Return to the Cloudy Nights Telescope Reviews home page

Click here if you are having trouble logging into the forums

Privacy Policy | Please read our Terms of Service | Signup and Troubleshooting FAQ | Problems? PM a Red or a Green Gu.... uh, User

Other >> Science of Astronomy & Space exploration

Pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | (show all)
LadyAstronomer
Bookworm
*****

Reged: 11/15/07
Posts: 2769
Loc: Library of Congress
PHOENIX Landing Coverage
      #2405881 - 05/19/08 12:18 PM

I thought this might be of interest to those of you who have cable or satellite access to the NASA channel.



NASA news briefings, live commentary and updates before and after the scheduled Sunday, May 25 arrival of the agency's Phoenix Mars Lander will be available on NASA Television and on the Web.

Entry, descent and landing begins at 4:46 p.m. PDT on May 25, when the flight team will listen for radio signals indicating that Phoenix has entered the top of the Martian atmosphere. The spacecraft must perform a series of challenging transformations and activities during the seven minutes after it enters the atmosphere to slow it from 12,000 mph to 5 mph and a soft touchdown. The Phoenix team will be watching for radio signals confirming the landing at 4:53 p.m. More than half of previous international attempts to land on Mars have been unsuccessful. For a detailed schedule and landing timeline, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/phoenix


Briefings on mission goals, challenges, status and final trajectory adjustments will originate from JPL on Thursday, May 22, at 11:30 a.m. and on Saturday and Sunday, May 25-26, at noon.

On landing day, May 25, live landing commentary will air on NASA TV. A telecast without videos and interviews will run on NASA TV's Media Channel beginning at 3 p.m. Another telecast with commentary, interviews and videos will begin at 3:30 p.m. on NASA TV's Public Channel. For more information on NASA TV and this coverage schedule, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/nasatv/MM_NTV_Breaking.html

Both telecasts will continue through landing time and resume at 6:30 p.m. during the period after landing when engineers anticipate the receipt of data and possible images confirming that Phoenix has opened its solar panels successfully.

A news briefing at JPL will be held Sunday, May 25 at 9 p.m., following landing and the first possible downlink of images. Briefing updates at JPL also are scheduled on Monday, May 26 at 11 a.m. and on Tuesday, May 27, at 11 a.m.

Daily news briefings will continue at 11 a.m. for several days following a successful landing. Mission control and the site for news briefings will then shift to the University of Arizona in Tucson after a determination that the spacecraft is in a safe condition for conducting science operations. The earliest possibility for moving the host site for mission news briefings to the University of Arizona's Space Operations Center is Wednesday, May 28. Mission briefings from Pasadena and Tucson will be carried on NASA TV unless preempted by other NASA events.

For NASA TV streaming video, schedules, and downlink information, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

--------------------
"I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me." -- Sir Isaac Newton





Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
lightfever
Pooh-Bah
*****

Reged: 09/27/04
Posts: 1133
Loc: Macomb Michigan
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: LadyAstronomer]
      #2405962 - 05/19/08 12:58 PM

Thanks for the info.

I will be out of town and will not have high speed internet but will have access to the NASA channel.

I really hope this goes well.

--------------------
Mark
Tasco 15-TE 76mm
Sky Watcher 80mm ED
AT-111 Triplet
XT8i (with Woden re-figured mirror)
Discovery 12.5" f/5 Premium DHQ (PDHQ Split-tube Dobsonian)
12.5" f/6.3 Dob (Underconstruction)
Celestron CG-5GT EQ Mount
Celestron C4 EQ Mount

‘If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough’. AE

‘The devil has put a penalty on all things we enjoy in life. Either we suffer in health or we suffer in soul or we get fat’. AE


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
LadyAstronomer
Bookworm
*****

Reged: 11/15/07
Posts: 2769
Loc: Library of Congress
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: lightfever]
      #2406949 - 05/19/08 08:40 PM

Quote:

I really hope this goes well.




Me too, Mark! Me too!!

--------------------
"I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me." -- Sir Isaac Newton





Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
jupiterzkool
Pooh-Bah
*****

Reged: 05/08/06
Posts: 1170
Loc: Pasadena, CA
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: LadyAstronomer]
      #2409342 - 05/20/08 08:41 PM

JPL will also be blogging on Facebook and Twitter. You can also sign up for text messages to be sent to your cell phone. You can find more information here.

