Cheetah Posted December 25, 2003 Posted December 25, 2003 Today, around 03:52 CET, Beagle 2 was expected to land on Mars surface. Also, the European Mars Express space probe entered Mars orbit at 03:47 CET. But no communication from Beagle 2 has been recieved(ESA). Although the probe may have crashed on the surface, there are also other possibilities. As Mike Healey from Beagle 2's constructor Astrium UK says, " it could have landed in the wrong place or it may not have opened successfully, and the aerial may be pointing in the wrong direction." BBC also has an article on it. I hope they manage to get contact with Beagle soon.
blike Posted December 26, 2003 Posted December 26, 2003 Kinda disappointing, especially for the ESA. I was hoping to see this one succeed. Perhaps they will get it working, but to me it seems unlikely at this stage of the game.
Kedas Posted December 27, 2003 Posted December 27, 2003 I'm just watched/listened to the live internet broadcast of the press conference and it are not all equal opportunities. They will try blind commanding now !! (after the complete risk analises) http://www.beagle2.com/resources/video-album.htm They sure not thinking about giving up now. Monday morning 8:30 new press conference. (unless very important news before it) Did you know they originaly didn't plan to be able to get contact with beagle2 for the first 10day's but with Odyssey they can try earlier Mars express will only enter the game later on. (important from software point of view) When? I understood 30Jan but that is so late? that is also when Odyssey has to start doing other NASA things.
YT2095 Posted December 27, 2003 Posted December 27, 2003 the date for the mars express 2 way cominication has been bought forwards from Jan 6 to Jan 4`th. there have so far been 5 atempts to hear something, nothing yet, if anyone is interested, the frequency they`re listening for it on is: 401.56 MHz (for those of you out there with radio telescopes).
Kedas Posted December 27, 2003 Posted December 27, 2003 YT2095 said in post #5 : 401.56 MHz (for those of you out there with radio telescopes). LOL, damn and I just sold mine You would still need the experiance and software to get the signal out of the noise. (even with a very large one)
YT2095 Posted December 27, 2003 Posted December 27, 2003 oh so my Wok and a Coat hanger idea may not work then? *sigh* back to the drawing board
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted January 11, 2004 Posted January 11, 2004 Beagle 2 is too small to make a crater.
Kedas Posted January 11, 2004 Posted January 11, 2004 Cap'n Refsmmat said in post #10 :Beagle 2 is too small to make a crater. I was joking but you are incorrect it could make a small crater. Not only the size/weight is important to know if there will be a crater or not the speed at impact is also very important. quote from the weird beagle-2 professor: To locate a crater with high resolution shots you would need a picture from before and after. (we obvious don't have one of before)
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted January 11, 2004 Posted January 11, 2004 Well, big crater. Why don't we have one from before? They photograph landing sites? (if it hit the landing site!)
Kedas Posted January 11, 2004 Posted January 11, 2004 Cap'n Refsmmat said in post #12 :Well, big crater. Why don't we have one from before? They photograph landing sites? (if it hit the landing site!) I don't know, I assume they don't make higher res shots because the zone is to big. http://www.ncbe.rdg.ac.uk/MARS/PDF/landingzone.pdf Not sure if this was made before or after. edit: here a picture not sure about the orientation.http://photojournal.jpl.nasa.gov/catalog/PIA05019 (before landing)
Cap'n Refsmmat Posted January 11, 2004 Posted January 11, 2004 Not sure if they'd do high res, but they should, in case there are lots of rocks.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now