As long as they got that whole "meters and feet" thing nailed down this time....then it may indeed fly through the moon. Or at least the first several feet of it.
followmeinfantry:As long as they got that whole "meters and feet" thing nailed down this time....then it may indeed fly through the moon. Or at least the first several feet of it.
If they coul build a probe strong enough to collect lunar samples by flying thought the moon itself, i'd say we need to buy some engineers some drinks for a job well done.
Okay, when and where do the results start appearing? 7:40AM UTC was over 13 hours ago; can we at least get confirmation that the probe is returning data?
overzelus:I feel like this is missing a, "What could possibly go wrong?"
Flying though a plume of frozen particles with a satellite... it just seems like we're asking to freeze-over some mission critical component.
Satellites have to be constructed to insulate themselves against thermal stress. I just wonder if Cassini can handle a cold blast of whatever...
Uh you do know that is probe is already flying through space right? Space is pretty cold. I do not think a blast of ice will affect too much in regards to temperature. I would be more worried about the ash attaching itself to the satellite and mucking up any equipment on board.
I guarantee you that, if the probe collides with any "frozen particles" at orbital velocities, they won't stay "cold" for long. At those energies, a starting temperature a few hundred degrees hotter or colder is completely irrelevant.
Makh
2009-11-02 02:27:07 PM
TheOther
2009-11-02 02:43:28 PM
Pro Zack
2009-11-02 02:45:58 PM
followmeinfantry
2009-11-02 02:49:43 PM
theorellior
2009-11-02 02:51:48 PM
Although this probably won't be "ash" as we know it on Earth; it'll probably be water ice and maybe some sulfur dioxide.
GypsyJoker
2009-11-02 02:55:11 PM
/it's stone-dead
CrankMyBlueSax
2009-11-02 03:02:29 PM
Slowdog
2009-11-02 03:08:58 PM
/not obscure
Amish Animal Scientist
2009-11-02 03:13:14 PM
you beat me to it.
Antimatter
2009-11-02 03:40:37 PM
I Like Bread
2009-11-02 03:54:03 PM
jfarkinB
2009-11-02 03:54:32 PM
overzelus
2009-11-02 04:05:54 PM
Flying though a plume of frozen particles with a satellite... it just seems like we're asking to freeze-over some mission critical component.
Satellites have to be constructed to insulate themselves against thermal stress. I just wonder if Cassini can handle a cold blast of whatever...
Ponzholio
2009-11-02 04:10:55 PM
The moonbeams would shoot out of your fingers and your toes and the ends of your hair... am I talking too much?
IXI Jim IXI
2009-11-02 04:20:58 PM
Dubai Vol
2009-11-02 04:36:42 PM
also, what Enceladus looks like.
Nice.
IXI Jim IXI: "All these worlds are yours except Enceladus. Attempt no crash landings there..."
Also nice.
I like this place.
caperbear
2009-11-02 05:05:55 PM
StealthStalker
2009-11-02 05:26:34 PM
Scientists predict numerous plumes of gas in the hours directly following the encounter with Enceladus.
Thanks, I lol'd.
DjangoStonereaver
2009-11-02 05:28:45 PM
ActionJoe
2009-11-02 06:20:04 PM
Flying though a plume of frozen particles with a satellite... it just seems like we're asking to freeze-over some mission critical component.
Satellites have to be constructed to insulate themselves against thermal stress. I just wonder if Cassini can handle a cold blast of whatever...
Uh you do know that is probe is already flying through space right? Space is pretty cold. I do not think a blast of ice will affect too much in regards to temperature. I would be more worried about the ash attaching itself to the satellite and mucking up any equipment on board.
jfarkinB
2009-11-02 06:58:22 PM
Invincible
2009-11-02 08:35:34 PM
Instead, only try to remember the truth. There is no plume.
veryequiped
2009-11-02 09:41:57 PM
dragonchild
2009-11-02 10:29:51 PM
DonkeyDixon
2009-11-02 11:00:45 PM