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Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by knockoff nige
(Post 11695486)
What I'm saying would be an actual split second of time around Pluto, no pretence.
I'm sure others will be doing the complete Pluto system. |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by GarryP
(Post 11695421)
In order:
We spent over a trillion dollars on war in the middle east, which doesn't really seem to have achieved a great deal. I often wonder how our space program would look if we had invested it there instead :( S |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by Swerv-o
(Post 11695895)
We spent over a trillion dollars on war in the middle east, which doesn't really seem to have achieved a great deal. I often wonder how our space program would look if we had invested it there instead :(
We hear the 'illions and are incapable of successfully comparing them, particularly over time. New Horizons cost ~$700 million over 15 years. Budget of CSIRO is ~$1.2 billion The budget of NASA is ~$19 billion The amount of unaccounted for money in Iraq/Afghanistan is ~$14 billion Australian cost of helping out Dubya in Iraq ~$2.5 billion Cost of US involvement in Iraq/Afghanistan ~$6 trillion Thus you could have 8571 x New Horizons missions for the cost of Dubya trying to strut his stuff around the middle east. |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by GarryP
(Post 11695936)
I blame millions vs billions vs trillions.
We hear the 'illions and are incapable of successfully comparing them, particularly over time. New Horizons cost ~$700 million over 15 years. Budget of CSIRO is ~$1.2 billion The budget of NASA is ~$19 billion The amount of unaccounted for money in Iraq/Afghanistan is ~$14 billion Australian cost of helping out Dubya in Iraq ~$2.5 billion Cost of US involvement in Iraq/Afghanistan ~$6 trillion Thus you could have 8571 x New Horizons missions for the cost of Dubya trying to strut his stuff around the middle east. We could have colonised Mars for that money :( S |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by Swerv-o
(Post 11695939)
We could have colonised Mars for that money :(
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Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by knockoff nige
(Post 11695400)
I think it's amazing that in a matter of months we'll be seeing the best ever photos of Pluto
Pluto comes into focus - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation) |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by GarryP
(Post 11695942)
We could have buried every two-bit politician, head first, in the martian soil for quite a lot less. It would still have been a bargain.
Wasted money aside, it is very exciting, and I'm really looking forward to seeing the images. If anybody is interested, BBC Knowledge have a show called Stargazing with Dara O'Briain and Brian Cox. An hours worth of all manner of space exploration news, and in a fairly digestible format. S |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Should be cool to see. :thumbup:
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Re: Pictures of Pluto
New image. They seem to be coming in at a rate of one per day.
http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/fi...apl-swri_0.png |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by GarryP
(Post 11696768)
New image. They seem to be coming in at a rate of one per day.
http://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/fi...apl-swri_0.png |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by carolinephillips
(Post 11697431)
Is the fact that it it appears to be constructed out of hexagons due to the processing, or has Pluto been made by alien bees?
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Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by knockoff nige
(Post 11695431)
Strangely, I didn't see this coming.
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Re: Pictures of Pluto
Thought this might be of interest, the plan of what images arrive when. Basically, to date, we've been getting long range images at 4+ million kms out. Today things switch over the encounter imaging, first of failsafe scientific data (not images), then a few images pre-encounter but only 1m km out (in case it gets smashed).
Then the actual encounter, where the probe will be snapping pics like a japanese tourist and not talking to anyone. Then after phoning home on the 15th, it starts pushing out a few sub 1m km images of each object, followed by real close images of Pluto's & Charon's surfaces and some science data. From Friday it will return a few sexy pics, close up, as a kind of sampler. It will then go quiet for the following 2 months, before it starts downloading the rest of the images (first equivalent of JPGs, then the RAWs). So the next week, till Tuesday next will be the main images seen during the actual encounter timeperiod. That's all unless they have changed their minds at all after losing contact for a few days. AEST is 10 hours in advance of UT. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Sunday, July 12 19:39 UT : 7.5hr downlink: Final optical navigation images
Monday, July 20 at 16:20 UT : 3.3hr downlink: High Priority G
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Re: Pictures of Pluto
So where is it boldly going after Pluto?
BB |
Re: Pictures of Pluto
Originally Posted by moneypenny20
(Post 11697448)
Strangely, that's what I was expecting when I first saw the title.
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