Lost landers from HiRISE, The next step |
Lost landers from HiRISE, The next step |
Jan 3 2007, 08:41 PM
Post
#1
|
|
Member Group: Members Posts: 428 Joined: 21-August 06 From: Northern Virginia Member No.: 1062 |
Okay, we now have definitive pictures of VL1, 2, Spirit, Opportunity, and a Pathfinder coming up soon. So, now, what would the lost landers look like, starting with Beagle, MPL, and Mars 6, which will be the easiest to find of the landers. Just curious to hear your thoughts. Thanks!
|
|
|
Jan 3 2007, 11:07 PM
Post
#2
|
|
Founder Group: Chairman Posts: 14434 Joined: 8-February 04 Member No.: 1 |
MPL will have to wait until Southern Summer I presume - we should know where it is FAIRLY well from tracking etc. and we know we should be able to find a parachute VERY easily, as well as Backshell and Heatshield. As for the lander itself - slightly smaller than the viking spacecraft if memory serves me right - and likely to be a lot 'shorter' (i.e. crushed landing legs etc ) - and if there were any 'splat' mark from leaked fuel etc - i would have thought that 3 winters would have eliminated much if not all evidence of that.
Beagle 2, well that supposed MOC target would be an interesting starting point. How far B2 got through its landing sequence before failing will dictate how much 'stuff' is on the ground. The Chute - if 'entry' worked - deflated airbags should be visible as well, if it got further than that. The heatshield, backshell and indeed the lander itself - I would say no - going on the sim I managed which seems to be something roughly indicative going on MER experience... http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.p...ost&id=8409 As for pieces of the historic Russian landers - I would be doubtfull. They were comparatively small, and their Parachutes and indeed any other hardware- if anything like V1 and V2's chutes - will almost certainly be dust-covered and hard to identify. Doug |
|
|
Jan 25 2012, 04:10 AM
Post
#3
|
||||||||
Newbie Group: Members Posts: 1 Joined: 21-January 12 From: Kobe JAPAN Member No.: 6318 |
MPL will have to wait until Southern Summer I presume - we should know where it is FAIRLY well from tracking etc. and we know we should be able to find a parachute VERY easily, as well as Backshell and Heatshield. As for the lander itself - slightly smaller than the viking spacecraft if memory serves me right - and likely to be a lot 'shorter' (i.e. crushed landing legs etc ) - and if there were any 'splat' mark from leaked fuel etc - i would have thought that 3 winters would have eliminated much if not all evidence of that. Beagle 2, well that supposed MOC target would be an interesting starting point. How far B2 got through its landing sequence before failing will dictate how much 'stuff' is on the ground. The Chute - if 'entry' worked - deflated airbags should be visible as well, if it got further than that. The heatshield, backshell and indeed the lander itself - I would say no - going on the sim I managed which seems to be something roughly indicative going on MER experience... http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.p...ost&id=8409 As for pieces of the historic Russian landers - I would be doubtfull. They were comparatively small, and their Parachutes and indeed any other hardware- if anything like V1 and V2's chutes - will almost certainly be dust-covered and hard to identify. Doug Hello Doug I am new to this blog and this forum....I want to help find the MPL....actually anything up there that man sent....but I always wondered what happened to that particular lander. It was expensive. It promised so much. It just disappeared. Like everyone else I would like to know why. To try to understand what is involved with the search, I have been looking at one of the HiRISE Images assigned to the MPL Search. I agree with comments made by tuvas. I have to say that trying to find a Mars Lander or wreckage of same on this series of HiRISE Images is going to be a massive undertaking, even if you do know what you are looking for. As part of my job I view RT Films of welds and you really need some experience to accurately understand what you are looking at.....same case here. The Zoomify Viewer provided on the HiRISE site is pretty good and I am astonished at the resolution which seems to me to be much better than 25cm per pixel. I wish it had a grid overlay that you could tick off.....something like that to keep track of what you have looked at. Also some sort of reference coordinates linked to the cursor which would give exact location so others can easily and quickly find and verify for themselves. Frankly, some of the images I am seeing, well....I have no idea what it is I am looking at.....I have found a number of objects that look like man made wreckage to me..... (I have posted these 23 images in an album with comments on the following site for anyone interested.... http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=260...e=1&theater All objects are from one picture PSP_005301-1030) but look at these HiRISE images long enough and after a while you see all sorts of things. I will be adding to to the 23 images as I find more in the debris fields I think I am finding.) I found these objects just by trying to identify things that stood out as being different from their surrounding terrain using a complete scan at 20M resolution and then zooming in further for confirmation. The Images are naturally very blurry and it's only to be expected.....I have no image enhancement software beyond Photo Impact 12 and that doesn't improve these images. These are only PrntScrn captures via Photo Impact 12 to get to .jpg images that I could post on Facebook. The were always going to be degraded.....sorry. It just show the difficulties beginners have to cope with when they try to interpret images and then submit them for consideration. To aid radiographers when they review RT Films of welds there are often reference images showing the appearance of typical defects. Something similar to guide novice interpreters would be invaluable. One of the hardest things for people to do is identify things from above as opposed to head on or from the side. There are clearly people on this blog with considerable experience who are in a position to easily identify