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MRO Captures Pic of Phoenix Landing

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YankeyMCC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 03:20 PM
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MRO Captures Pic of Phoenix Landing
This is pretty cool for many reasons - we certainly are establishing a bit of an infrastructure in and around Mars aren't we

http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/phoenix/main.php

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lapfog_1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 03:24 PM
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1. We might need it to keep our species alive. - n/t

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Kutjara Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 03:26 PM
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2. It's great to see the little ship actually landing.
I watched the broadcast on NASA TV and, exciting as it was, the impact was a bit diminished insofar the whole thing was just a technician's voice reporting on various signals received from the lander. This, and the photos Phoenix broadcast from the Martian surface make the whole thing a bit more real.

At this rate, we'll have a Starbucks up there by next spring.
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Wilms Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 03:29 PM
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3. Very cool. And you beat me to it.
I was buying the newspaper this morning, gushing about the landing, when the guy behind me introduces himself, one of the mission managers, and offers me a commemorative pen. LOL!

He mentioned the effort to capture such an image and told me to look for it.

You might dig my hood as there are a lot of JPLers living here.



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Wilber_Stool Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 03:38 PM
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4. That is so fucking cool.......n/t
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YankeyMCC Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 03:48 PM
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5. No doubt, that's pretty cool nt
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Garbo 2004 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-26-08 04:09 PM
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6. That's seriously cool, thanks. nt
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LongTomH Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed May-28-08 12:50 PM
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7. Here's the latest: Phoenix on Mars
Edited on Wed May-28-08 12:51 PM by LongTomH
The HiRise camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter was the instrument that imaged the lander descending. It also imaged the lander, heat shield, parachute and back shell on the surface.



I got the link from Phil Platt's latest post at the Bad Astronomy blog. Here's his comment on the picture:

This is quite an extraordinary picture. The Phoenix lander is bluish and sits at the top of the field. You can see dust disturbed around it, no doubt from the exhaust of the landing thrusters as it descended. At the bottom is the bright parachute, and just above it is the back shell; the part of the apparatus that connected the parachute to the lander. To the right center is the heat shield, blackened by its fiery descent. It must have bounced when it hit, making the blurry splotch to the left of the better-defined shield itself. And, of course, zooms are provided. Looks like the back shell bounced a bit too, or was dragged a little by the parachute.


edited to add: Oops! In the next paragraph, I got the descent path going the wrong way. In the comments, To Seek made a good point: the heat shield would still be moving rapidly when it was ejected from the lander, while the lander was slowing due to the drag from the ‘chute. I forgot about momentum and which part of the lander was slowing! So the actual entry angle is from the upper left, moving to the lower right. Everything else is pretty much the same though.


An earlier post by Phil had a link to the Planetary Society blog page with the orbiter descending pix, including a magnified picture of the lander on its parachute.



I loved Phil's comments on this:
Think on this, and think on it carefully: you are seeing a manmade object falling gracefully and with intent to the surface of an alien world, as seen by another manmade object already circling that world, both of them acting robotically, and both of them hundreds of million of kilometers away.


Never, ever forget: we did this. This is what we can do.


Edited to add: Sorry if this is a bit wide for people with older monitors like mine. This was just the best image I could find.


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