** The Official Space Flight Thread - The Space Station and Beyond **

Soldato
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Seeing the above pic and watching the above video makes me even MORE GUTTED :(

I need to make more of an effort to see one now. I've been living only 4hrs away for the last 10yrs... Already missed all of the shuttle launches.. No excuses i know !
 
Man of Honour
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legs!!!!
Freaky extra jointed legs with no feet.

Rosseta is due to be woken up from deep hibernation on 20th of january.


Scientists say they are in for an anxious wait as they prepare to wake a comet-chasing probe from deep-space hibernation.

In January, they will attempt to bring the Rosetta spacecraft back online so it can journey towards Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Once it has reached the huge mass of ice and rock, the team will try to deploy a lander on the comet's surface.

Details were announced at the American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting.

Rosetta's project scientist Matt Taylor, from the European Space Agency (Esa), said: "This has never been done before.

"You have the hurdle of getting it back on, then there is a massive hurdle of getting it close to the comet... And then there's landing on it.

"This is going to be a year of intensity."

The Rosetta probe was launched in March 2004, and has been on an epic journey through the Solar System.

It has orbited the Earth three times and then performed a slingshot around Mars to place it on a path towards Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

After travelling many millions of kilometres, and passing two asteroids along the way, the Esa craft was put into deep sleep - that is, the spacecraft is turned off bar its alarm clock - in June 2011.

This has enabled it to conserve its power for the final, risky stages of its journey.

Waking it up again will be "nerve-wracking", Dr Taylor told the BBC.

"It has an internal alarm clock... the clock will say it's time to wake up," he said.

This will happen at 10:00 GMT on 20 January. However, it could be a slow process - as if the craft is hitting snooze a few times after such a long slumber.

The on-board electronics will be the first warm up and then the "star trackers" should begin to establish Rosetta's position.

The craft will then have to right itself, stabilising from the slow spin it has been performing while in hibernation mode.

"By the evening, that is when the first signals will be beaming back from Earth. Hopefully we will receive them," Dr Taylor said.

"But it's going to be a very slow day - I imagine there will be lots of scientists pacing up and down while we wait."


Rosetta was launched way back in 2004
If the team can revive Rosetta, it will push forwards towards the comet, which has a core that is about 4km-wide (2.5 miles).

It should meet the object in August and spend some weeks hurtling alongside.

In November, the most perilous stage of the process will begin as the team tries to deploy a robotic lander - Philae - on to the icy surface.

"We've got loads of people working on this to make sure the trajectories are correct," said Dr Taylor.

But he said it was a risky manoeuvre that had never before been attempted.

If the landing is successful, the robot will take samples and record images as the comet makes its closest approach to the Sun in 2015.

They hope this will reveal more about these mysterious icy bodies, which are some of the most primitive objects in the Solar System.

Also don't forget the Mars one announcement today at 10:00EsT what ever that is in gmt.
 
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Man of Honour
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Wtf a star is a planet or the other one i like, its 4 times smaller than earth. You what.
I know its hard to gauge as i like space, but surly people know what a star is and how massive they are.

 
Man of Honour
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More steps towards the future:


Very impressive!

The second free flight of a Morpheus prototype lander was conducted Dec. 17, 2013 at the north end of the Shuttle Landing Facility at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The 81-second test began at 1:37 p.m. EST with the Morpheus lander launching from the ground over a flame trench and ascending about 164 feet, pausing briefly at 82 feet. The lander then flew forward, covering about 154 feet in 30 seconds before descending and landing on a dedicated landing pad inside the autonomous landing and hazard avoidance technology (ALHAT) hazard field.

Morpheus landed within 3.5 inches of its target. Project Morpheus tests NASA automated landing and hazard avoidance technology and an engine that runs on liquid oxygen and methane, or "green" propellants. These new capabilities could be used in future efforts to deliver cargo to planetary surfaces.
 
Soldato
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I know its hard to gauge as i like space, but surly people know what a star is and how massive they are.

You would be surprised, I was chatting to a girl at work, ~19yo, and she was blown away when I told her the stars are all just 'suns' like ours....she had absolutely no idea, she didn't know what an asteroid or meteorite was...the list went on and on.

I was starting to lose the will to live when I was talking about craters on the moon being caused by impacts and she didn't know what a crater was....
 
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