The Toughest Space Probe Ever - How NASA Dropped A Probe Into Jupiter

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Scott Manley

Scott Manley

Күн бұрын

The Galileo mission to Jupiter featured a space probe which would be dropped into the atmosphere of Jupiter. Because of this planet's gravity the atmosphere probe would experience conditions that no other spacecraft has seen. Entry velocities 7 times faster than those experiences by humans returning from orbit, massively higher temperatures and head fluxes, and no way to test the system fully on Earth.
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Пікірлер: 234
@marcusalexander7088
@marcusalexander7088 17 сағат бұрын
20 GIGAWATTS??! You can run 16 Deloreans with that!
@KeplarDesign
@KeplarDesign 17 сағат бұрын
No my friend, that's Jigawats ur talking about
@BenjySparky
@BenjySparky 17 сағат бұрын
1.21
@juhajuntunen7866
@juhajuntunen7866 17 сағат бұрын
Did it go backward in time to dinosaur era?
@penultimateh766
@penultimateh766 16 сағат бұрын
Actually only 16.52 DeLorean.
@RCAvhstape
@RCAvhstape 16 сағат бұрын
Extra points for doing some math on this joke.
@jajssblue
@jajssblue 16 сағат бұрын
My Thermodynamics Professor worked at JPL and helped to do the primary calculations for this heat shield. His name is Richard Passamaneck and he worked at Colorado School of Mines later in life. He had some fun stories on how hard it was to model the entry and the margins involved. He did a lot of really interesting things in his life and I was glad to learn from him. I wish I had thought to try to connect him with Scott, but I didn't think of it until after he passed in 2020.
@samuelscott-wildman5191
@samuelscott-wildman5191 15 сағат бұрын
That’s awesome
@CumulusGranitis
@CumulusGranitis 14 сағат бұрын
Thank for that interesting piece of personal history. Getting study under the gentleman who worked on Galileo probe heat shield was a great learning opportunity.
@jajssblue
@jajssblue 14 сағат бұрын
@@CumulusGranitis Yeah, it was great! The guy was a multi-domain genius and easy to learn from. Thermodynamics has a tough reputation that is well deserved, but I took well to it in his class, which I credit to his teaching style. Same with fluids, which I found to actually be harder. Lol.
@holo_val
@holo_val 17 сағат бұрын
10/10 video, I have always been fascinated by the scientific probe missions through-out history more than any any other kinds of launches. The idea of bits and pieces of spacecraft scattered about the solar system and space for the sole mission of measuring little bits of temperatures and gases to discover the universe always feels so heroic and inspiring.
@ebrombaugh
@ebrombaugh 16 сағат бұрын
One of my colleagues at a job back in the 1990s had worked at JPL prior and designed the demodulator that received the probe data on the mothership before it was stored on tape and forwarded to Earth. He had some stories to tell about the challenges that posed. We congratulated him when word came back that it had worked successfully.
@thomas.deliot
@thomas.deliot 17 сағат бұрын
Absolutely love these deep dives into nasa exploration missions ! Thanks Scott :)
@snickers10m
@snickers10m 13 сағат бұрын
The news videos are great but the level of detail he gives in these ones is very inspiring
@Miata822
@Miata822 16 сағат бұрын
... and the Jovian population still talk today about that mysterious spy drone.
@adamb8317
@adamb8317 13 сағат бұрын
It’s hard to imagine a creature that could survive the pressure required to solidify elemental hydrogen
@PortRhouse
@PortRhouse 16 сағат бұрын
“Quoted at reaching Mach 50….” Holy crap that is *screaming* “….which made it sound way slower than it actually was.” 🤯
@AluminumOxide
@AluminumOxide 16 сағат бұрын
230 g of deceleration is roughly 2.3x more intense than the deceleration in a typical car crash, except a car crash only lasts a split second. That Jupiter Armospheric Probe had to wistand car-crash deceleration for tens of seconds!
@QuantumHistorian
@QuantumHistorian 14 сағат бұрын
That's an amazing way to put it into context. Crashing a car into a wall continuously for a minute.
