![]() |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "George" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Anonymous Sender" wrote in message acolo.com... Spirit Lands on Mars and Sends Postcards This has got to be one of the greatest moments since, well, landing on the moon! (:) Hurrah for NASA! Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? TL |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? TL They lost a lander, not a rover, The Mars Polar Lander, when it had a premature retro rocket shut off as it landed at the South Pole of MARS, not the moon, back in 1999 or so. And they lost a Mars orbiter, Observer, around the same time due to the miles vs kilometers business. rj |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
TL the "Geologist" wrote:
Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? No, I'm afraid that there were no lunar probes lost somewhere around the south pole of the moon. In fact, there have been no failures of NASA missions to the moon since Apollo 13, and no U.S. unmanned lunar probe failures even farther back to the old Surveyor 4 back in July of 1967. The only lunar rovers deployed by the U.S. were on the Apollo 15, 16, and 17 lunar missions, all successful. The last two U.S. probes to the moon were Clementine and Prospector, both orbiters and both of which were highly successful. As for Mars, the only probe which attempted a polar landing was Mars Polar Lander, which was lost during descent to the Martian southern polar regions due to a premature cutoff of the descent engines (a modified backup spacecraft is scheduled to attempt a similar landing in the northern polar regions in a few years). The only one deploying a rover (so far) was Pathfinder which was successful (with the MER "Spirit" deployment coming up) and it did not land near the polar regions. Of the five Mars landing attempts by the U.S., four have now been sucessful. Of the 15 total U.S. probe attempts to reach Mars, only 5 have failed (one flyby, two orbiters, and one lander). Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 11th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 18-23, 2004, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Anonymous Sender" wrote in message acolo.com... Spirit Lands on Mars and Sends Postcards This has got to be one of the greatest moments since, well, landing on the moon! (:) Hurrah for NASA! Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? Your memory does not serve you well. You'll have to do better than that. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "randyj" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? TL They lost a lander, not a rover, The Mars Polar Lander, when it had a premature retro rocket shut off as it landed at the South Pole of MARS, not the moon, back in 1999 or so. And they lost a Mars orbiter, Observer, around the same time due to the miles vs kilometers business. rj But what does any of that have to do with "Miserable failures with the moon???" Who knows? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "George" wrote in message ... "randyj" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? TL They lost a lander, not a rover, The Mars Polar Lander, when it had a premature retro rocket shut off as it landed at the South Pole of MARS, not the moon, back in 1999 or so. And they lost a Mars orbiter, Observer, around the same time due to the miles vs kilometers business. rj But what does any of that have to do with "Miserable failures with the moon???" Who knows? My mistake, I was remembering wrong. So they had no miserable failures witht the moon. fine, shoot me, forgive my ignorance, 1999 was a horrible year for me, and Im lucky I remember much of it anyhow. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "David Knisely" wrote in message ... TL the "Geologist" wrote: Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? No, I'm afraid that there were no lunar probes lost somewhere around the south pole of the moon. In fact, there have been no failures of NASA missions to the moon since Apollo 13, and no U.S. unmanned lunar probe failures even farther back to the old Surveyor 4 back in July of 1967. The only lunar rovers deployed by the U.S. were on the Apollo 15, 16, and 17 lunar missions, all successful. The last two U.S. probes to the moon were Clementine and Prospector, both orbiters and both of which were highly successful. As for Mars, the only probe which attempted a polar landing was Mars Polar Lander, which was lost during descent to the Martian southern polar regions due to a premature cutoff of the descent engines (a modified backup spacecraft is scheduled to attempt a similar landing in the northern polar regions in a few years). The only one deploying a rover (so far) was Pathfinder which was successful (with the MER "Spirit" deployment coming up) and it did not land near the polar regions. Of the five Mars landing attempts by the U.S., four have now been sucessful. Of the 15 total U.S. probe attempts to reach Mars, only 5 have failed (one flyby, two orbiters, and one lander). Clear skies to you. -- David W. Knisely Prairie Astronomy Club: http://www.prairieastronomyclub.org Hyde Memorial Observatory: http://www.hydeobservatory.info/ ********************************************** * Attend the 11th Annual NEBRASKA STAR PARTY * * July 18-23, 2004, Merritt Reservoir * * http://www.NebraskaStarParty.org * ********************************************** Yes yes yes, I said I was sorry, I was wrong. TL |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Chosp" wrote in message news:WPGKb.29583$i55.4462@fed1read06... