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Curiosity - first images received from rover
via orbiter.
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
Le 06/08/12 07:39, Alan Erskine a écrit :
via orbiter. Apparenty all systems are nominal. JPL sees absolutely nothing else but nominal values. |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
Le 06/08/12 07:39, Alan Erskine a écrit :
via orbiter. "Mission is speechless" says one engineer :-) |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
jacob navia explained :
Le 06/08/12 07:39, Alan Erskine a écrit : via orbiter. "Mission is speechless" says one engineer :-) Relive it via http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yIUQ3MZ8yMs /dps -- Who, me? And what lacuna? |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
On Aug 6, 1:39*am, Alan Erskine wrote:
via orbiter. Congrats to NASA and JPL. Bob Clark |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
On Sunday, August 5, 2012 10:39:38 PM UTC-7, Alan Erskine wrote:
via orbiter. New eyes on the Red Planet. It will be fun, I hope. And I hope they send another one. Trig |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
Was watching "This Week at NASA" after the landing. I was interested
in how the voice over describing the Curiosity landing phrased the life on Mars question. It said Curiosity will try to determine if the conditions are right for microbial life *to exist* on Mars: Curiosity Has Landed! on This Week @NASA. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3smd4INzng It was notable to me this was phrased in the present tense, not for microbial life *to have existed* on Mars, but *to exist* on Mars. Since Viking with the general consensus that the current life on Mars question was answered in the negative, usually NASA missions were described as only determining if life could have existed in the past on Mars, not the present. On the "NASA360" episode shown this week, the NASA scientist interviewed Dr. Bruce Jakosky of the Curiosity and upcoming MAVEN Mars missions described them also as determining if conditions are right for life *to exist* on Mars, present tense: NASA 360 Season 3, Show 19. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiYVRg7d-PQ Bob Clark |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
On Aug 11, 8:46*am, Robert Clark wrote:
*Was watching "This Week at NASA" after the landing. I was interested in how the voice over describing the Curiosity landing phrased the life on Mars question. It said Curiosity will try to determine if the conditions are right for microbial life *to exist* on Mars: Curiosity Has Landed! on This Week @NASA.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3smd4INzng *It was notable to me this was phrased in the present tense, not for microbial life *to have existed* on Mars, but *to exist* on Mars. Since Viking with the general consensus that the current life on Mars question was answered in the negative, usually NASA missions were described as only determining if life could have existed in the past on Mars, not the present. *On the "NASA360" episode shown this week, the NASA scientist interviewed Dr. Bruce Jakosky of the Curiosity and upcoming MAVEN Mars missions described them also as determining if conditions are right for life *to exist* on Mars, present tense: NASA 360 Season 3, Show 19.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiYVRg7d-PQ * *Bob Clark To find Mars red clams you have to go about 60 feet under ground. If this rover can't drill down 60 feet its 2.7 billion was worse than $ 25,000,000 for those Mafia NASA toilets. Get the picture yet. Once Upon a Time Mars had Water Life ,heavy atmosphere,and closer to the Sun.this rover will prove all of this. Its time for NASA fairy tales . Just to see craters rocks and sand again and again does not add anything to my scrape book or get on TV. Get the picture yet? TreBert |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
On Aug 18, 10:48*am, "G=EMC^2" wrote:
On Aug 11, 8:46*am, Robert Clark wrote: *Was watching "This Week at NASA" after the landing. I was interested in how the voice over describing the Curiosity landing phrased the life on Mars question. It said Curiosity will try to determine if the conditions are right for microbial life *to exist* on Mars: Curiosity Has Landed! on This Week @NASA.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3smd4INzng *It was notable to me this was phrased in the present tense, not for microbial life *to have existed* on Mars, but *to exist* on Mars. Since Viking with the general consensus that the current life on Mars question was answered in the negative, usually NASA missions were described as only determining if life could have existed in the past on Mars, not the present. *On the "NASA360" episode shown this week, the NASA scientist interviewed Dr. Bruce Jakosky of the Curiosity and upcoming MAVEN Mars missions described them also as determining if conditions are right for life *to exist* on Mars, present tense: NASA 360 Season 3, Show 19.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiYVRg7d-PQ * *Bob Clark To find Mars red clams you have to go about 60 feet under ground. If this rover can't drill down 60 feet its 2.7 billion was worse than *$ 25,000,000 for those Mafia NASA toilets. *Get the picture yet. Once Upon a Time Mars had Water Life ,heavy atmosphere,and closer to the Sun.this rover will prove all of this. Its time for NASA fairy tales . Just to see craters rocks and sand again and again does not add anything to my scrape book or get on TV. *Get the picture yet? TreBert Where are all the little green men? Are they sure they landed it on the right planet? Double-A |
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Curiosity - first images received from rover
On Aug 18, 2:39*pm, Double-A wrote:
On Aug 18, 10:48*am, "G=EMC^2" wrote: On Aug 11, 8:46*am, Robert Clark wrote: *Was watching "This Week at NASA" after the landing. I was interested in how the voice over describing the Curiosity landing phrased the life on Mars question. It said Curiosity will try to determine if the conditions are right for microbial life *to exist* on Mars: Curiosity Has Landed! on This Week @NASA.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3smd4INzng *It was notable to me this was phrased in the present tense, not for microbial life *to have existed* on Mars, but *to exist* on Mars. Since Viking with the general consensus that the current life on Mars question was answered in the negative, usually NASA missions were described as only determining if life could have existed in the past on Mars, not the present. *On the "NASA360" episode shown this week, the NASA scientist interviewed Dr. Bruce Jakosky of the Curiosity and upcoming MAVEN Mars missions described them also as determining if conditions are right for life *to exist* on Mars, present tense: NASA 360 Season 3, Show 19.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiYVRg7d-PQ * *Bob Clark To find Mars red clams you have to go about 60 feet under ground. If this rover can't drill down 60 feet its 2.7 billion was worse than *$ 25,000,000 for those Mafia NASA toilets. *Get the picture yet. Once Upon a Time Mars had Water Life ,heavy atmosphere,and closer to the Sun.this rover will prove all of this. Its time for NASA fairy tales . Just to see craters rocks and sand again and again does not add anything to my scrape book or get on TV. *Get the picture yet? TreBert Where are all the little green men? *Are they sure they landed it on the right planet? Double-A It could be old Mars pictures. Could be old Moon pictures Could be even the surface of Mercury. Craters are craters rocks are rocks and sand and dust is everywhere. I'm looking at the human face on Mars,and so far Mafia NASA with this rover has not topped that TreBert PS Reality is NASA keeps saying the vast gullies have been made bt water.,so why not land right on the Newton basin? Well I like to see Mafia NASA show its books,and GOPer Romney show his books so that "WE the People" can be sure we know what is happening with our money. |
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