-S

--------------------
Scott G. Edgington, Planetary Scientist
Cassini-Huygens: Mission to Saturn & Titan
Yes, Asia, John Wetton Fan


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
gazerjim
Postmaster
*****

Reged: 02/12/04
Posts: 7536
Loc: San Angelo, TX
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: jupiterzkool]
      #2409752 - 05/21/08 12:08 AM

Thanks for the info, LA!

--------------------
Jim Fisher

If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.

Henry J. Tillman


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
nssian
journeyman


Reged: 05/06/08
Posts: 8
Loc: Arnhemland NT Australia
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: gazerjim]
      #2410320 - 05/21/08 09:57 AM

I have taken quite an interest in this landing and have made it the main Topic of my weekly Radio science show.
I have put up the first in a series of podcasts on the event on http://www.askthescienceguru.com/
I am really looking forward to seeing this on NASA TV.
I watched the landing of Cassini on Europa and for me it was like watching man step on the moon for the first time !

--------------------
Ian Maclean
Astronomy Author and Presenter
Host of Radio show "The Science hour"


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
LadyAstronomer
Bookworm
*****

Reged: 11/15/07
Posts: 2769
Loc: Library of Congress
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: gazerjim]
      #2410424 - 05/21/08 10:36 AM

Quote:

Thanks for the info, LA!




You are very welcome, Sir Jim!

--------------------
"I do not know what I may appear to the world, but to myself I seem to have been only a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me." -- Sir Isaac Newton





Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
llanitedaveModerator
Humble Megalomaniac
*****

Reged: 09/26/05
Posts: 9580
Loc: Amargosa Valley, NV, USA
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: LadyAstronomer]
      #2410427 - 05/21/08 10:37 AM

Welcome to Cloudy Nights, Ian! We're honored to have you here!

--------------------

Homebuilt 10" dob, old Coulter mirror.

16" Royce conical mirror: Construction on S.O.E. (Sauron's Other Eye) has officially begun!


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
janehoustonjones
super member


Reged: 10/21/07
Posts: 193
Loc: 34 N 118 W, 637.0 feet
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: nssian]
      #2410856 - 05/21/08 02:19 PM

Quote:

I watched the landing of Cassini on Europa and for me it was like watching man step on the moon for the first time !




I missed that one, but did watch and listen as the Cassini's Huygens Probe landed on the surface of Titan.

Jane

--------------------
Jane Houston Jones
Cassini Program Outreach Office
JPL's What's Up Podcast


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Matthew Ota
super member


Reged: 04/30/05
Posts: 173
Loc: New Hampshire
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: LadyAstronomer]
      #2411928 - 05/21/08 11:24 PM

It will be nail biting time at JPL on Sunday. I am looking forward to seeing some pictures of solar panels on Sunday evening. See my article here Matt's Mars Landing Preview

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
David Knisely
Postmaster
*****

Reged: 04/19/04
Posts: 6475
Loc: Beatrice, Nebraska
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: LadyAstronomer]
      #2412038 - 05/22/08 12:39 AM

For those in the Lincoln, Nebraska area, Hyde Memorial Observatory will be carrying the NASA TV feed for the Phoenix landing live on the big screen of the lecture hall on Sunday, May 25th from 6 p.m. to around 9 p.m. CDT. Hyde Observatory is located in Holmes Park on the South Shore Road in southeastern Lincoln, Nebraska. Clear skies to you.

--------------------
David W. Knisely
Hyde Memorial Observatory
http://www.hydeobservatory.info


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
robinsondd
member


Reged: 05/28/07
Posts: 97
Loc: St. Mary's City, MD
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: David Knisely]
      #2416194 - 05/23/08 10:58 PM

Thanks for the reminder. I was looking for this last weekend! Guess I was too early.

--------------------
David Robinson
Southern Maryland



Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Matthew Ota
super member


Reged: 04/30/05
Posts: 173
Loc: New Hampshire
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: nssian]
      #2417251 - 05/24/08 03:11 PM

Cassini Huygens is a mission with a spacecraft in orbit around Saturn. It recently was granted funding for an extended mission. The Cassini continues to operate in good health, while the Huygens probe sits frozen on the surface of Titan - which is Saturn's largest moon.

Europa is one of the four Galillean satellites of Jupiter. It gets a lot of popular attention as it may harbor life in is liquid ocean, which is below its exterior surface ice shell.

Nobody has landed a probe on Europa as of this date, but there are some concepts and proposals that have not received full approval yet as formal missions.

