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Scientists Pick Up Pieces of Genesis Space Capsule (with tweezers)
Yahoo News ^ | 9/09/04 | PAUL FOY

Posted on 09/09/2004 3:37:12 AM PDT by Libloather

Scientists Pick Up Pieces of Space Capsule
1 hour, 47 minutes ago
By PAUL FOY, Associated Press Writer

DUGWAY PROVING GROUND, Utah - Scientists with tweezers picked through the twisted wreckage of a space capsule that crash-landed on Earth, hoping that microscopic clues to the evolution of the solar system weren't completely lost in Utah's salt flats.

NASA engineers were stunned Wednesday when neither parachute deployed aboard the Genesis capsule and the craft plummeted to the ground at 193 mph, breaking open like a clamshell and exposing its collection of solar atoms to contamination.

"There was a big pit in my stomach," said physicist Roger Wiens of Los Alamos National Laboratory. "This just wasn't supposed to happen. We're going to have a lot of work picking up the pieces."

The capsule held billions of charged atoms — a total haul no bigger than a few grains of salt — that were harvested from solar wind on five collecting disks during the 884-day, $260-million mission.

Roy Haggard, who took part in the initial reconnaissance of the capsule, said the capsule's shell had been breached about three inches and the science canister inside appeared to have a small break.

The inner canister was flown to the Army's air field at the proving ground and put in a clean room, a work area in which the air quality, temperature and humidity are highly regulated to prevent contamination.

The reconstruction was expected to take several days, and scientists were hopeful they could salvage the embedded atoms among the twisted platters of exotic metals and silicone.

"This is something that's not a total disaster," said Carlton Allen, astromaterials curator for the Houston-based Johnson Space Center. "We didn't lose all the science in the crash."

NASA planned to appoint a "mishap review board" to determine a cause for the failure. Flight engineers say a set of tiny explosives didn't trigger the capsule's parachutes, although the fact that all explosives failed pointed to another cause.

The spacecraft was designed and built by Lockheed Martin Space Systems near Denver. Robert Corwin, an engineer for the company, said a battery that overheated shortly after the 2001 launch could be a culprit.

The mishap also raised questions about the durability of another NASA sample-return capsule called Stardust, due to land here in 2006. But that capsule was built to be more rugged and will land on its own with a parachute.

Scientists got their first glimpse of the damage when the Genesis capsule was wheeled into a garage bay late Wednesday. The capsule's inner canister was all but unrecognizable, although scientists thought they saw some unbroken parts holding the atoms.

The space capsule had been outside the earth's magnetic shield for three years, collecting solar wind particles that could explain how the sun formed an estimated 4.5 billion years ago and what keeps it fueled.

The atoms were captured on 5-foot disks, each with hexagons of gold, sapphire, silicone and diamond. Each collector array was assigned to catch various types of solar wind.

The five disks were of different thicknesses, which could make it easier for scientists put the pieces back together like a puzzle, Wiens said. The disks were so tightly packed within the canister that it was hard to tell how badly they were damaged.

Helicopters flown by Hollywood stunt pilots were supposed to grab Genesis almost a mile above the Utah desert and lower it gently to the ground by snatching its main parachute with a hook. But before the capture team learned of the parachute failure, the speeding capsule had plummeted into the Utah desert.

Solar wind is a stream of highly charged particles that are emitted by the sun. The Genesis mission marked the first time NASA has collected any objects from farther than the moon for retrieval to Earth.

Scientists hoped the charged atoms gathered in the capsule would shed important light on the solar system, said Don Burnett, Genesis' principal investigator and a nuclear geochemist at California Institute of Technology.

"We have for years wanted to know the composition of the sun," Burnett said before the crash. He said scientists had expected to analyze the material "one atom at a time."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: capsule; genesis; pick; pieces; scientists; space; tweezers; up
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...neither parachute deployed aboard the Genesis capsule...

Wasn't there a Yahoo commercial where some guy, out in the middle of no where, saved his trailer from a falling meteor by covering it (and his dog) with pillows?

1 posted on 09/09/2004 3:37:13 AM PDT by Libloather
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To: Libloather

Nerds.


2 posted on 09/09/2004 3:39:37 AM PDT by Skooz (My Biography: Psalm 40:1-3)
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To: Libloather

The legacy of Dan Golden lives on.


