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Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 24,593
Timelord. Drunkard. 15000+ posts
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Timelord. Drunkard. 15000+ posts
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 24,593 |
quote: By ANDREW BRIDGES, AP Science Writer
PASADENA, Calif. - NASA (news - web sites ) plans to crash its $1.5 billion Galileo spacecraft into Jupiter next weekend to make sure it doesn't accidentally contaminate the planet's ice-covered moon Europa with bacteria from Earth.
After Galileo's orbit carries it behind Jupiter at 12:49 p.m. PDT Sunday, the aging probe will plunge into the planet's stormy atmosphere at a speed of nearly 108,000 mph.
The heat generated as it streaks through the atmosphere will vaporize the nearly 3,000-pound Galileo and any microbes that may have been stowaways on the spacecraft since its 1989 launch.
The crash will ensure Galileo doesn't hit Europa and spill bacteria onto the ice that caps its enormous oceans.
Europa, a planet-sized moon, is widely believed to have the most promising habitat for extraterrestrial life within the solar system. Were Earth bugs to gain a toehold on Europa, perhaps in pools of water warmed by radioactive plutonium the spacecraft uses to generate electricity, they could compromise future attempts to probe the moon for indigenous life.
"It seems like a good place where, potentially, you can have life and it also seems like a place where Earth life would find it a nice place to live. So why hit it?" said John Rummel, planetary protection officer for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA typically scrubs its spacecraft clean of microbes to prevent what it calls the "forward contamination" of other places in the solar system. That wasn't done with Galileo, which NASA originally intended to leave in orbit around Jupiter.
The crash will be the first since 1999, when NASA plowed the Lunar Prospector orbiter into the moon. In 1994, NASA crashed the Magellan orbiter into Venus. Satellites routinely crash to Earth, as NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory did in 2000.
Recent research has revealed the tenacity of microbial life and its ability to resist extremes of temperature and radiation. Even though Galileo has been buffeted by both, its shielded innards likely harbor viable microbes.
"We in our infinite wisdom thought nothing could survive in those harsh environments, but we are learning every day about things that can," said Claudia Alexander, Galileo's seventh and likely last project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.
The 14-year mission has been among NASA's most successful, despite a litany of glitches. Its focus was to have been Jupiter itself, but the planet's quirky, diverse moons — including Io, the solar system's most volcanically active body — stole the spotlight.
NASA hopes to wring some scientific measurements from Galileo before its demise. When the end does come, 1,500 people associated with the mission are expected to gather at the lab to mark the occasion.
"It will have some of the flavor of a wake," Alexander said.
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Joined: May 2003
Posts: 1,978
1500+ posts
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1500+ posts
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 1,978 |
No one destroys expensive shit quite like NASA.
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 15,367 Likes: 13
Banned from the DCMBs since 2002. 15000+ posts
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Banned from the DCMBs since 2002. 15000+ posts
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 15,367 Likes: 13 |
Must be a fun job to have the joy stick on something like that.
"Here I am crashing a $1.5 billion dollar interplanetary vehicle into Jupiter."
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Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 4,205
fudge 4000+ posts
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fudge 4000+ posts
Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 4,205 |
quote: Originally posted by Dave: Must be a fun job to have the joy stick on something like that.
"Here I am crashing a $1.5 billion dollar interplanetary vehicle into Jupiter."
once-in-a-lifetime experience
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 15,367 Likes: 13
Banned from the DCMBs since 2002. 15000+ posts
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Banned from the DCMBs since 2002. 15000+ posts
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 15,367 Likes: 13 |
I read some more about this on the weekend.
Apparently when the thing was launched, the arm for the antenna wouldn't open. Almost ended up being a $1.5 b piece of crap. Only compression technology and a subidiary recorder saved the mission.
Still, it got some great shots of Io's volcano cutting sick. I remember that photo - a huge volcano spewing lava into space. Amazing.
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Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 2,016
2000+ posts
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2000+ posts
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In related news:
JUPITER DECLARES WAR ON EARTH!
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Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 37
25+ posts
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25+ posts
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Next, we'll start crashing stuff into Uranus.
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Joined: May 2003
Posts: 5,958
some RKMB'ers are Obsessed with Black People Hmmm? 5000+ posts
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some RKMB'ers are Obsessed with Black People Hmmm? 5000+ posts
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 5,958 |
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Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 25,469 Likes: 37
brutally Kamphausened 15000+ posts
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brutally Kamphausened 15000+ posts
Joined: Sep 2001
Posts: 25,469 Likes: 37 |
quote: Originally posted by DuplicateMan: Next, we'll start crashing stuff into Uranus.
Y'know, scientists have found rings around...
![[biiiig grin]](images/icons/grin.gif)
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Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 15,367 Likes: 13
Banned from the DCMBs since 2002. 15000+ posts
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Banned from the DCMBs since 2002. 15000+ posts
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 15,367 Likes: 13 |
That's actually a very interesting link. I hadn't known about the smouldering "bullet hole".
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