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Princess Turandot

(4,787 posts)
Mon Nov 26, 2018, 08:29 AM Nov 2018

NASA's Insight Lander mission is scheduled to touch down on Mars at 3PM ET today!

It'll be streamed on their website and the JPL Youtube channel, and will also be shown on the NASA television cable channel if you have it. Coverage starts at 2PM ET/11AM PT, with the landing set for 3PM ET/12PM PT

https://www.nasa.gov/nasalive



If you're not too familiar with the mission, Matthew Inman of Oatmeal comics has created a comic style explanation of it which is..well..kind of adorable. (Especially the mole.)

https://theoatmeal.com/comics/insight

He's also going to be live-tweeting on the event, from NASA-JPL: https://twitter.com/Oatmeal
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NASA's Insight Lander mission is scheduled to touch down on Mars at 3PM ET today! (Original Post) Princess Turandot Nov 2018 OP
I hope someone at NASA moved the satellite clock 'back' one hour so it doesn't arrive an hour early Submariner Nov 2018 #1
Seven minutes of terror dalton99a Nov 2018 #2
We're going to be watching and crossing our fingers for Hortensis Nov 2018 #3
30 seconds after it lands hexola Nov 2018 #4

Submariner

(12,504 posts)
1. I hope someone at NASA moved the satellite clock 'back' one hour so it doesn't arrive an hour early
Mon Nov 26, 2018, 10:08 AM
Nov 2018

doing Mach 2 and smash to bits. We all remember the kilometer vs miles mistake from a Mars crash landing a few years ago.

dalton99a

(81,512 posts)
2. Seven minutes of terror
Mon Nov 26, 2018, 10:23 AM
Nov 2018
https://www.cnn.com/2018/11/25/opinions/nasa-insight-mars-landing-don-lincoln/index.html

After six months of flight, the lander component of the probe will detach itself from the cruise stage and head into the atmosphere. The lander component initially looks a fair bit like the re-entry capsule used in the 1960s and 1970s for the Apollo moon missions -- sort of conical, with a smooth and flat bottom. That bottom is a crucial heat shield that is designed to protect the probe as it passes through the thin Martian atmosphere.

The landing is a devilishly difficult feat. The landing capsule has to batter its way through the atmosphere. It will fly through the Martian air at an initial speed of 12,300 mph, and it must hit the atmosphere at an angle of precisely 12 degrees. Any shallower, and the probe will bounce off into deep space. Any steeper, and the probe will burn itself up in a spectacular and fiery death. The probe will first touch the atmosphere six minutes and 45 seconds before landing. During this phase, it will experience acceleration 12 times that of the Earth's gravity. Were the probe a 150-pound human, during the flaming descent, it would weigh nearly a ton.

About 3½ minutes after the probe hits the atmosphere, a parachute will deploy, slowing down the probe even more. Fifteen seconds later, explosives will blow the heat shield off, exposing the actual InSight probe hidden inside. Ten seconds after the heat shield falls away, the probe will extend its legs, much like an airplane extends its wheels before touching down.

The probe will fall for an additional two minutes attached to the parachute and protected by its conical shell. About 45 seconds before InSight lands, it will drop out of the shell and fall toward the surface. As soon as it leaves the shell, its landing rockets will ignite.

The actual InSight probe looks a little bit like the Apollo moon lander, with three legs to support it and a boxy top. The rockets will slow it further and stop any remaining horizontal motion. Then, about 15 seconds before touchdown, the InSight probe will descend at a speed of 8 feet per second, before hopefully touching down gently on the Martian surface.

The entire landing sequence will take about seven minutes to occur. A radio signal from Mars to Earth currently takes about eight minutes and seven seconds to get here. So the complete landing process will take place before we find out if it was successful. It will be done automatically, entirely by the probe itself. For the scientists and engineers who designed InSight, this is called "seven minutes of terror."

And they are right to be worried. Mars is a graveyard of failed probes. There have been 44 attempts by various national space agencies to land on Mars. Eighteen have been successful. Twenty-three have not. Three have achieved orbit but failed at a landing.



Hortensis

(58,785 posts)
3. We're going to be watching and crossing our fingers for
Mon Nov 26, 2018, 10:33 AM
Nov 2018

a successful landing, 12,000+ mph to gentle landing in "7 minutes of terror." It'll be our first landing in six years and amazing no matter what happens. This one's being followed by two mini CubeSats, about the size of a briefcase each, that'll try to fly by during the landing and relay landing data.

Just learned the minis are called Wally and Eva because they're filled with fire extinguisher fluid, which, like Wall-E in the movie, they use as a propellant to fly around space.

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