Aftersplat
Sep. 9th, 2004 11:09 pmMainly Martian talks about possible policy implications of the Genesis parachute failure.
Seriously, having already cracked stupid jokes about this, I've gotta say that I feel terrible for the scientists and engineers working on Genesis... though my definite impression is that when you work on any space science mission, you have to accept the possibility of a catastrophic failure as a large part of the business. And it sounds as if they're going to try their damnedest to get some science out of the wreckage.
Seriously, having already cracked stupid jokes about this, I've gotta say that I feel terrible for the scientists and engineers working on Genesis... though my definite impression is that when you work on any space science mission, you have to accept the possibility of a catastrophic failure as a large part of the business. And it sounds as if they're going to try their damnedest to get some science out of the wreckage.
"That's impact, sir. Ground level."
Date: 2004-09-09 10:22 pm (UTC)Stardust uses fragile aerogel as a capture medium, so the whole mission (which, at around $200 million, was substantially cheaper than Genesis) could be a total loss if its sample capsule decides to hit the dirt in a similar fashion-- the samples will be in there, along with that desert dirt. More importantly, a second failure will potentially reduce the risk-tolerance of those who'd be funding future sample-return missions in the near future until a proven return method is cooked up.
However, the DoD continues to fund its SCOOP sampling-probes with unknown success.
no subject
Date: 2004-09-10 06:18 pm (UTC)The Genesis failure is sad, but the Kirk/Khan jokes have been funny.