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NASA Satellite Looks For Response From Dead Mars Craft

coondoggie writes "NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter will next week make a number of passes over the presumed dead Phoenix Mars Lander on the surface of the planet and listen for what the space agency called possible, though improbable, radio transmissions. Odyssey will pass over the Phoenix landing site about 10 times this month and two longer listening tries in February and March trying to determine if the craft survived Martian winter and try to lock onto a signal and gain information about the lander’s status."

5 of 152 comments (clear)

  1. Love the space program by jhoegl · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wish we took 50% of the money given to the military and put it into space. We would be at Jupiter right now.

    1. Re:Love the space program by snmpkid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Or there would be 50% more dead space junk on jupiter now

    2. Re:Love the space program by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't see how a rocket with a payload of nothing but dollar bills is going to get us any closer to Jupiter.

    3. Re:Love the space program by Kintanon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Are you serious? This is what you're bringing to the table? We already disrupt local economies and destroy the livelihoods of local farmers with the amount of food relief we drop into areas. The US spends more money on foreign aid than any other developed nation. We POUR food into the third world and their fucked up governments let the civilians starve while they feed their military and trade the food to other warlords for guns.

      So take that bullshit and try to sell it elsewhere jackass.

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    4. Re:Love the space program by jpmorgan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      While I agree with your sentiment about the longevity of the rovers, I'm a little confused about your tank comment. The military has no problem using and maintaining old equipment when it's good for the job... the famous example of the B-52 comes to mind. Military equipment tends to go obsolete faster than robot probes, because it doesn't take years (sometimes decades) to deploy a new model.