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July 2, 2008: Mars Plane
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2007? Did they do it? Does mars have enough atmosphere for those wings to support it? Could that delicate design stand up to being dropped onto Mars? Did they launch it from the spaceship? I want answers, damnit. :eyebrow: |
I've seen this speculated about years ago, but NASA must have not pursued it. It probably would fly, with significantly less gravity on mars. I think wind shear would destroy it though.
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Yes, yes, but will they charge for an extra bag?
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And aren't the ongoing dust storms on Mars significant enough to either knock it down or block the solar power? But it might work here. I'm willing to accept delivery of one [no charge, of course] and experiment with it, especially if it can be reconfigured to strafe squirrels.
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I know it's all computers these days, but I find it amazing that they made a model in Earth's atmosphere with Earth's strong sunlight, got it to fly here, and based on the testing here, they are certain it would work in Mars's atmosphere with its dimmer sun.
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You've seen the Mars plane. Here's the Mars with nuts.
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You mean :alien: :alien: :alien: ? |
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In the movie "Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control" a scientist/inventor type suggested sending hundreds of these little mini rovers to mars which would swarm all over the planet sending info back to the mother ship where it would be relayed. The cost was a fraction of what a larger module would be and the amount of data collected would be hundreds of times greater but NASA couldn't quite wrap their heads around a new paradigm like that.
Great movie, btw. |
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I'm less concerned about the longevity of such an aircraft. What I want to know is...how the fuck will they get it into the air? Are they going to build a lander with a big slingshot on it?
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