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![]() wrote in message ... India's first lunar probe lands on the moon: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081114/...a_moon_mission Some news reports call it "crash-landed", so it's not as impressive as the US and Soviet unmanned probes which soft landed on the moon. Still, it's quite an achievement. Jeff -- beb - To paraphrase Stephen Colbert, reality has an anti-Ares I bias. |
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![]() Some news reports call it "crash-landed", so it's not as impressive as the US and Soviet unmanned probes which soft landed on the moon. Still, it's quite an achievement. Jeff "Crash-landed" is a understatement... it went straight into the Moon in a unbraked descent, like our early Ranger probes - hitting the surface at several thousand miles per hour. Total descent time after release from Chandrayaan to impact was to be around a day, so if it took pictures all the way down, it should make one mighty impressive movie of still frames. Nice work, India...nice work indeed ! Pat |
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![]() Pat Flannery wrote: "Crash-landed" is a understatement... it went straight into the Moon in a unbraked descent, like our early Ranger probes - hitting the surface at several thousand miles per hour. Total descent time after release from Chandrayaan to impact was to be around a day, so if it took pictures all the way down, it should make one mighty impressive movie of still frames. Nice work, India...nice work indeed ! Pat According to this, the impactor survived its impact on the lunar surface, and sent data back after its impact: http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/I...ow/3714245.cms If that's the case, then India has led the world in regards to a high impact velocity probe that hits a planetary surface and keeps working...like would be usable in regards to impactor probes on Jupiter's and Saturn's moons. Many nations have discussed such a concept; apparently India is the first nation to achieve it. Pat |
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![]() "OM" wrote in message ... On Fri, 14 Nov 2008 13:48:04 -0600, Pat Flannery wrote: Total descent time after release from Chandrayaan to impact was to be around a day, so if it took pictures all the way down, it should make one mighty impressive movie of still frames. ...*Did* it take photos all the way down? This thread is worthless with out pics! :-) Jeff -- beb - To paraphrase Stephen Colbert, reality has an anti-Ares I bias. |
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On Nov 10, 11:28 pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0811/07chandrayaan/ Will drop its impactor on Nov 15. Pat What a pack of losers you are. Just like Hitler, perhaps you should take your own life, and be done with it. Trust me, none of us good- guys would mind losing your worthless contributions. ~ BG |
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![]() Jeff Findley wrote: Total descent time after release from Chandrayaan to impact was to be around a day, so if it took pictures all the way down, it should make one mighty impressive movie of still frames. ...*Did* it take photos all the way down? This thread is worthless with out pics! :-) I made a slip on the descent time BTW; it was 25 minutes, not around a day. The article I read on it around a week back said it was 25 _hours_. I haven't seen any photos yet, but resolution is supposed to be five meters: http://tinyurl.com/6rn7g4 |
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![]() Jeff Findley wrote: This thread is worthless with out pics! :-) ISRO has a couple of photos from the impactor up now: http://www.isro.org/pslv-c11/photos/moon_images.htm Pat |
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