3 posted on 09/09/2004 3:45:47 AM PDT by Jeff Gordon (Remember: Benedict Arnold was a "war hero," too.)
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To: Libloather

Someone on tv described the mission as "ground breaking" (after the crash).


4 posted on 09/09/2004 3:51:07 AM PDT by searchandrecovery (Socialist America - diseased and dysfunctional.)
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To: Libloather
.... with tweezors...
5 posted on 09/09/2004 3:56:21 AM PDT by Flavius ("... we should reconnoitre assiduosly... " Vegetius)
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To: Libloather

I don't know who dreamt up the landing scenario but it had to be someone on LSD


6 posted on 09/09/2004 3:58:24 AM PDT by OldFriend (GIVE EM ZELL)
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To: Libloather

"We didn't lose all the science in the crash."

Yep! Proves Newton's theory of gravity.


7 posted on 09/09/2004 4:04:47 AM PDT by moonman
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To: Libloather
Now all we need is a killer virus to breakout and we'll have the movie "Andromeda Strain" for real. Gee, let's go into space scoop up alien biological bacteria, shield it through reentry into out atmosphere, crash land the bitch into the desert and wipe out the entire human population. Sounds like a plan.
8 posted on 09/09/2004 4:09:26 AM PDT by Falcon4.0
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To: Libloather

Last night I heard NASA label the crash as an "Unquantified Science Degredation".


9 posted on 09/09/2004 4:18:59 AM PDT by Rebelbase (John Kerry, sign form 180 .)
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To: Libloather

I hear NASA is blaming Steve Bartman for missing the catch


10 posted on 09/09/2004 4:21:36 AM PDT by captain_zammo (pledging life, fortune, and sacred honor to the cause)
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To: Flavius

Sheesh, typical Goverment spendthrift attitude. This labor could have been outsourced. :-)

11 posted on 09/09/2004 4:21:43 AM PDT by Rebelbase (John Kerry, sign form 180 .)
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To: OldFriend

Perhaps you're not aware there have been over 25,000 helicopter captures of material returned from space, and an equal number of fixed wing captures using the same method.


12 posted on 09/09/2004 4:31:54 AM PDT by G Larry (Support John Thune!)
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To: G Larry
Sending stunt pilots to capture floating parachutes?

Over 25,000 times this has been done successfully.

13 posted on 09/09/2004 4:34:22 AM PDT by OldFriend (GIVE EM ZELL)
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To: OldFriend

over 50,000 times successfully.

25K helo's
25K fixed wing

Military pilots, not stunt pilots.


14 posted on 09/09/2004 4:41:54 AM PDT by G Larry (Support John Thune!)
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To: OldFriend
I don't know who dreamt up the landing scenario but it had to be someone on LSD

It dates back to 1960. It's how we recovered film capsules from spy satellites.

15 posted on 09/09/2004 4:44:39 AM PDT by Poohbah (If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much room.)
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To: XBob

ping


16 posted on 09/09/2004 4:46:29 AM PDT by cyborg (http://mentalmumblings.blogspot.com/)
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To: Libloather
The atoms were captured on 5-foot disks, each with hexagons of gold, sapphire, silicone and diamond.

I think the writer did not know the difference between silicon and silicone. What a boob!

17 posted on 09/09/2004 4:50:17 AM PDT by 17th Miss Regt
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To: Libloather
Maybe when they're done, they can salvage atoms from the kerry campaign.


18 posted on 09/09/2004 4:51:13 AM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: OldFriend
I don't know who dreamt up the landing scenario but it had to be someone on LSD

Actually, some of the very first classified recon satellites(Corona) send their photos back by capsule which were snagged by C119s and C130s over the Pacific. The trick is to make sure the parachute deploys correctly!

To Catch a Falling Star

19 posted on 09/09/2004 5:07:18 AM PDT by texson66 ("Tyranny is yielding to the lust of the governing." - Lord Moulton)
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To: Libloather
Yes, the whirlybird guy from The Road Warrior, I think.

I watched a clip of this thing falling back to earth and it looked like a wobbly kick-off or a very bad "dead-duck" spiral.

20 posted on 09/09/2004 5:13:45 AM PDT by rabidralph (Mr. Clinton is sedated but arousable.--Cardiologist, commenting after surgery.)
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