Landing on Mercury on equator at perihelion |
Landing on Mercury on equator at perihelion |
Mar 21 2006, 12:18 AM
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Junior Member Group: Members Posts: 40 Joined: 20-March 06 Member No.: 720 |
How will it be to make a manned landing at Mercury at its closest to the sun (perihelion) on its equator when the sun is in the zenith ,what are the dangers of a landing then? Do we need to be protected against the sunheat and radiation then? How strong is the heat and radiation of the sun then ,and is it dangerous when the solaractivity is high then? What kind of spacesuits do we need then? Better protected suits than we have used on the apollo moonlandings i think. Can you explain how a landing on Mercury will be when it is at perihelion and land on its equator with the sun directly overhead? I hope it will ever happen. Lets start discuss about it.
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Guest_BruceMoomaw_* |
May 10 2006, 08:43 AM
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God, yes. We've mentioned all this before. A manned landing under such conditions presents huge problems even if you don't try to get out of your ship and walk around -- it presents staggering problems for any space suit design. Very large-scale daytime surface exploration of Mercury, whenever the human race ever gets around to it, is yet another opportunity to utilize remote-control robots controlled from a nearby, non-landed and Sun-shielded manned ship (which could be hundreds of thousands of km from Mercury, thus avoiding the emitted IR heat from the planet's surface itself).
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