Martian Meteorite Gets NASA Mars Rover's Attention
coondoggie writes "NASA's Mars rover Opportunity will take a small detour on its current journey to check out what could be a toaster-sized iron-based meteorite that crashed into the Red Planet. NASA scientists called the rock 'Oileán Ruaidh,' which is the Gaelic name for an island off the coast of northwestern Ireland. The rock is about 45 centimeters (18 inches) wide from the angle at which it was first seen on September 16."
So this rock, I suppose it Rocks?
Restore the madness of youth's lechery
If that is a meteorite, then where is the crater?
My karma is not a Chameleon.
Oileán Ruaidh translates to red island.
I bet that it is a meteorite that was ejected from the Earth due to a comet impact, and that reached Mars after a long journey bringing with itself traces of life.
Toaster-sized at 18''? That's a quite a toaster...
I gave up sigs almost a year ago.
That's no meteorite ...
Nuke it from space, it's the only way yada yada ...
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For the irony challenged, I don't really think NASA scientists are overpaid. What does the Tea Party use to make the toast at its tea parties, anyway?
From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
What about this meteorite is so special as to deserve a rover's attention? The rovers are very expensive pieces of kit with, presumably, limited lifespans. We get plenty of meteorites on Earth, including some practically uncontaminated ones in the Antarctic. Is this an especially unusual space-rock? Does Mars's position mean it gets types of meteorites that earth doesn't?
# cat
Damn, my RAM is full of llamas.
A bit like "ay-lan ruah" apparently but yes, let us know if we're supposed to prounce that in an Irish accent, an American accent, or a Martian accent..... ;-)
That's not a meteor, that's a monolith. Kubrick got the scale wrong, apparently.
What a depressingly stupid machine.
Oh my god! It is full of stars!
> NASA scientists called the rock 'Oileán Ruaidh,' which is the Gaelic name for an island off the coast of northwestern Ireland
Can't NASA scientists think ahead a little bit to make the future a safer place? GPS manufacturers of the year 2437 are gonna be pissed when their customers end up on Mars while trying to fly to Ireland...
First of all, the title of the official press release is "Mars Rover Opportunity Aproaching Possible Meteorite" (so, it's not confirmed) and this http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/newsroom/pressreleases/20100921a.html is the original NASA Press Release.
Also something "weird". This site talks about network technology, and in the middle a post about a rock on Mars. Also there's a big blocking Video Ad right in the middle when you open the link. Frustrating.
A bit like "ay-lan ruah" apparently but yes, let us know if we're supposed to prounce that in an Irish accent, an American accent, or a Martian accent..... ;-)
A closer pronunciation is "ill-aawn rew-ah".
From a friendly martian.
Neither the Martians or Irish (or Scots) appear to have much of an imagination.
Typical, just typical. We spend all this time and money going to an exotic location to see the sights, but once we're there you want to spend all this time looking through the imported kitsch.
It's an imperial probe droid!
Apt. This means 'Red Island' in Irish, so Red Island in a Red sand sea, on a Red planet... I believe there is a slight misspelling though - this should be 'Oilean Ruadh' (no 'i' in Ruadh, though I haven't figured out how to put fadas over a's on Slashdot.)
you will be endowed with the gift of martian gab
of course, that could be just a bunch of blarney
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
We know this, because we read the great grandpost.
And I call double bollocks on your '...so your reasoning is bollocks.' statement.
A) From the fine article:
"The dark color, rounded texture and the way it is perched on the surface all make it look like an iron meteorite," said science-team member Matt Golombek of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory...
and:
Opportunity has found four iron meteorites during the rover's exploration of the Meridiani Planum region of Mars since early 2004. Examination of these rocks has provided information about the Martian atmosphere, as well as the meteorites themselves, NASA stated.
So they have seen this before, and have some good people checking this stuff out.
All we know about this is that what appears to be a meteorite sitting there.
If you bothered to actually look at the pics the AC linked to(especially the second link- note the Big Fscking Rock that this meteorite happens to be perched on, and the prevalence of rocks making up the surface in the immediate area.
We don't know that it didn't bounce or roll there- no telling when it got there, the planetary conditions at the time it arrived- maybe Mars had a thicker atmosphere then, whether it impacted there or is it just a fragment of something else that landed there.
Who knows yet?
B) See above (re: the second link) about the rocky ground, and particularly, the previously mentioned rock this thing is perched on.
How long has it been there to show that much erosion? What caused the erosion? Where did it come from? Where did it actually impact, and at what speed and trajectory?
'...so your reasoning is bollocks.'...indeed.
Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
Maybe the GREAT ONE lives on Mars.
Assuming Irish Gaelic is anything like Scottish Gaelic, it actually means 'red island'.
Neither the Martians or Irish (or Scots) appear to have much of an imagination.
Damn NASA, that unimaginative joint Martian/Irish/Scots space agency.
The Rover makes a sword out of it!
Towards the Singularity.
Someone has been watching "the Brave Little Toaster goes to Mars" too many times.
What really is amazing is that the rovers only had a design life of 90days and they are still going after several years.
Arctic Turtle
We don't know that it didn't bounce or roll there- no telling when it got there, the planetary conditions at the time it arrived- maybe Mars had a thicker atmosphere then, whether it impacted there or is it just a fragment of something else that landed there.
This is the amusing bit: the dweebs here who assume that the only way a piece of rock from space ever winds up on a planetary surface is to come crashing straight down into the atmosphere and drill a deep hole without any fragmentation or ejecta.
I guess they are ignorant of the entire class of meteorites found on Earth that are believed to be ejecta from Martian impacts. Or they are too stupid to realize that if a rock can hit Mars hard enough that fragments sometimes wind up on Earth, maybe a few of the fragments might just possibly hit Mars at far distant locations.
Man /. is depressing this morning. The parade of arrogant ignorance on display here these days is really something to see.
Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
Gaelige - Irish gaelic - though our teachers always told us to call it "Irish" (as béarla) and not Gaelic to emphasise it was the national language and gàidhlig (Scots gaelic) are essentially the same language - 400 years ago there would have been a continuous linguistic community from the north west of Scotland the the south west of ireland with merely changes of accent and dialect.
Now the pentration of English and spelling reform in Ireland makes them look different - but Ulster Irish (in the North West of Ireland) is still quite similar to the Scottish version, at least in spoken form.
One earth, in very dry places, they sit out in the open too- nothing to cover them up or rust them. There is a spot in Antarctica with minimal snow accumulation and lots of meteroites just sitting there. Some sandless deserts too.
Modern Irish would be "Oileaacute;n Rua"; "rua" is "red". "Ruaidh" is an archaic spelling, and ("oileaacute;n" being a masculine noun) would most likely signify the genitive case. So a better translation might be "Red's Island", where "Red" might be a nickname. Google returns mostly proper name results for "ruaidh", including "Cuan na Maoil Ruaidh" (Mulroy Bay), suggesting that "Roy Island" might more apt. This appears in at least one local guide:
The pronunciation is probably more like "ill-aawn roy".
(Interesting but unrelated: how Red Square got its name)
Floating face-down in a river of regret...and thoughts of you...
The thing that keeps amazing me every time I read something about the mars rovers is their stamina.
Think about it, it landed in January 2004 for a 90 (ninety) day mission on the surface of mars.
As we speak it's still driving around and making new discoveries, just mindblowing.
That's 2343 days more than expected. Massive kudos to the engineers of these little wonders.
Life starts at the end of your comfort zone.
Since the island itself is in the northwest the Conamara (or Connemara) accent is probably the one to use, so it would be OH-lun ree. However, most Irish Gaelic speakers would pronounce it OH-lun r(ue)-ee'. Fun, huh?
You can also use numeric character references, but that's not very portable. What works for Windows is wrong on a Mac, for instance.
I thought Unicode (especially UTF-8) was intended to resolve this issue. With UTF-8 becoming nearly ubiquitous, EOL issues are a much bigger problem than character encoding.
.jp site, at least, uses UTF-8).
Don't get me wrong: I wish ISO-8859 and CP1252 would be incinerated by a bolt of lightning from Zeus for all the issues they have caused me over the years. The divine hammer can't be dropped soon enough: even Slashdot is stuck in the early 1990's by continuing to insist on using ISO-8859-1 for the US-based site (the
HTML escaped characters are a horrible hack in every case aside from the syntax interference related ones (greater than, less than, etc).
This evolution is essential. For instance, I should be able to inject some ancient Sumerian Cuneiform characters into this message, dammit! Unicode supports me on this!
This isn't just an idle desire for feature-creep. Sometimes I channel Ur-geeks who had to post their trolls via clay tablet in the marketplace, and dammit, they want a piece of this action. Writing something like "Your ancestors were so foolishly illiterate that they mistakenly grew flax instead of barley" just doesn't have the same punch in English as in Sumerian Cuneiform.
Maybe it's my eyes but isn't the picture in the linked article showing a small, squat, bird-like creature, surfing on the ocean?
Or perhaps I've not been keeping up with the latest Mars news!