Spacecraft BepiColombo Poised For Mission To Mercury
The European Space Agency is launching a spacecraft to explore the mysteries of Mercury. BepiColombo, named after the Italian mathematician and engineer Giuseppe "Bepi" Colombo, is set to launch at 9:45 p.m. ET Friday aboard an Ariane 5 rocket from a spaceport in French Guiana. The launch will be livestreamed via ESA's website. NPR reports: The spacecraft is actually made up of two probes: One will go into orbit close to the planet, while the other, supplied by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, will orbit farther away, measuring Mercury's magnetic field. "What this lets you do is look at that space environment around Mercury from two different perspectives at exactly the same time," says Nancy Chabot, a planetary scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. That gives a clearer picture of what's changing during the 88 days it takes Mercury to make one revolution around the sun.
Radar measurements from Earth first suggested that there was ice on Mercury. Earlier this decade, NASA's Messenger mission was able to confirm that the ice was actually there. But Messenger only came close enough to see the ice at Mercury's north pole. The real icy action, Chabot says, is at the south pole. "The largest crater to host these water ice deposits is right smack dab at the south pole of Mercury," she says. "And so I'm very excited that BepiColombo is going to be in an orbit that passes much closer to the southern hemisphere." BepiColombo will take a rather circuitous path to Mercury. It will fly by Earth once, Venus twice and Mercury six times before it is in the right orientation to go into orbit around the innermost planet in our solar system. The entire trip will take slightly more than seven years. When BepiColombo gets into orbit, it may be able to see where Messenger crash-landed on the planet. It is estimated to have made a crater about 60 feet across.
UPDATE: BepiColombo successfully blasted off from Europe's spaceport in French Guiana, marking the third ever mission to Mercury. "Launching BepiColombo is a huge milestone for ESA (the European Space Agency) and JAXA, and there will be many great successes to come," ESA Director General Jan Woerner said in a statement. "Beyond completing the challenging journey, this mission will return a huge bounty of science."
Radar measurements from Earth first suggested that there was ice on Mercury. Earlier this decade, NASA's Messenger mission was able to confirm that the ice was actually there. But Messenger only came close enough to see the ice at Mercury's north pole. The real icy action, Chabot says, is at the south pole. "The largest crater to host these water ice deposits is right smack dab at the south pole of Mercury," she says. "And so I'm very excited that BepiColombo is going to be in an orbit that passes much closer to the southern hemisphere." BepiColombo will take a rather circuitous path to Mercury. It will fly by Earth once, Venus twice and Mercury six times before it is in the right orientation to go into orbit around the innermost planet in our solar system. The entire trip will take slightly more than seven years. When BepiColombo gets into orbit, it may be able to see where Messenger crash-landed on the planet. It is estimated to have made a crater about 60 feet across.
UPDATE: BepiColombo successfully blasted off from Europe's spaceport in French Guiana, marking the third ever mission to Mercury. "Launching BepiColombo is a huge milestone for ESA (the European Space Agency) and JAXA, and there will be many great successes to come," ESA Director General Jan Woerner said in a statement. "Beyond completing the challenging journey, this mission will return a huge bounty of science."
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A Chatbot doing science? Kewl!
We didn't get any information on the most important part of this story. Think about it: what matters the most here? What do we have direct empirical evidence that's more important than humanity landing on a comet? The most important part of the story is: what kind of shirt was the spokesman wearing when he made the announcement?
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
As the countdown rolled to zero, the spacecraft reported a number of delays, noting "Just one more thing..."
liars touts & shills oh my... cease fire stand down.. there's mothers & children in every town the world around..
Free Software world hero Linus Torvalds was forced to resign from the Linux kernel project by blackmail. He fell for a honeytrap and was threatened with a #MeToo purge if he didn't resign. It's a corporate power grab, using "Social Just-Us" as a tool.
Tank U: Cap thine OP via us!
A US journalist is dismembered and killed (in that order) in a Saudi embassy on the soil of a NATO ally, on the orders of a close 'Whatsapp' friend of Jared Kushner. A doctor is on hand to keep him alive during the dismemberment (you don't need a doctor to kill people), and the whole process is live streamed on Whatsapp back to bone-saw-boss-man (he uses Whatapps for the backchannel to Jared, he uses Whatsapp for the backchannel to his henchmen). Apparently involving a bone saw, injections half way through to keep him alive (you don't inject dead people), and lots and lots and lots of screaming.
And not one of the GOP Senators or GOP Congressmen is calling for the FBI to investigate Jared? Jared is busy helping the coverup even, pretend he accidentally choked, but choked men don't scream for minutes and don't get injections after they're dead. No doubt their silence is because of Elliot Broidy.
I'm sure after the election, they'll be totally investigation the chain of command here and Jared's involvement, which at minimum included getting Khashoggi kicked out of Saudi Arabia, after being critical of Trump at a press conference.
But yeh, comets, must go explore them. And yeh, last time someone wore a crap t-shirt and it was a slow news day. There are no slow news days now.
I wish the news was full of "science man wears inappropriate T-shirt" stories.
Finally a country willing to explore something besides Mars and going back to the Moon. I wish them luck and that we can finally get some important research back on Mercury. Unfortunately NASA completely lacks any sort of solid path in space exploration anymore. I mean we can't even supply ISS with crew or supplies and the shuttle has been retired for years. Obviously no real plans were ever in place for the future, and so here we are looking to a unrealistic manned Mars mission, or a redundant return to the Moon. Maybe people in general have lost interest in space because of science fiction. We don't have a Enterprise starship so why bother.
Have gnu, will travel.
For a challenge a little closer to home, What is Winter Sunlight?
Funny how when you read it too quickly, it comes out as "Poisoned Mission with Mercury"...
Ezekiel 23:20