TiME |
TiME |
May 5 2011, 08:48 PM
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#1
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Member Group: Members Posts: 613 Joined: 23-February 07 From: Occasionally in Columbia, MD Member No.: 1764 |
Ahoy mateys!
NASA announces Discovery mission selection for Phase A. Titan Mare Explorer (TiME) is among them. Har! |
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May 16 2011, 01:08 PM
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#2
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Newbie Group: Members Posts: 16 Joined: 30-March 08 Member No.: 4078 |
Except that the vast majority of the data will probably be GCMS results, which are a little less photogenic, albeit very scientifically valuable.
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May 17 2011, 05:35 AM
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#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 613 Joined: 23-February 07 From: Occasionally in Columbia, MD Member No.: 1764 |
Except that the vast majority of the data will probably be GCMS results, which are a little less photogenic, albeit very scientifically valuable. I'm glad to see that you lot are thinking about all this - fun, isnt't it? Obviously I'm not going to go into specifics but it is possible to address some of the questions that have come up in very general terms. Materials/temperatures - guys, come on. Huygens operated in this environment until its batteries ran out. Launch vehicles - to say nothing of the liquified natural gas industry - deal with cryogenic fluids all the time. Of course heat leaks and insulation need to be designed appropriately, and material properties at the relevant environment must be considered, as they do on Mars and Venus or in vacuo. Communications - some cogent discussion on the thread. This has been thought about a lot for Titan balloons too. I'll remind readers that many cruise ships, and drones for that matter, use gimballed antennas for satellite communications. Again, not trivial, but a familiar and soluble problem. As for data - have a look at the Huygens or Pathfinder or any other mission's balance of data volume between imaging, composition, meteorology etc. On any mission this balance gets struck somehow (and indeed it can often be tuned during the mission) |
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May 17 2011, 06:07 AM
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#4
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Senior Member Group: Admin Posts: 4763 Joined: 15-March 05 From: Glendale, AZ Member No.: 197 |
Materials/temperatures - guys, come on. Huygens operated in this environment until its batteries ran out. Launch vehicles - to say nothing of the liquified natural gas industry - deal with cryogenic fluids all the time. Thanks for responding Ralph. My actual concern was not so much the low temperatures affecting the TiME craft as the other way around. If it drops down in that hydrocarbon sea and then sets it boiling and steaming that would seriously affect instrumentation's ability to collect data would it not? If nothing else images would be difficult. With respect to terrestrial cryogenic industrial uses, to the best of my knowledge none of that equipment is required to go through launch vibration tests at STP and then transition to high loads and stresses in cryogenic environs. My armchair recollections are that materials which are strong and ductile at one end become fragile and brittle at the other end and vs. vs. Certainly the temperatures we are dealing with are substantially lower than any of the Mars craft were designed for, and then finally the whole notion of the vehicle in contact with an ocean of liquid adds a heat capacity component to the materials calculations that is barely a factor in the gaseous 0.01 atm on Mars. I'm certainly not questioning your knowledge or understanding of the conditions (I read your book), just outlining my line of thinking that caused me to pose (perhaps in-artfully) the previous question. -------------------- If Occam had heard my theory, things would be very different now.
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May 19 2011, 03:54 AM
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#5
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Member Group: Members Posts: 613 Joined: 23-February 07 From: Occasionally in Columbia, MD Member No.: 1764 |
Thanks for responding Ralph. ..... I'm certainly not questioning your knowledge or understanding of the conditions (I read your book), just outlining my line of thinking that caused me to pose (perhaps in-artfully) the previous question. Dan I realize your questions are well-intentioned and motivated by your excitement about this mission (an excitement that is widely shared). The fact is that any measurement perturbs its subject (qv quantum theory) and this applies to a warm lander on Titan, a warm lander on a comet, or a geophysical lander on Mars that couples wind energy into the ground. It is also a fact that a Phase A study is just that, a study. Only one of the three missions under study is likely to fly (and NASA reserves the right not to fly any of them!). Remember too that USMF is read by many in the planetary science community. Thus people who may be reviewing study reports in the future and deciding what flies could be reading your question. Developing a full answer that satisfactorily addresses your question (or any other from someone else) may require more text than most people want to read, more of my spare time than I can afford, or may require details that are proprietary to my employer or one or more of the industrial/agency/academic partners in the project. So a complete answer cannot be given, and an incomplete answer may be seen as indicating a weakness that may not exist or may be otherwise taken out of context. Thus by asking a question of a mission in competition in a public forum you actually may make the mission less likely to happen. There does not exist at present a 'people's court' wherein missions under competition can be probed by the public in an equable manner, appealing as such a notion may be (and it may not appeal for example to industry). And probing at concepts under study in an ad-hoc manner, wherein all concepts under competition are not probed equally, could be prejudicial to the decision-making process. So I ask your understanding that I cannot discuss such details. All I can say is the challenges of doing science in an exotic environment are recognized by a team that has successfully addressed such challenges before. The detailed plans for doing so will be evaluated in NASA's formal review process. And let me take this opportunity to remind readers that (roughly) for every scientist out there doing cool stuff like studying pictures on Mars, or analyzing bits of asteroids, there's another (nameless) scientist who doesnt get their name on papers, or appear on TV, but who had to sit on a tedious peer review panel for a week in some dreary hotel, and read hundreds of pages of dense proposal material to help judge which 1 of 5 scientists should be picked to work on the team, or which mission should fly, when actually the top 3 out of the 5 would all be superb. A painful decision, and an onerous duty, but one that is rarely recognized outside the field. |
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