My new hosting domain is now setup (or at least i've got it up and running - i'll never be finished setting it up :-) and MovableType is running, so welcome to my new MT blog. Please use this URL from now on : http://blog.ewanscorner.com/, and update your RSS / ATOM feeds please :-)
I've imported all my old Blogger posts (i'm not happy with the formatting, but that's an issue for another day) - so thanks for all the good times Blogger, and hats off to you Pyra, but it's time to move on. Using the default template for now, until i have enough spare time to design my own...
And in the news, the Huygens probe - with any luck - lands on Saturn's fascinating moon Titan today! We live in exciting times :-) See the ESA timeline for details, but in my timezone (SAT, GMT+2) it looks like this:
- 07h51 - electronics on, transmitter on in low-power mode
- 12h13 - technical entry into Titan's atmosphere begins (1270 km up)
- 12h17 - pilot parachute deploys, rear cover released shortly afterwards (should be 180 km up, moving at under 400 m/s)
- 12h18 - Front shield released, Huygens begins transmitting to Cassini (about 160 km above the surface of Titan). First images and data recorded.
- 12h32 - main parachute separates, drogue chute deploys. Tons of data being captured :-)
- 12h49 - Surface proximity sensor activated - Huygens should now be able to tell it's distance from the surface (around 60 km) via radar, as well as it's spin rate. Timing gets fuzzy from here on.
- 13h57 - Begins sampling atmosphere using the Gas Chromatograph Mass Spectrometer. Descent should take 137 minutes (+-15 minutes) in total. Cameras and instruments should see the entire panorama as the probe rotates.
- 14h30 - Main camera activates a light - the Spectral Radiometer lamp.
- 14h34-ish - touchdown (or splashdown) at around 5 m/s (ouch). Surface Science Package captures as much data as possible in the remaining 3 minutes of battery life.
- 16h44 - Huygens landing site drops below horison for Cassini, and no more data can be received by Cassini. EOM.
- 17h14 - Cassini turns high gain antenna to Earth, and begins transmitting data. World listens carefully for repeated data.
I'm holding thumbs that Huygens has better luck than the ill-fated Beagle did on Mars.
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