08-27-2023, 08:49 PM | #301 | |
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FWIW a top 10 list of where to find life.
Mars is actually #1 followed by #2 Europa. https://www.technologyreview.com/202...system-ranked/ Quote:
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09-14-2023, 11:30 AM | #302 | ||
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Sept 24.
Day we may find some extraterrestial life. The article also talks about how/what the recovery steps are which I thought interesting. OSIRIS-REx sample return: What to expect | The Planetary Society Quote:
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This is what it looks like |
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09-23-2023, 06:52 PM | #303 | ||
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Capsule with asteroid samples touching down Sun 10:55am ET. If you live in Utah, look outside ...
Frakking amazing science & math. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nasa-as...-earth-sunday/ Quote:
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09-23-2023, 06:54 PM | #304 |
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So that is where the zombie infection is going to come from?
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09-23-2023, 06:56 PM | #305 |
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I read an article that documented the process to "securely" recover the samples, avoid contamination etc.
But yeah, if somehow it breaks up over California & Utah, watch out ... |
09-23-2023, 09:07 PM | #306 | |
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let's call him patient zero |
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09-24-2023, 02:37 AM | #307 |
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Another positive for the possibility of life on Europa; James Webb has detected carbon dioxide from an 'internal source', that is originating from the oceans there. There lots of words like 'think' and 'implies' in the statements, but still encouraging.
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09-24-2023, 05:59 AM | #308 | ||
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That is pretty Quote:
Looked it up. Nice. You know how India was able to put a rover on the Moon for < $100M ... NASA should team up with them and outsource the production of probes. I get the quality control may not be up to NASA's standards, but does that really matter when talking about probes (e.g. not astronauts) and India can probably produce 10+ for what it costs us to produce 1? James Webb telescope finds potential signature of life on Jupiter's icy moon Europa | Live Science Quote:
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09-24-2023, 07:24 AM | #309 | |
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For those interested, NASA live stream (starts at 10am ET)
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kdwyqctp908 |
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09-24-2023, 08:15 AM | #310 |
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Re: outsourcing probes, I don't think that's a good idea. Quality control may or may not be an issue, but I do think that's still important with unmanned probes. The associated PR if a mission fails, launching the probe in the first place is a big deal and far worse than the monetary cost.
- Probes aren't actually that expensive compared to the big picture; even a more expensive one like Perseverance cost less than 10% of NASA's annual budget, which is a half a percent or less of the total federal budget. In the grand scheme of things we are spending very very little on these. Still better to get them cheaper obviously, but basically these aren't amounts that matter much. - Outsourcing the production also means giving away the technology we are developing and using. No thanks. I'm all in favor of doing joint endeavors with other countries, and hopefully eventually just doing all of humanity's space endeavors under one unified effort. But just having them build stuff for us to do it cheaper? Nah. Last edited by Brian Swartz : 09-24-2023 at 08:16 AM. |
09-24-2023, 09:17 AM | #311 |
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Before the probe lands and infects us all, I'd just like to say its been an honor knowing you all.
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09-24-2023, 09:21 AM | #312 | |
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Yeah, you're right. India is far behind in space technology but no doubt they can catch up quicker if given a jump start. FWIW. I'm watching the NASA live-stream right now. Queen's Brian May just showed up, he's a fan and got a book out about this. Pretty cool. |
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09-24-2023, 09:45 AM | #313 |
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09-24-2023, 09:50 AM | #314 |
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09-24-2023, 02:01 PM | #315 |
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NASA's Twitter thread seems to have some good pics of the probe landing and recovery.
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09-26-2023, 08:41 AM | #316 | |
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Welp, its been about 47 hours since landing. I assume this means they didn't find a space worm, ant etc. in their sample.
Next steps are: Quote:
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09-26-2023, 08:57 PM | #317 | ||
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First look.
Scientists just opened the lid to NASA’s asteroid sample canister | Ars Technica Quote:
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10-10-2023, 01:02 PM | #318 | |
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NASA's press team is really doing a crappy job. They need to hire some PR firm to help them out.