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Anonymous Sender" wrote in message acolo.com... Spirit Lands on Mars and Sends Postcards This has got to be one of the greatest moments since, well, landing on the moon! (:) Hurrah for NASA! Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? Your memory does not serve you well. You'll have to do better than that. Yes, I know, I was wrong. I truly, truly stand corrected. (wow, one mistake, and your the dog in the dog pile) My best wishes and regards to all those at NASA. I like my geology where I can touch it, those guys have to guess where they are going to touch it. Could you imagine sending out a drilling rig to go out somewhere, and have to rely on what you told them to do, where you wanted it, how deep, and expect that within 2 years you would get a picture back of the sample? That's what I equate sending out probes to. Its got to be tough on the stomach. TL (again) |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Chosp" wrote in message news:WPGKb.29583$i55.4462@fed1read06... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Anonymous Sender" wrote in message acolo.com... Spirit Lands on Mars and Sends Postcards This has got to be one of the greatest moments since, well, landing on the moon! (:) Hurrah for NASA! Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? Your memory does not serve you well. You'll have to do better than that. Yes, I know, I was wrong. I truly, truly stand corrected. (wow, one mistake, and your the dog in the dog pile) My best wishes and regards to all those at NASA. I like my geology where I can touch it, those guys have to guess where they are going to touch it. Could you imagine sending out a drilling rig to go out somewhere, and have to rely on what you told them to do, where you wanted it, how deep, and expect that within 2 years you would get a picture back of the sample? That's what I equate sending out probes to. Its got to be tough on the stomach. TL (again) Fortunately, they have also sent other instruments besides cameras, so it will be very interesting to see what they find. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "George" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Chosp" wrote in message news:WPGKb.29583$i55.4462@fed1read06... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message ... "TL the Geologist" wrote in message ... "Anonymous Sender" wrote in message acolo.com... Spirit Lands on Mars and Sends Postcards This has got to be one of the greatest moments since, well, landing on the moon! (:) Hurrah for NASA! Well the most recent one, considering the miserable failures they have had with the moon recently and a couple of other rovers they sent to Mars. However, this is not the first rover, and I'm quite sure it will not be the last. Miserable failures with the moon??? If memory serves me correctly, didnt they lose two rovers somwhere around the south pole in the last three years? Your memory does not serve you well. You'll have to do better than that. Yes, I know, I was wrong. I truly, truly stand corrected. (wow, one mistake, and your the dog in the dog pile) My best wishes and regards to all those at NASA. I like my geology where I can touch it, those guys have to guess where they are going to touch it. Could you imagine sending out a drilling rig to go out somewhere, and have to rely on what you told them to do, where you wanted it, how deep, and expect that within 2 years you would get a picture back of the sample? That's what I equate sending out probes to. Its got to be tough on the stomach. TL (again) Fortunately, they have also sent other instruments besides cameras, so it will be very interesting to see what they find. Yeah, I'm quite excited. The Planetary Geologist in me and my inner child are having a party! TL |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
No Moon, Mars, or Space in the State of the Union Speech [was Audio of Bush's Speech] | GCGassaway | Space Shuttle | 1 | January 22nd 04 12:22 PM |
Spirit Lands On Mars And Sends Postcards | Serge Oliva | Policy | 12 | January 18th 04 07:26 AM |
Mars Express attempts communication with Beagle 2 (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | January 5th 04 06:27 PM |
Congratulations to NASA: Beagle 2 Team Still Hopes To Repeat MarsLanding Success (Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | January 4th 04 06:45 PM |