http://www.space.com/16265-7-minutes-of ... video.html
A very nice clip on the many innovations and technologies involved in landing the Curiosity lander on Mars..in Aug 2012!
Mars Lander - Curiosity
- Airconvent
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Mars Lander - Curiosity
The Boldly Go Where No Meade Has Gone Before
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
A website that's tracking the countdown to the landing ... and also 'landing' parties around the world
http://getcurious.com/
The scheduled time for us here in Singapore is 1:30 PM on Monday, so I guess there won't be any parties happening here
http://getcurious.com/
The scheduled time for us here in Singapore is 1:30 PM on Monday, so I guess there won't be any parties happening here
- starfinder
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Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
The scheduled landing of Mars Science Laboratory Curiosity is less than 2 days away!
The rover is right on course for a landing on the surface of Mars (targetted for Gale Crater) at 1:31pm S'pore time on Monday 6 August 2012 (0531UTC).
See here for the latest status updates from NASA:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/index.html
http://www.nasa.gov/rss/msllanding_update.xml
Links here to watching the press conferences (archived and live) on NASA TV online :
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/news/newsroom/
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/n ... 20730.html
I remember watching the launch from Earth live in November last year. How time flies.
I have some reservations (doubts) about the sky crane landing system though. Hope all goes to plan...
The rover is right on course for a landing on the surface of Mars (targetted for Gale Crater) at 1:31pm S'pore time on Monday 6 August 2012 (0531UTC).
See here for the latest status updates from NASA:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/index.html
http://www.nasa.gov/rss/msllanding_update.xml
Links here to watching the press conferences (archived and live) on NASA TV online :
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/news/newsroom/
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/n ... 20730.html
I remember watching the launch from Earth live in November last year. How time flies.
I have some reservations (doubts) about the sky crane landing system though. Hope all goes to plan...
- starfinder
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Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
Another point...
You can watch the simulated current status of Curiosity on NASA/JPL's amazing Java-based app called "Eyes on the Solar System" (Windows or Mac only):
http://eyes.nasa.gov/
Click on the "Curiosity" feature. After the data loads, it will show the current distance, velocity, time to touchdown etc of Curiosity. You could also advance the time to just before Curiosity's entry: click on "Preview" mode and change the date/time to 6 August 2012 at 0500UTC and click on "Submit". If you're impatient, change the time to 0511UTC and watch the entire landing process from any angle/zoom setting (i.e. see the approaching surface of Mars from Curiosity's viewpoint).
After you've finished with the Curiosity feature, click to close the "MSL" (Curiosity) feature and explore the rest of the Solar System (planets, moons of planets, some asteroids and comets (choose by "Destination"), sunlight, space probes etc) as it is right now. For example, you could pan around the Solar System and see where Halley's Comet and Comet Hale-Bopp are now or at some other time. Or go to Jupiter and watch it's Galilean Moons orbit around it at an increased rate, whilst Jupiter itself rotates through night and day. Amazing...
You can watch the simulated current status of Curiosity on NASA/JPL's amazing Java-based app called "Eyes on the Solar System" (Windows or Mac only):
http://eyes.nasa.gov/
Click on the "Curiosity" feature. After the data loads, it will show the current distance, velocity, time to touchdown etc of Curiosity. You could also advance the time to just before Curiosity's entry: click on "Preview" mode and change the date/time to 6 August 2012 at 0500UTC and click on "Submit". If you're impatient, change the time to 0511UTC and watch the entire landing process from any angle/zoom setting (i.e. see the approaching surface of Mars from Curiosity's viewpoint).
After you've finished with the Curiosity feature, click to close the "MSL" (Curiosity) feature and explore the rest of the Solar System (planets, moons of planets, some asteroids and comets (choose by "Destination"), sunlight, space probes etc) as it is right now. For example, you could pan around the Solar System and see where Halley's Comet and Comet Hale-Bopp are now or at some other time. Or go to Jupiter and watch it's Galilean Moons orbit around it at an increased rate, whilst Jupiter itself rotates through night and day. Amazing...
- Airconvent
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Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
Curiosity enters Mars atmosphere at 1330H tomorrow! Good Luck and see you on the Surface !
The Boldly Go Where No Meade Has Gone Before
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
Live streams now
http://www.ustream.tv/nasajpl
http://www.ustream.tv/nasajpl2
Detailed schedules of EDL
http://www.spaceflight101.com/uploads/6 ... sl_pdt.pdf
http://www.ustream.tv/nasajpl
http://www.ustream.tv/nasajpl2
Detailed schedules of EDL
http://www.spaceflight101.com/uploads/6 ... sl_pdt.pdf
We are the Borg, Resistance is Futile!
Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
landed gd!
- weixing
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Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
Hi,
Congratulation and Well Done!!
Have a nice day.
Congratulation and Well Done!!
Have a nice day.
Yang Weixing
"The universe is composed mainly of hydrogen and ignorance."
"The universe is composed mainly of hydrogen and ignorance."
- Airconvent
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Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
yeah..got the news at 1:45pm today! wow an exquisite marvel of engineering. So many complex steps needed to work together to land it and they did it. Well done Nasa!
The Boldly Go Where No Meade Has Gone Before
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
Captain, RSS Enterprise NCC1701R
United Federation of the Planets
- starfinder
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Re: Mars Lander - Curiosity
Agree, well done NASA!
A truly amazing feat. To borrow from diving and gymnastics parlance, I think the degree of Difficulty was 9+ out of 10 and their Execution was somewhere near 10. MSL/Curiosity performed the equivalent of something like a triple inverse somersault and landed squarely on all six feet. Give them a gold medal!
Not as if this was easy, since this *was* rocket science.
Here is a photo of Curiosity on its descent into Mars:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/n ... 0806b.html
It's so cute that i would say there's an element of romance about it.
Thanks too to NASA for sharing all their space probe photos. I can still recall watching the news on the Uranus and esp. Neptune images taken by the Voyager probes (Time magazine front cover). Now we await in curiosity what Pluto looks like up close. Just a few years more!
A truly amazing feat. To borrow from diving and gymnastics parlance, I think the degree of Difficulty was 9+ out of 10 and their Execution was somewhere near 10. MSL/Curiosity performed the equivalent of something like a triple inverse somersault and landed squarely on all six feet. Give them a gold medal!
Not as if this was easy, since this *was* rocket science.
Here is a photo of Curiosity on its descent into Mars:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/n ... 0806b.html
It's so cute that i would say there's an element of romance about it.
Thanks too to NASA for sharing all their space probe photos. I can still recall watching the news on the Uranus and esp. Neptune images taken by the Voyager probes (Time magazine front cover). Now we await in curiosity what Pluto looks like up close. Just a few years more!