I realized I hadn't seen an update lately on the samples so dug around. Wed Oct 11 press conference. NASA to Host Asteroid Sample Media Call; Provide Experts for Interviews - NASA Quote:
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10-10-2023, 01:04 PM | #319 | |
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10-10-2023, 04:25 PM | #320 | |
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To publicize what? There's not much to say about the asteroid sample yet. Certainly nothing that the average person would care about. Japan has already done this kind of thing, albeit in smaller amounts. Last edited by Brian Swartz : 10-10-2023 at 04:27 PM. |
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10-10-2023, 05:41 PM | #321 | |
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In addition to doing the science they are committed to, if I was head of NASA, I'd want to take every opportunity to (1) promote NASA's people & accomplishments and (2) create/feed the excitement with those already predisposed to be excited about science, space exploration etc. To answer your question, they've had it for 2 weeks now. We've had pretty much zippo news or updates. They should be widely pushing out what information they have. The best way of doing that (for the targeted group), is leveraging what is already there. The infrastructure is already ready to go, relatively low cost.
Neil & Chuck will take care of the rest (they always do). I'd bet any of those influencers will move things around to make room for a NASA chat. After StarTalk, rinse and repeat. So, I would approach it as a marketing/sales campaign to generate interest. IMO what I'm getting is a bunch of tech/nerds that don't know how (or don't think it's important) to communicate to the regular people. Bonus: have a live feed of the capsule & publicize the opening and taking out the samples, or any other key activities. If there are security concerns, then time delay it (e.g. if a space worm crawls out unexpectedly). Last edited by Edward64 : 10-10-2023 at 06:09 PM. |
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10-10-2023, 06:39 PM | #322 | ||
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A lot of that is it just being a slow process. Science inherently is. It's like how after JWST takes a 'picture' of whatever, actually getting that in a form where it can be reasonably shown to the public takes time, and often there isn't .... anything interesting to show. It takes a few months if people are working really hard and quickly on it to analyze the data and get research papers done, at which point new proposals are made for like 6-12 months after that in terms of what we'd like to get more data on based on what the first round of images found. Stuff like live camera of opening the capsule ... I mean what's in it is rocks and dust, almost certainly visually indistinguishable from the average person's backyard. Potentially interesting science takes a lot longer that two weeks to even get started on. It's like the camera they put on Artemis I. People threw a fit that JWST didn't have one, even though it would have compromised the mission, and then the Artemis camera was ... aggressively boring and largely ignored, because of course it was, because you can get a lot more information from telemetry than a live feed when 99.99% of the time there is nothing visually interesting happening whatsoever. It feels to me like what's being looked for is something that moves at the speed of modern news/social media. Science is not that and never will be. They have people going on shows like StarTalk all the time and talking about actual results, which is when it matters. As soon as new findings come out about this or that there are plenty of creators putting out information - and disinformation about it, and talking about what it all means, and interviewing relevant people. There's even been plenty of that ahead of time, with various creators talking about what tests on the material in the capsule would be done and so on, and why they weren't even going to start trying to open it for a week after it landing, and all of that fun stuff. I'm not saying NASA is perfect on this or anything, but I don't really see anything of much value they could add. Speculation on the unknown, and completely un-visually interesting feeds don't add much. You can't do an effective marketing campaign on the timescale science happens at. People don't have that much of an attention span. .02 ETA: From NASA's blog on OSIRIS-REx: Quote:
In other words, we're talking a period of months from touchdown to even getting the majority of the material out of the equipment it's kept in. And that's before you even *start* to do tests on it. Last edited by Brian Swartz : 10-10-2023 at 06:44 PM. |
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10-11-2023, 03:38 AM | #323 |
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FWIW, they have a news conference 11 am today where NASA and OSIRIS-REx specific people will discuss the sample. For whatever reason, media representatives will see live feed of the sample, to the extent any of it can be seen yet, but it doesn't look like they are just going to broadcast that feed.
Maybe I'll be wrong and they will have highly useful/dramatic info, but I doubt it. FWIW people to be there are: - NASA Administrator Bill Nelson - Francis McCubbin, OSIRIS-REx deputy curation lead, NASA Johnson - Daniel Glavin, OSIRIS-REx sample analysis lead, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt - Dante Lauretta, OSIRIS-REx principal investigator, University of Arizona, Tucson Last edited by Brian Swartz : 10-11-2023 at 03:39 AM. |
10-11-2023, 11:31 AM | #324 | |||
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Unfortunately, no space worm (or ant, beetle, bug, spider) ... NASA reveals a pristine sample collected from a near-Earth asteroid | CNN Quote:
Okay on the 2 years, just give us monthly or bi-monthly updates ... Quote:
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11-05-2023, 01:35 PM | #325 | |
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Nice. Hope there's enough content to keep my interest.
