NASA Launches a New Mission To Mars (cnn.com)
"This is a big day. We're going back to Mars," said one NASA official, presiding over this morning's launch of the first Mars surface craft to lift off since 2011. CNN reports:
The Atlas V 401 rocket also carried two suitcase-size spacecraft, designed to orbit Mars, as it blasted into the dark and cloudy sky, which turned bright gold for seconds as the rocket ascended in a plume of smoke... After a six-month journey, if it all goes as planned, InSight -- whose name is short for Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport -- will touch down just north of the Martian equator on November 26, joining five other NASA spacecraft operating on and above Mars.
The 790-pound (358-kilogram) probe will then begin its two-year science mission to seek the "fingerprints" of the processes that formed the rocky planets of the solar system. It will measure the planet's "vital signs: 'its "pulse' (seismology), 'temperature' (heat flow) and 'reflexes' (precision tracking)," according to NASA. The explorer doesn't have wheels, so it can't roll around gathering up dirt to study. But it does have a 7.8-foot-long (2.4-meter) robotic arm. The arm will place a seismometer on the ground to detect "marsquakes" (think earthquakes, but on Mars, of course). InSight also will burrow 10 to 16 feet into the crust of Mars, going 15 times deeper than any previous Martian mission, according to NASA.
The rocket is carrying two briefcase-sized satellites (named Wall-E and Eva) which will demonstrate that cubesats can survey journeys to other planets.
Two microchips have also been affixed to the lander carrying the names of 2.4 million space enthusiasts -- including William Shatner.
The 790-pound (358-kilogram) probe will then begin its two-year science mission to seek the "fingerprints" of the processes that formed the rocky planets of the solar system. It will measure the planet's "vital signs: 'its "pulse' (seismology), 'temperature' (heat flow) and 'reflexes' (precision tracking)," according to NASA. The explorer doesn't have wheels, so it can't roll around gathering up dirt to study. But it does have a 7.8-foot-long (2.4-meter) robotic arm. The arm will place a seismometer on the ground to detect "marsquakes" (think earthquakes, but on Mars, of course). InSight also will burrow 10 to 16 feet into the crust of Mars, going 15 times deeper than any previous Martian mission, according to NASA.
The rocket is carrying two briefcase-sized satellites (named Wall-E and Eva) which will demonstrate that cubesats can survey journeys to other planets.
Two microchips have also been affixed to the lander carrying the names of 2.4 million space enthusiasts -- including William Shatner.
"Back to Mars"? NASA is obsessed with Mars, in a way no other space agency is. A grossly disproportionate amount of their planetary science budget goes to this one destination. Why act like they've been neglecting Mars?
"WANTED: Sinking ship seeks rats."
Unless by some miracle we find water on Mars a unlikely reality. We have little hope to sustain human life on Mars. Yeah its a notable achievement to place a explorer on Mars for insight to its history. But its simply not a planet that will probably ever sustain life so what exactly are we trying to achieve?
When is the manned mission scheduled for?
No way ever gonna get off this rock. In time. Before it comes to an end. Again. Depressing? No. Trump is depressing. Surely a sign of the apocalypse.
For research: there are many things to learn there that can be applied to Earth.
And it'll also give some talking point to your hero, Elon Musk, when he needs to distract people from his incompetence and the fact that he's running Tesla into bankruptcy.
In the search of diamonds, gems, platinum, gold, uranium, ... all in Mars.
Did anyone tell these 2.5 million space enthusiasts that the rockets destination was Mars not space?
What TFS states:
"This is a big day. We're going back to Mars," said one NASA official, presiding over this morning's launch of the first Mars surface craft to lift off since 2011. CNN reports:
This particular sentence appears nowhere in Space.com linked article. Here's how it actually appears:
"This is a big day. We're going back to Mars," NASA's new administrator Jim Bridenstine, who took charge of the agency last month, said in a congratulatory call to the InSight team after launch.
Three problems here. 1)The way the TFS reads, it implies that the Space.com article was referencing CNN reporting which is completely false. The Space.com article comprises original reporting.with no external references to any other news media's reporting on the story. 2)The quote from the "one NASA official" doesn't appear anywhere in the CNN linked story appearing further down in the summary. It wasn't said by the "one NASA official" in the included video segments of the CNN article, either. 3) Its turns out the "one NASA official" is actually NASA's new administrator, Jim Bridenstein, and the quote is from his congratulatory phone call to the Mars InSight team responsible for the mission. Why the TFS is written to make it sound like the quote is from some anonymous NASA PR flunky instead of the head of NASA is questionable.
Charitably, I would attribute these mistakes to editorial ineptitude. Uncharitably -particularly on the last point - I attribute it to editorial malfeasance to not report anything positive associated with the Trump appointed NASA chief.
Isn't NASA just a sink hole of corruption and greed? Shouldn't we have a real space agency with a real space station and a real moonbase? Instead it seems we have a bunch of overpaid affluent kids playing with remote control toys. They take no personal risks and they make six and seven figure salaries. IMO, this latest "mission" is a colossal waste of time and money.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I went to Lompoc to watch this morning, pretty nice crowd for 4:05am. But totally fogged in so we heard a rumble but no flame at all. Poor kids felt bamboozled but I was OK with it, been meaning to attend any sort of launch since childhood.
Instead of this "make work" welfare project for whitey, maybe they should have thought about the poor nigga first?
Obama gave all the niggas a free Obama phone, but please, nigga! That was just a "feature" phone. The bruthas and sistas need something better.
This wasted white people's money should have been spent on new smart phones so colored boys could watch videos and booty instead of calling mammy or the parole officer. Ain't no nigga uses no feature phone! Please!
Contrary to the summary, the MarsCubeOne (or MarCO) CubeSats will not orbit Mars. Their task is to serve as a communications relay during InSight's entry, descent and landing (if the landing is successful, InSight will rebroadcast the telemetry after local earthrise). Since they have no propulsion capabilities, they cannot slow down to enter Mars orbit, but will only fly by the planet.
*enjoying Stephen Hawking's books*
WilliamReview.com
I have my very own official âoeboarding passâ
that the longest surviving soviet probe transmitted for only 65 minutes. I feel that you're over-romanticizing landing on Venus a bit here, also lets not forget about the atmospheric pressure (93 bar) and temperature (462 C; 863 F), at the surface, not the easiest conditions to operate machinery in for longer periods of time. (src: http://astro.if.ufrgs.br/solar...) ESA's Venus Express did some good science as recently as 2015. And you didn't mention the weird retrograde rotation of Venus (together with Uranus, the only ones in our solar system), which is one of its most interesting features in my personal opinion..