Getting to 'Big Crater', A little premature speculation |
Getting to 'Big Crater', A little premature speculation |
Sep 21 2006, 11:57 AM
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#1
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Member Group: Members Posts: 813 Joined: 8-February 04 From: Arabia Terra Member No.: 12 |
Opportunity is not quite at Victoria yet, but on the horizon is a tantalising goal for the future- the big eroded crater to the south-east, the rim of which is already visible. This is the first 'large scale' topography of the mission so far. Wouldn't it be great if Opportunity could get to these hills and uncover their secrets?
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/sfjcody2/route_to_big.jpg |
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Sep 22 2006, 07:02 AM
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#2
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Founder Group: Chairman Posts: 14433 Joined: 8-February 04 Member No.: 1 |
Oh we've got to stop this I'm getting excited about the sort of view we could have from there - and that's bad because I really can't imagine us getting there, realistically.
Doug |
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Sep 22 2006, 08:45 AM
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#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 307 Joined: 16-March 05 Member No.: 198 |
Oh we've got to stop this I'm getting excited about the sort of view we could have from there - and that's bad because I really can't imagine us getting there, realistically. Doug On the other hand, way back at Sol 1, or even Sol 90, would any of us have anticipated, realistically, that Opportunity would get as far as Victoria? Even the etched terrain seemed a long way of back thenl If and when Opportunity leaves the Victoria it and the MER team (not to mention us!) will need another goal, and right now "Big Crater" seems no more impossible now that Victoria Crater was as a destination all those Sols ago. ====== Stephen |
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Sep 22 2006, 08:49 AM
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#4
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Founder Group: Chairman Posts: 14433 Joined: 8-February 04 Member No.: 1 |
On the other hand, way back at Sol 1, or even Sol 90, would any of us have anticipated, realistically, that Opportunity would get as far as Victoria? Once we had left Endurance - yes - realistically I thought that Victoria, if the terrain was navigable, was a genuine possibility. However - looking SE from Victoria - I don't like the look of the terrain a great deal - there's no MOC NA imagery that I can see in that direction and we need that or HiRISE to judge what the navigability would be like. Realistically - I think we could spend at least the next 300-500 sols exploring Victoria - THEN....let's see how the rover is doing. Doug |
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Sep 22 2006, 10:29 AM
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#5
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Member Group: Members Posts: 307 Joined: 16-March 05 Member No.: 198 |
However - looking SE from Victoria - I don't like the look of the terrain a great deal - there's no MOC NA imagery that I can see in that direction and we need that or HiRISE to judge what the navigability would be like. It's enough to make you wonder how terrestrial explorers of a non-mechanised kind ever managed to find their way around Earth before the advent of satellite imagery... Having the MOC images has been nice (especially for Tesheiner's maps), but let's face it: they're a basically a luxury. They didn't stop Opportunity getting stuck at Purgatory and they were of limited use in determining--beforehand--what the actual nature of the etched terrain was like. They doubtless helped the Opportunity route planners attempt those long drives after Endurance, but the terrain itself soon spelt an end to those, imagery or no imagery. After that the rover and its planners more or less had to feel their way forward anyway. Only now that it has reached Victoria's annulus have the long drives resumed; and that has arguably had less to do with the orbital imagery than the flatness of the terrain evident to the rover's own eyes. If the rover has the opportunity--pardon the pun --to strike out into the martian equivalent of Terra Incognita, why not? It will not be as if it will be venturing out there entirely blind. The rovers do have their own eyes, after all. If it--or at least its drivers--get a little lost and have to backtrack a little (or maybe a lot, depending on the terrain), so what? As everybody, from Steve Squyres down, keeps reminding us: the rovers are into extra time now. It's not as if they are trying to beat some kind of deadline (as they were back in their first 90 days). Opportunity in particular is on what Hollywood would probably term a "road trip"; and with those the journey and what you learn along the way can sometimes be at least as important as getting to the desired destination. Realistically - I think we could spend at least the next 300-500 sols exploring Victoria - THEN....let's see how the rover is doing. Of course. Victoria first. But that said like others I'm beginning to have doubts about whether the rover will actually be able to get inside Victoria--short of rolling off a clifftop. And even then it may well find no bedrock to land on, just a slope of scree descending steeply to the dunefield on the crater floor. Still, time will tell. ====== Stephen |
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Sep 22 2006, 03:00 PM
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#6
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Senior Member Group: Admin Posts: 4763 Joined: 15-March 05 From: Glendale, AZ Member No.: 197 |
I'm beginning to have doubts about whether the rover will actually be able to get inside Victoria--short of rolling off a clifftop. You'll be glad to know that I heard a rumor how they are out at the JPL test bed right now practicing "rover rolls". The goal is to see exactly how to approach a ledge and roll off of it so that the rover lands upright after three or four tumbles. I hear it's not going well but it's really fun to watch....... (joking, just joking) -------------------- If Occam had heard my theory, things would be very different now.
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Sep 23 2006, 01:25 AM
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#7
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Member Group: Members Posts: 101 Joined: 29-January 06 Member No.: 667 |
You'll be glad to know that I heard a rumor how they are out at the JPL test bed right now practicing "rover rolls". The goal is to see exactly how to approach a ledge and roll off of it so that the rover lands upright after three or four tumbles. I hear it's not going well but it's really fun to watch....... (joking, just joking) A good joke, no so very far from reality. Did any of you rover fans see test footage of the rover dismounting the lander back before they decided ramps were a good idea? It was on the web a long time ago, some NASA site, maybe while the rovers were cruising to Mars, or maybe shortly after landing. I've looked for it since but failed to find it. If anyone knows its whereabouts, please let us know. It's a fun watch. OK. No ramp. The rover needed to get off the lander platform and onto the ground, a foot or two down. It rolled right to the edge of the platform, kept rolling so the front wheels were in space, kept rolling on 4 wheels, and the entire craft began to rotate -- gasp! -- until the rover body was almost vertical, until the front wheels touched down. Then it rolled some more and the middle wheels left the platform and reached the ground, and finally the rear wheels: 6 wheels on the ground. It was scary -- and it was only a test vehicle. Yeah. I'm glad they eventually went with the ramps. But, it was good to know what kind of a vertical step a rover could handle if it had to. Anyone else see it? Know where it is? |
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Sep 23 2006, 02:56 PM
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#8
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Forum Contributor Group: Members Posts: 1372 Joined: 8-February 04 From: North East Florida, USA. Member No.: 11 |
I saw the movies, and some where the rover would have landed on its top it the restraints had not been in place.....
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