Parachute fails to open - Solar capsule crashes into Earth

by Elsewhere 9 Replies latest jw friends

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Damn! The experiment is ruined!

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3638926.stm

    Solar capsule crashes into Earth

    A capsule from the Genesis probe, which has been gathering particles blown off the Sun, has crashed back to Earth.

    The capsule entered the atmosphere as planned at 1555GMT (1655BST) but its drogue parachute failed to open.

    Hollywood stunt pilots had been waiting to catch the capsule in midair to give its cargo a special soft landing.

    The particles of solar wind in the capsule were being sought by scientists to help them understand the origin and evolution of the Sun and the planets.

    "It appears that it hit the ground at about 100 mph (161 km/h)," said Chris Jones, of Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.

    He said it might take some time to recover the capsule from the Utah desert floor because charges used to deploy the drogue could still be live.

    The capsule impacted with such force that it dug itself into the ground. From aerial pictures from chasing helicopters it is clear the pod has sustained severe damage.

    The return of the Genesis probe was supposed to mark the first bits of extraterrestrial matter retrieved from space by human means since the 1970s, when Moon rocks were carried back to Earth by manned US Apollo and unmanned Soviet Luna missions.

    The $264m Genesis mission was launched in 2001. It carried delicate hexagonal wafers of pure silicon, gold, sapphire, diamond and other materials.

    These were hung outside the probe for more than 800 days, sifting space for 10-20 micrograms of atoms that had been blown off the Sun.

    The precise nature of the atoms could have told scientists how the Sun and the nine major planets grew out of a huge cloud of dust and gas 4.5 billion years ago.

    Professor Colin Pillinger, of the UK's Open University, which was to analyse some of the Genesis samples, said the mission looked lost.

    "The outer part of the spacecraft is carbon fibre and that is very resilient - it is basically in one piece," he told the BBC.

    "There could be fragments inside there that still contained some kind of scientific information. But the contamination from the desert is going to be a killer at the end of the day for the scientists."

  • Netty
    Netty

    What happened to the helicpoters? THere were supposed to be some helicopters that were to help it land.

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    Since the parachute never opened the helecopters never had a chance to catch the capsule.

  • truthseeker1
    truthseeker1

    3 years wasted....DOH! Hopefully they can scrounge something from the wreck

  • Netty
    Netty

    well that stinks I was looking forward to watching the helcopters catch it, thought that would have been very cool.

  • VM44
    VM44

    The capsule was designed to scoop particles from space, there was a malfunction, and it crashed in the desert.

    Reminds me of The Andromeda Strain!

    --VM44

  • CaptainSchmideo
    CaptainSchmideo

    They should of used Spiderman!

    In issue #1 of "Amazing Spiderman" waaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyy back in 1963, the plot involved the hero trying to slow down a space capsule. He actually rides a jet, jumps out, and uses his webs to slow it down. With such science bending skills as this (after all, this is a high school kid that invented web fluid strong enough to hold onto a speeding capsule, out of ordinary household epoxy!), he should have been a natural to catch that capsule, with or without the parachute.

    This whole incident smells like "stunt", and not even a very good one. Like a Robbie Knievel barrel jump.

  • Sunnygal41
    Sunnygal41
    $264m Genesis mission

    Hmmmm, wonder how many humans died of starvation, or lack of medical care during the time this experiment was running...........sorry, I am fascinated by space and our origins, but, IMO, priorities are slightly off kilter..........

    Terri

  • funkyderek
    funkyderek
    Hmmmm, wonder how many humans died of starvation, or lack of medical care during the time this experiment was running...........sorry, I am fascinated by space and our origins, but, IMO, priorities are slightly off kilter..........

    If there had never been any space exploration, there would still be people starving - probably more than there are now. Space exploration has provided countless new technologies which have immeasurably improved the lives of millions of people. See http://www.thespaceplace.com/nasa/spinoffs.html for some examples.

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    Looks like Roswell to me....

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