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NASA Live HD Coverage of Mars 'Curiosity' Rover Launch (Video at # 25)
NASA ^

Posted on 11/26/2011 5:50:50 AM PST by lbryce

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To: lbryce

This mission only has a 33% chance of success if you factor in the Mars Curse.
http://www.universetoday.com/13267/the-mars-curse-why-have-so-many-missions-failed/


21 posted on 11/26/2011 7:31:27 AM PST by Jack Hydrazine (It's the end of the world as we know it and I feel fine!)
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To: lbryce; mazda77
Life on Mars: Russian detector to help crack enigma

NASA’s latest Mars mission takes off on Saturday carrying a huge array of high-tech tools. Critical to its success is a cutting-edge water detector built by Russian scientists.

­RT's Darya Pushkover has been to meet the people behind the device.

The Red Planet has been a source of wild flights of imagination and of scientific speculation for centuries. Getting there has never been easy – many missions have failed.

But hopes are high for the new rover. It is called “Curiosity” and it is due on Mars next year.


Engineer Aleksey Bitulev told RT that the heart of the device is a tiny tube that produces neutrons capable of penetrating up to one meter below the planet’s surface. And Sergey Sholeninov, head of the design team, added that the challenge was to accommodate the device on board a spacecraft.

“We were not only limited in weight – it also has to endure all the hardships of interplanetary flight.”

DAN’s second half is a hydrogen detector, which will act as the probe’s aqua navigator.

“The rover is like a small car, and our device is placed on it like headlights,” Mitrofanov explained. “So as the pulsing neutron generator shoots, neutrons go under the ground, and feel their way under. If liquid or frozen water is there, it can then be measured with our detector.”

And the Rover comes fully-loaded: 17 high-definition cameras, aluminium wheels that can be steered independently, a mounted laser to vaporize rock and a robotic arm to drill and scoop up samples, among other instruments. Under the hood: a nuclear-powered engine to give it a top crawling speed of five centimeters per second.

Read more at: Russia Today

22 posted on 11/26/2011 7:37:59 AM PST by Cardhu
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To: Cardhu

Thanks. Just watched the liftoff to vehicle separation just a minute ago. The separation was streamed live and it was a remarkable thing to see. God’s speed Curiosity! Will be checking back in August when it gets near the red orb.


23 posted on 11/26/2011 7:58:56 AM PST by mazda77 (and I am a Native Texan)
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To: mazda77

It is quite a feat - I hope everything goes OK.

I notice they are making sure that the Rover vehicle will not be ticketed by the Martian cops for speeding.

“Under the hood: a nuclear-powered engine to give it a top crawling speed of five centimeters per second”

All of 200 yards an hour. Fast enough to really explore.


24 posted on 11/26/2011 8:15:04 AM PST by Cardhu
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To: All
Here's video of the launch posted at YouTube to watch at your convenience.

Historic Mars Launch: NASA Giant Rover 'Curiosity' Blasts Off
YouTube Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7-LudR2pQyU

25 posted on 11/26/2011 8:15:57 AM PST by lbryce (BHO:The bastard offspring of Satan and Medusa.)
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To: Cardhu

With a reactor lifespan of 14 years that gives it something of the tune of 15,000 miles it can cover in that time. Not bad for a snail.

I’m now looking forward to the landing in August.


26 posted on 11/26/2011 8:30:12 AM PST by mazda77 (and I am a Native Texan)
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To: lbryce
Prayers for the success of this mission!

Regards,

27 posted on 11/26/2011 9:21:10 AM PST by alexander_busek
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