Agreed with all of that. I watched the video also. I especially liked the first guy on the scene, carefully edging up to it, half crouching....I'm thinking....does the guy need a special suit to approach that thing that was just in space? (Too Much Star Trek!) Trisha ----- Original Message ----- From: Jim Scotti Date: Wed, 8 Sep 2004 13:37:18 -0700 (MST) To: Arizona Geocaching Subject: Re: [Az-Geocaching] NASA in mourning > Hey Trisha, > I watched the NASA TV live broadcast of the Genesis entry and recovery > this morning. They showed the usual video feeds from the control centers and > the choppers flying in formation preparing for the recovery and then they > used a long range camera to pick up the spacecraft as it entered overhead, > first at around 400,000 feet. It was just a white speck against the blue > sky. They continued following it and it looked sorta normal (I wasn't sure > exactly when things should be happening, so I was relying on the NASA > commentator). You could see the speck change in brightness a little and they > mentioned it was down to 200,000 feet (it didn't take long to go from 400K to > 200K feet!). The image got a little clearer and then it started to look a > little oblong and wobbly - I thought it might be an out of focus camera > image, but then it soon was obviously elongated and was clearly the > spacecraft spinning and tumbling it looked like. I was thinking - "Wow, this > is an excellent camera view, now where's the drogue chute or main chute?" > As it descended, the spinning looked less tumbly and more wobbly and I'm > still wondering about the parachute as it now fills about 20% of the screen > when suddenly it vanished and then it was obvious that the camera was now > pointed at the ground as it stopped and backed up. I was thinking "Uh Oh, > this can't be good! Did we really just see what I think we saw?" when they > finally put up an image of the spacecraft, half buried in the dirt with what > looked like an impact ejecta blanket around it. A bit later, they had the > video from one of the choppers and it was obvious that the spacecraft was > badly damaged with a crack across the spacecraft and it was also split in the > middle and half buried in its impact crater. > But hey, the re-entry targeting was right on - it impacted right about > where it was supposed to! It impacted at about 193 miles per hour (terminal > velocity for the spacecraft freefalling through the atmosphere). I was > thinking while looking at the images from the chopper that was circling and > showing the first of the recovery crew arriving onsite in other helicopters > that I should make it a virtual geocache, especially when I heard them > announce the preliminary coordinates of the crash site: N40d 07' 40", W113d > 30' 29". Unfortunately, that is on a military base, so I don't think it > would be accessible to use civilians.... > > Jim. > > On Wed, 8 Sep 2004 trisha@brasher.com wrote: > > > This is a bit off topic (unless they use GPS technology?) but we probably > > lost the data from the Genesis project (geez, I sound like a Star Trek > > Movie!) this morning. > > > > The project, collecting atoms and data from the sun for the past 4 years > > (at a cost of, um, 260 mill) was supposed to re-enter and land with the > > help of parachutes, and they were even worried about a chute-controlled > > landing....they had stunt chopper pilots ready to snag the chute to give > > it an even softer landing. > > > > Instead, the chutes failed to open and the refrigerator-sized capsule > > crashed to earth in Utah, creating a big crator. All that technology and > > the CHUTE fails?? > > > > We hope they can recover some of the data. In the meantime, NASA flags > > are at half mast (just kidding) > > > > Jim, anything to add? > > > > Trisha "Lightning" > > Prescott Vly > > ____________________________________________________________ > > Az-Geocaching mailing list listserv@azgeocaching.com > > To edit your setting, subscribe or unsubscribe visit: > > http://listserv.azgeocaching.com/mailman/listinfo/az-geocaching > > > > Arizona's Geocaching Resource > > http://www.azgeocaching.com > > > > Jim Scotti > Lunar & Planetary Laboratory > University of Arizona > Tucson, AZ 85721 USA http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~jscotti/ > > ____________________________________________________________ > Az-Geocaching mailing list listserv@azgeocaching.com > To edit your setting, subscribe or unsubscribe visit: > http://listserv.azgeocaching.com/mailman/listinfo/az-geocaching > > Arizona's Geocaching Resource > http://www.azgeocaching.com