NASA Releases HiRISE Images of Curiosity's Descent
gcnaddict writes "NASA released content from the MRO HiRISE imager taken during the descent of the Curiosity Rover. Among the most notable artifacts are the images themselves as well as a diagram showing the exact location of the rover relative to NASA's target."
Update: 08/07 00:15 GMT by U L : And now for a picture from the rover itself.
Nice shot. And kudos to the folks who painted the white square on the surface of Mars. If only the people who striped our freeways could have done such a good job.
Have gnu, will travel.
Watched the stream last night of Mission Control, and coupled with this and the other images it has just been too cool.
Just think about this a moment. NASA took a photo from a satellite, of a probe landing on another planet. And they got telemetry relayed about the landing from ANOTHER satellite.
And it's not just a bright pixel, you can clearly see what it is.
Stunning.
NZ Electronics Enthusiasts: Check out my Trade Me Listings
Tiff images
http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/tiff/
XML source file for day 0
http://landingimagecatalog-1450153822.us-west-1.elb.amazonaws.com/landing/images_sol0.xml
why http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/ didn't release a sequence of pictures? It'd be so awesome! Perhaps the other ones are blurry ...
NB: The message above might reflect my opinion right now, but not necessarily tomorrow or next year.
I think something missed in all of this is how powerful imagery is.
Imagine a world without photographs ?
This mission, and ones before it.. highlight how important this invention, photography, is.
We have photographs of this on its chute landing.. this is the second time we've done it.. and we got photographs back as soon as it landed.. This is great... and the excitement of the crew, and the public, upon seeing these images is a testament to how far photography has come in the past 150ish years.
Kudos to all of those who made this happen.. for the science it will do.. and further affirming the power of images in our world..
I neglected to mention the obvious point in my submission that this was HiRISE's second such shot.
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/phoenix-descent.php
The first shot of the sort was this one from the Phoenix lander.
Viable Slashdot alternatives: https://pipedot.org/ and http://soylentnews.org/
This image - and everything it took to take it - gives me goosebumps.
A picture of a probe, taken from an orbiting satellite - all on a different planet, and all done without direct human control.
This could be my generation's earthrise photo - proof that mankind is stretching beyond Earth.
I was somewhat amazed the whole landing worked, so many complex parts that had to work together...
And then like you say - a casual snap shot from above of the thing on descent! Too amazing.
I'll put on several hats just to take them all off for all the NASA engineers on this one. It was a really spectacular success and it was fantastic how well they did at getting visual confirmation right off the bat before it went into radio silence.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
http://www.flickr.com/photos/56980942@N07/7729195958/in/photostream
Can't get that ball back now, can we?
Don't let Richard Hoagland get a hold of this!
Forward! -- Emperor Norton, 2012
This photo is so astounding that it brings back memories of the 1960s moon landing days. I was totally enthralled by the awesome techno-wizardry it took set, not one, but two men on the moon, and bring them back to earth. The techno wizardry needed to pull this shot off seems the equal of the feats of those heady days. Well done NASA, well done.
What amazes me is how cheap the entire MSL mission is...
The entire budget was only 4 days in Iraq/Afghanistan, or approx USD$2.5billion.
NASA's entire budget is less than what the US Army spends on air-conditioning in Iraq/Afghanistan ( USD$20 billion ).
I. Kid. You. Not.
Wow 2 billion dollars to go look at some rocks, that we have already looked at... Impressive.
If you take 2,000,000,000 dollars, buying a 10 dollar meal, you could have bought 200,000,000 people meals. But instead of feeding the poor, we'd rather look at some distant rocks.
What a loving nation we are...
Thoughtful analysis untainted by political correctness is getting scarce these days. Which by definition means it's getting more valuable.
There's also a video of the descent:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcGMDXy-Y1I
Events
* 0:15: heat shield drops
* 0:18: detachment from parachute, with corresponding acceleration towards the surface
* 0:19: rockets kick in to slow things down
* 0:44: dust is kicked up from the jets
* 0:48: wheels deployed
* 0:53: touchdown
I'd mod you up too if I had points. Troll is completely unwarranted.
@MarsCuriosity. ..FYI, I aim to send bigger, color pictures from Mars later this week once I've got my head up & Mastcam active #MSL...
Looks fake and rendered.
Actually, space is all in the English system. By a strange coincidence most of the aliens have 12 fingers, 3 toes and 1760 of an appendage we have no name for, so it makes the math easier and is more logical.
Big apple, new Yorik, undig it, something's unrotting in Edenmark.
For crying out loud... what is this? The 1970's? Heck, these days doesn't black-and-white actually cost *MORE* than color? And wouldn't color be capable of giving more information than what they get from black-and-white anyways?
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
just above and to the left of that parachute!
Aren't you ignoring a very important detail: NASA budget is negligible compared to spending on "preventing entire region from falling under the control" of taliban?
"Doing only one thing at a time" in this context is like saying "oh, I can't help my kid construct a Lego house, since I'm already building a real house", duh...
Mars has it all, even without any intelligent life yet.
The first impression is important. All know that.
Then why Curiosity's first images are of worse quality than those of "Lunokhod 1" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunokhod_1 in 1970?
Yes the percentage of sulfate in rocks is important, but we want to see HD color images and HD videos from Mars. Real time. Not when someone important decides to release a black and white photo.
You thank the Jews who run Congress for that - they're too busy stealing YOUR labour in the form of taxes to pay for endless wars against 'precious' Israel's enemies, which YOUR people have to go and fight, to 'save the Jews'...
Didn't see any Africans in Mission Control either- why is that? Surely not because they're not intelligent enough...
Was there Cake?
It's hard to believe that detail is possible from the top of a multi-story building. Amazing!
I cannot believe that he could show his face at JPL after killing Mars exploration
Mars exploration has ended with this mission and you can politics and Bolden.
NASA director Bolden is part of the whole manned-mission pork machine that has been poaching from JPL for decades. Sagan created the Planetary Society to stop this poaching but it is happening again. NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) has been called the "Rocket To Nowhere" because it has not mission or target--its sole purpose is to create jobs in Houston. ...
“When’s the next lander on Mars? The answer to that is nobody knows,” Bolden said in a recent interview with The Associated Press. Bull. He knows and it is "Never"
Giant numbers should be presented in context.
Whenever I hear giant numbers for budgets I like to compare them to other things to know what they mean. A good comparison is one that everyone or almost everyone can relate to. I like to use the cost to raise everyone on earth out of extreme poverty, which means clean water, food, clothes and shelter.
Ending extreme poverty would cost less than $200 billion each year.
(source: Jeffrey Sachs - The end of poverty)
The UN has similiar numbers from the millenium goals.
The United States military budget is $500 billion to $1.5 trillion. $500 billion doesn't count the middle east wars, interest on war debt, veterans benefits or spending by the States.)
Plus a recent analysis of Deptartment of Labor Statistics by the PERI institute shows that for every billion dollars that we spend on the military we LOSE from 5,000 to 15,000 jobs compared to spending the money on green jobs, hwalth or education. That's because the military isn't very labor intensive. It takes more people to teach effectively than to kill effectively.
Anyway, remember it only costs $200 billion to end extreme poverty globally. Think about that next time you hear a big budget item come up.
I'm off topic I know. Context matters. And for those of you who think "So what? Congress will never go for military cuts." go watch Lawrence Lessig talk about "How money corrupts Congress, and a plan to stop it."