NASA Spacecraft Images Crash Site of Retired LADEE Probe
An anonymous reader writes In April, NASA ended the mission of its Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) mission by de-orbiting (read: crashing) it on the far side of the moon. The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has now directly imaged the crash site, showing a small crater and the spray of rocks and dust caused by the crash. "LADEE's grave lies about 0.5 miles (0.8 kilometers) from the eastern rim of the larger Sundman V crater, just 0.2 miles (0.3 km) north of the spot where mission team members predicted the spacecraft would go down based on tracking data, NASA officials said. ... The new crater is less than 10 feet (3 meters) wide. It's so small because LADEE was just the size of a washing machine, and the probe was traveling relatively slowly (3,800 mph, or 6,116 km/h) when it impacted the surface. The LROC team was able to spot LADEE's impact crater after developing a new tool that compared before-and-after images of the same lunar sites, researchers said."
So a washing machine going 3,00 MPH would make a decent hole in the dirt. Like anvil shooting
enlarging my vocab one crash at a time.
"Da"
This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
Can someone explain to me why the images have such bad quality and resolution? Satellite images of the earth are good enough to spot someone sunbathing on a roof.
The narrow band cameras have a resolution of 0.5 meters/pixel
That also happens to be the legal limit for commercially available satellite imagery.
They could have sent up something to take higher resolution pictures, but they wouldn't have the memory, weight, or power budget to handle the files.
There's also the fact that (A) the system they're using is proven technology that was modified from the Mars orbiter camera and (B) 0.5 meters/pixel is a fairly high resolution for mapping a landscape.
[Fuck Beta]
o0t!
I didn't know Rick Deckard was currently working as a NASA spokesman.
I can't read a story about this probe without hearing Jerry Lewis screaming in my head.
- Mike
The satellite images of people sunbathing on their roof are actually taken with an airplane.
Because then you could spot the random alien ship parts that the grays also crashed there duh :)
More than 95% of stuff in orbit now is junk and huge resources at NASA and DoD are used just to track it More than 500,000 pieces of debris, or “space junk,” are tracked as they orbit the Earth. They all travel at speeds up to 17,500 mph, fast enough for a relatively small piece of orbital debris to damage a satellite or a spacecraft. http://motherboard.vice.com/re... http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pa...
it will be much harder to remove later. By the time we are building moon telescopes and research bases, we will be using half the payload for tools to sweep the junk up http://science.nasa.gov/scienc...