Godron
Spy
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2007
- Messages
- 638
- Reaction score
- 4
Well it's about to land, at 05:31 UTC on Monday (that's 01:31 in America).
This is the Curiosity rover, aka Mars Science Laboratory. It's about the size of a small car; it absolutely dwarfs anything that's been sent to Mars before. The engineering inside is fantastically complex, and it's utterly loaded with scientific equipment, far more than any previous rover. It has ****ing seventeen cameras. Opportunity, by comparison, has a pathetic four. Solar panels were deemed an inadequate power supply for this beast, so it was fitted with a radioisotope thermoelectric generator, powering it with heat energy from the decay of plutonium-238.
Then there's the decent. I could explain, but you'd be better off just watching this:
In all honesty, the scientific measurements this thing takes and the implications thereof barely interest me. It's just the sheer scale and audacity of the mission that gives me such a raging boner.
Oh and look here if you want to follow the landing (or spectacular crash) live.
This is the Curiosity rover, aka Mars Science Laboratory. It's about the size of a small car; it absolutely dwarfs anything that's been sent to Mars before. The engineering inside is fantastically complex, and it's utterly loaded with scientific equipment, far more than any previous rover. It has ****ing seventeen cameras. Opportunity, by comparison, has a pathetic four. Solar panels were deemed an inadequate power supply for this beast, so it was fitted with a radioisotope thermoelectric generator, powering it with heat energy from the decay of plutonium-238.
Then there's the decent. I could explain, but you'd be better off just watching this:
In all honesty, the scientific measurements this thing takes and the implications thereof barely interest me. It's just the sheer scale and audacity of the mission that gives me such a raging boner.
Oh and look here if you want to follow the landing (or spectacular crash) live.