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MSL Landing Timeline: What To Expect Tonight

An anonymous reader writes "When the Curiosity rover lands on Mars later tonight, it'll be executing a complex series of maneuvers. JPL will be relying on the Mars Odyssey orbiter to relay telemetry back to Earth in time-delayed real-time, and if all goes well, we'll be getting confirmation on the success (or failure) of each entry, descent, and landing phase, outlined in detail here."

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  1. Re:Not for any definition of "real time" that I kn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Telemetry will be continuously relayed back to earth, true, but with not much less than about a 15 minute latency, owing to the fact that Mars roughly a quarter of a light-hour from earth right now.

    That IS indeed real time. Relativity tells us nothing can have an effect here in less time. I don't know if you're trolling or just ignorant, but by your definition you can never look at the stars, galaxies or nebulae in the sky in real time either because they're all at varying distances and we're seeing light that originated anything from about 4 to several million years ago. With telescopes you can go back billions.