly" = not pointing at the earth. You can't transmit to the earth without attitude control.

  2. Re:The Real Ulysses by Petrushka · · Score: 5, Informative

    Yeah, because he sucked at navigation. Additionally, he was an idiot: All the things the gods warned him not to do because they would turn out to be bad, he did - and they went bad.

    Not a single statement there accurately reflects the Odyssey. The actual story, as opposed to the one you've made up, relates that:

    1. he took ten years because his men continually disobeyed his orders -- that's made clear in the first few lines --;
    2. he shacked up with Circe for a year (voluntarily);
    3. after he washed up on Calypso's island she basically held him prisoner for seven years. The story also relates how
    4. any time a god told him to do something, he did exactly that; and
    5. he is repeatedly described as having practically divine intelligence, and this is borne out by the various schemes he devises in the story. Even Athena compliments him on his deviousness.

    The reason you do not understand his appeal to the ancient Greeks is because your memory of the story bears little resemblance to the actual story.