--------------------
Matthew Ota
10 inch Meade LX250GPS SCT (LX50/LX200GPS clone) f6.3-Orion 80ED, ETX-90 OTA, Coronado Helios 1 H-alpha Solar Telescope
Cassini Huygens Saturn Observation Campaign
New Hampshire Astronomical Society


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
janehoustonjones
super member


Reged: 10/21/07
Posts: 193
Loc: 34 N 118 W, 637.0 feet
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: David Knisely]
      #2418040 - 05/25/08 02:56 AM

Quote:

For those in the Lincoln, Nebraska area, Hyde Memorial Observatory will be carrying the NASA TV feed for the Phoenix landing live on the big screen of the lecture hall on Sunday, May 25th from 6 p.m. to around 9 p.m. CDT.




Here is a listing of Phoenix events at museums around the country: http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/events/Mars_Events.html .

Jane

--------------------
Jane Houston Jones
Cassini Program Outreach Office
JPL's What's Up Podcast


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
LivingNDixieModerator
Lord of Ferrets
*****

Reged: 04/23/03
Posts: 15620
Loc: Hoover, AL
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: Matthew Ota]
      #2418989 - 05/25/08 04:41 PM

Quote:

Cassini Huygens is a mission with a spacecraft in orbit around Saturn. It recently was granted funding for an extended mission. The Cassini continues to operate in good health, while the Huygens probe sits frozen on the surface of Titan - which is Saturn's largest moon.

Europa is one of the four Galillean satellites of Jupiter. It gets a lot of popular attention as it may harbor life in is liquid ocean, which is below its exterior surface ice shell.

Nobody has landed a probe on Europa as of this date, but there are some concepts and proposals that have not received full approval yet as formal missions.




Next Jupuiter mission that I know of is JUNO.

--------------------
Preston



Celestron 11" Nexstar GPS XLT
Lunt LS60T/Ha 60mm f/8.33 (on order)

It’s not finishing something when your tank is empty that makes you a stronger person. It’s brushing yourself off and refacing the foe that defeated you with the same determination and willingness to fight that you had when you began your journey.


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
nssian
journeyman


Reged: 05/06/08
Posts: 8
Loc: Arnhemland NT Australia
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: LivingNDixie]
      #2419030 - 05/25/08 05:03 PM

Only 3 hours to go now !
I have published in in depth look at impact that the discovery of the colder than expected Martian crust could have on the mission. On my Blog NT Dark Skies.
http://www.nightskysecrets.com/blog/2008/05/mars-phoenix-lander-touchdown-25th-may.html

--------------------
Ian Maclean
Astronomy Author and Presenter
Host of Radio show "The Science hour"


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Joad
Wordsmith
*****

Reged: 03/22/05
Posts: 11706
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: nssian]
      #2419183 - 05/25/08 07:01 PM

Just read that blog. Very useful, especially the explanation of the lack of tectonic activity's effect on the possibility of Martian life.

Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Bandit13
super member


Reged: 09/20/06
Posts: 195
Loc: N.W. Arkansas
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage new [Re: Joad]
      #2419301 - 05/25/08 07:51 PM

The chute is out!

--------------------
Orion 10" Intelliscope
10x50 binocs


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Bandit13
super member


Reged: 09/20/06
Posts: 195
Loc: N.W. Arkansas
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage [Re: Bandit13]
      #2419309 - 05/25/08 07:55 PM

Touchdown.

--------------------
Orion 10" Intelliscope
10x50 binocs


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
jupiterzkool
Pooh-Bah
*****

Reged: 05/08/06
Posts: 1170
Loc: Pasadena, CA
Re: PHOENIX Landing Coverage [Re: Bandit13]
      #2419320 - 05/25/08 07:58 PM

WooHoo!

--------------------
Scott G. Edgington, Planetary Scientist
Cassini-Huygens: Mission to Saturn & Titan
Yes, Asia, John Wetton Fan


Post Extras: Print Post   Remind Me!   Notify Moderator  
Pages: 1 | 2 | 3 | (show all)


Extra information
0 registered and 1 anonymous users are browsing this forum.

Moderator:  LivingNDixie, llanitedave 

Print Thread

Forum Permissions
      You cannot start new topics
      You cannot reply to topics
      HTML is disabled
      UBBCode is enabled


Thread views: 1921

Jump to

Home



Cloudy Nights Sponsor: Astronomics