the MPL as well as Martian terrain...... It would be very useful if that knowledge could be passed on in some way to beginners and even other more experienced searchers. Finally, someone has to look at images of submitted possible MPL crash sites and say "yea" or "nay"...... In the interests of sifting out the spurious stuff and giving the idea of what might be right, it might help to have a "Hall of Blunders and Possibles" Site with all the pics annotated with verdict and their location clearly indicated on the HiRISE Image of concern. For example, someone may have found the same things I have on PSP_005301-1030 and they have long ago been dismissed as non-starters. It would help tremendously with realizing efficient use of time and effort. A question...... In the case of the Mars Polar Lander do we know if the heat shield and back shield and chute detached. I ask because one of the objects I have found looks like the MPL sitting on it's Heat Shield, back shield present but displaced, with chute still attached ....please note I didn't say is.....just looks like. If we know the heat shield and back shield and chute detached what I have found clearly isn't the MPL ....just something that looks odd. I am going to post some images of this possible MPL and other anomalies here just to give you an idea of what I am talking about and give others an idea of problems with image interpretation......other details are on Facebook if anyone needs more information about location and so on to check for themselves. I have not messed with these images beyond labeling, adding arrows or outlines or zooming in even more....I all cases I recommend going back to the Zoomifier http://marsoweb.nas.nasa.gov/HiRISE/hirise...SP_005391_1030/ The control panel takes you down to a view with 20M scale. Right clicking gives you the option to zoom in further. One last point...something you said.....I do agree that sands may cover wreckage of old Russian landers but also winds blow sand away from covered objects here on earth particularly after large dust storms. Might that not happen on Mars? Large areas of the Image I have searched on my first HiRise Image showed little signs of sand drifts, just lots and lots of rock formations of various types (I think). It can work both ways I think....hope. It would be amazing to find those old Russian Landers and MPL...in fact any of the old space debris. Just to get something from Earth to the Martian surface regardless of whether it worked or not, is a tremendous achievement and an important monument to the amazing technology and scientific achievements of man and stupendous efforts of thousands of Earth's brilliant and best and each debris field is maybe worth pinpointing on the Map of Mars. Also....it would stop them being rediscovered. PS - OK - Sorry but due to 500 pixel max limit on the width on this blog I don't think you will be able to see much from the images that I have posted here......my apologies....please see the images posted on my Facebook Wall |
|||||||
|
||||||||
Jan 25 2012, 07:59 AM
Post
#4
|
|
Founder Group: Chairman Posts: 14434 Joined: 8-February 04 Member No.: 1 |
In the case of the Mars Polar Lander do we know if the heat shield and back shield and chute detached. We have absolutely no idea. After the spacecraft turned toward it's entry attitude, and (as expected) went quiet...nothing was ever heard again. I'm afraid none of your candidates stand out to me at least. One could easily find many similar features in a swathe of HiRISE images. Moreover, since the last post in this thread more than 5 years ago - we have an interesting analogue to compare to. Look at the images of Phoenix after just one Martian winter. http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/images/2010/...16_2485_cut.jpg An intact lander that safely touched down without trouble, along with a heatsheild impact, a backshell and parachute landing nearby - their visibility has been massively compromised after just one Martian winter. The parachute is entirely invisible. The backshell is visible, but much less defined, the heatshield impact has been rendered, in my opinion, indistinguishable from the natural terrain - and the lander significantly degraded. If it had never deployed it's solar arrays and just smashed into the ground rapidly (as the MPL investigation suggests it might) then it could be argued it would be no more visible than the PHX heatshield is now. Now extrapolate the same problem to MPL. Let's assume it got thru EDL to the point of separating from it's back shell - and thus the back shell with Parachute, and heat-shield would have impacted just like with Phoenix. Take the obscuration of the Phoenix hardware over just one Martian winter. Now multiply that by 3, 4 or 5 (depending on what season you are picking images from) - that polar lander site has been thru several winters - coverings and exposures of frost etc. Honestly, I don't think even if it's there, we could, with confidence, identify it. I think if you're going to expend energy on this - far better to do it at an equatorial site ( where, for example, we know a parachute like Mars Pathfinder is still visible - http://hiroc.lpl.arizona.edu/images/2007/d...MPF_parts_2.jpg - after 10 years ) with sites like Beagle 2 (where we have a fairly well constrained entry ellipse). I would urge caution for the Russian sites....the area required to be searched is simply massive, and I doubt if any genuine attempt has been to cover those sites with HiRISE at all. |
|
|
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 27th September 2024 - 08:49 AM |
RULES AND GUIDELINES Please read the Forum Rules and Guidelines before posting. IMAGE COPYRIGHT |
OPINIONS AND MODERATION Opinions expressed on UnmannedSpaceflight.com are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of UnmannedSpaceflight.com or The Planetary Society. The all-volunteer UnmannedSpaceflight.com moderation team is wholly independent of The Planetary Society. The Planetary Society has no influence over decisions made by the UnmannedSpaceflight.com moderators. |
SUPPORT THE FORUM Unmannedspaceflight.com is funded by the Planetary Society. Please consider supporting our work and many other projects by donating to the Society or becoming a member. |