Space Out: New Series Coming Soon to NASA+ - YouTube Quote:
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12-15-2023, 05:32 AM | #326 | ||
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So after a month and a half, hatch is still stuck.
Osiris-Rex: Nasa's asteroid mission 'gathers smaller sample' Quote:
And they estimate less than hoped for but still decent. Quote:
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01-09-2024, 07:01 PM | #327 | |
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Artemis pushed back about a year.
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Last edited by Edward64 : 01-09-2024 at 07:01 PM. |
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01-10-2024, 04:12 AM | #328 |
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Thanks. It seemed to me that it was likely they would push it back, but I thought it would be after Artemis II.
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01-10-2024, 05:54 AM | #329 | ||
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Yeah, it is unfortunate. Apparently, 3 concerns. I'm gonna be honest. I don't trust NASA as much anymore. I wouldn't be surprised if the root cause is bureaucracy, analysis-paralysis, lack of accountability etc. And definitely, lack of urgency.
After 2-3 months, no update on OsirisRex Bennu capsule that I could find, and I think the lid is still "stuck". If the US rocket science eggheads & engineers can't open the lid by now, something is wrong and I doubt it's from the lack of ideas. Also, on concern #1 below highlighted section. They've known of the problem since Dec 2022 and they are still "making good progress on understanding what caused that erosion". Smells like a little BS to me. Just my .02 cents. Page not found - SpaceNews. Quote:
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01-12-2024, 04:49 PM | #330 | |||
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Speak of the devil. Halleluiah! Finally figured it out 3+ months. https://www.livescience.com/space/sp...-seeds-of-life Quote:
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01-18-2024, 10:35 AM | #331 | |
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Congrats Japan. Hope it goes well.
Japan’s SLIM ‘Moon Sniper’ spacecraft prepares for historic lunar landing | CNN Quote:
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02-22-2024, 02:44 PM | #332 | |
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Moon landing today.
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Watch the stream below Intuitive Machines-1 Lunar Landing | NASA+ |
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02-22-2024, 06:05 PM | #333 |
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09-08-2024, 05:55 AM | #334 | |
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Rooting for the Mars landing and base to happen.
Just a moment... Quote:
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09-08-2024, 08:50 AM | #335 |
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One of my curiosities is what happens when - I think it's almost certainly a when, not an if - the first casualties are reported from such a Mars colony effort. I'm also very curious what the plans are for psychological training to avoid a repeat of the biosphere fiascos, since that would be an utter disaster there.
Last edited by Brian Swartz : 09-08-2024 at 08:51 AM. |
09-12-2024, 06:17 AM | #336 | |
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Good question, don't know. But I hope there's plenty of lessons learn, more living space, more colonists, Civ VII etc. to minimize the inevitable issues. Congrats to SpaceX Polaris Dawn rich guy being first private citizen to do a space walk. Last edited by Edward64 : 09-12-2024 at 06:18 AM. |
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10-13-2024, 08:45 AM | #337 |
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Cool ... very cool.
See around 1:35 |
10-15-2024, 08:59 AM | #338 |
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Europa Clipper launched successfully, solar array unfolded properly. ETA in the Jupiter 'system' is April 2030, after a flyby of Mars and then Earth to pick up speed. Gonna be a long five years for those of us interested in the potential for aquatic life on Europa.
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10-15-2024, 02:54 PM | #339 |
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Pretty cool, hope for an a-ha moment. But I've always been disappointed in the end result of "search for life" missions.
Even if they find the trace chemicals, evidence for life, it won't really be real unless they have a pics/video of the microbes (or whatever) moving around. ... which means another 5-6 year mission. |
10-15-2024, 05:51 PM | #340 |
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I don't think pics/videos are necessary to make it real, but just in case there might be confusion, this mission isn't meant to prove that there is life. It's rather to assess the likelihood and as you say, lay the ground work for the future. How thick is the ice, is there an ocean underneath it and if so how deep is it, general geology of Europa, and so on.
A lot of this stuff just happens on a very long timeline because there's no way to get to Jupiter quickly for a 'snap' mission that you can't even seriously start designing until this one sends back data. Easy to forget in the 'instant news' generation how big space is and that things just take decades or longer to accomplish. |
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