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Hi All,
Apart from the fabulous photos both rovers are sending back, what else are the scientists finding? I'm trying to find readings on ambient temperature, day/night temperature swings, pressure, wind velocity, stuff like that... Is this info published anywhere? How do they compare between the two rovers, and the pathfinder science data? Cheers, Richard |
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![]() "Richard Stewart" escribió en el mensaje ... I'm trying to find readings on ambient temperature, day/night temperature swings, pressure, wind velocity, stuff like that... I haven't seen any mention of external temperature and ambient pressure sensors on the MER's. MPF had them on the lander which also included a wind speed experiment, but the MER's seem to be focused on the mineralogy. I am sure they have internal temperature sensors which provide part of the engineering data though. |
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Richard Stewart writes:
Apart from the fabulous photos both rovers are sending back, what else are the scientists finding? I'm trying to find readings on ambient temperature, day/night temperature swings, pressure, wind velocity, stuff like that... Is this info published anywhere? Try visting the MER website. -- Gordon D. Pusch perl -e '$_ = \n"; s/NO\.//; s/SPAM\.//; print;' |
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In article ,
Richard Stewart wrote: I'm trying to find readings on ambient temperature, day/night temperature swings, pressure, wind velocity, stuff like that... Is this info published anywhere? Typically, the detailed science data has restricted circulation for an initial "proprietary period", to give the mission's own scientists a chance to write the first papers on it. I don't know what the proprietary period for the MERs is; a year is a typical time. (This is arguably unfortunate, but there is no other way to convince good scientists to spend years of their professional lives building hardware and otherwise preparing for such a mission. Being the first to publish a new result is the only thing that counts in the scientific world. That's all that tenure panels, selection committees, etc. look at. Getting your name in the "acknowledgements" section of someone else's paper is of no significance whatever.) -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
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In article , Richard Stewart
wrote: Hi All, Apart from the fabulous photos both rovers are sending back, what else are the scientists finding? I'm trying to find readings on ambient temperature, day/night temperature swings, pressure, wind velocity, stuff like that... There's a graph of the Spirit Mossbauer look at the rock Adirondack on the rover site. It's one of today's pictures. |
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