@rnbdc
@rnbdc 14 сағат бұрын
Yah but we have smart 155mm ammunition (quite big) that has electronics, GPS, actuators for orientation, etc... and survives lunch at thousands of Gs from a howitzer. So it's impressive, but not that much.
@tinysim
@tinysim 13 сағат бұрын
@@rnbdc I was thinking the same thing. They even had proximity fuses with vacuum tubes developed during WWII that survived canon fire.
@RCAvhstape
@RCAvhstape 17 сағат бұрын
So in the end Jupiter basically ate the probe and digested it.
@rogerreger9631
@rogerreger9631 16 сағат бұрын
And gave us a bad yelp review. *sad face*
@galliumgames3962
@galliumgames3962 17 сағат бұрын
20 GW is the equivalent of the entire electrical grid in a medium-sized country, wow.
@jakistam1000
@jakistam1000 16 сағат бұрын
Also, 30 kW/cm^2... I mean, that's insane
@Inkerflargin
@Inkerflargin 14 сағат бұрын
Where did it get that much power to dissipate when presumably the rocket launching it didn't have the power of a medium sized country?
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
@@InkerflarginThat power came from Jupiter sweeping the Probe up into its atmosphere at Jupiter’s orbital velocity. The Probe was effectively standing still in space when Jupiter ‘arrived.’
@bearlemley
@bearlemley 13 сағат бұрын
@@jakistam1000 And 250g’ for an hour!
@-snyslyk-5678
@-snyslyk-5678 17 сағат бұрын
About the atmosphere on other planets - today is 40 years since the launch of the Soviet probe "Nova-1" to Venus! It had a balloon probe that separated at an altitude of 55 km from the surface.
@patrickchase5614
@patrickchase5614 16 сағат бұрын
wrt "Apparently the test system was miswired exactly the same way" at ~14:50... That is a very, very common problem in all aspects of engineering. I like to call it "incestuous testing" i.e. the test and associated fixtures share the same defective DNA (in the form of bad design assumptions) as the real system. It's especially common when the system under test and the test are implemented by the same individual or team, without any external review. They just reinforce their own mistakes instead of finding them. That is exactly why we do integration testing, where we confirm that entire systems behave as expected instead of just testing individual parts. In this case if the computer had been exercised as part of the centrifuge test then the fact that it was interpreting the high- and low-G sensors in reverse would have been easily detected.
@AndrewBlucher
@AndrewBlucher 14 сағат бұрын
This retired IT guy totally agrees!
@Celestial.132
@Celestial.132 15 сағат бұрын
"Mach 50, which makes it sound way slower than it was" this is the only context in which mach 50 could possibly be slow
@T.h.e__T.r.u.t.h
@T.h.e__T.r.u.t.h 15 сағат бұрын
The nasa tv channel needs to hire you to make programming approachable and understandable now, not saying they dont already do that yet you bring so much more to the table and i thank you for the years of enjoyable content
@davidgunther8428
@davidgunther8428 15 сағат бұрын
The data rate from Galileo was tragic. I'm glad it sent the data it did.
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
The original mission design had Galileo collecting data on its flybys and transmitting that data ‘burstily’ to Earth on its subsequent ‘long orbit’ to the next flyby. With the datarate limited to 10 bps (160 bps max) the Orbiter continuously transmitted data from the previous flyby up until preparations for the next flyby began. In addition to scientists learning to very effectively prioritize which data would be returned first, on-board editing and compression software was added. These improvements greatly increased GLL’s data return. The biggest loss was to long-term monitoring of Jupiter’s weather. No getting around needing lots of pictures for that. These techniques were propagated to future (non-‘crippled’) missions to greatly improve data return volume and efficiency.
@robinseibel7540
@robinseibel7540 13 сағат бұрын
Tragic, yes, but still more reliable than 9.6k dial-up via AOL.
@TreeCutterDoug
@TreeCutterDoug 16 сағат бұрын
What a deep dive! Amazing to think this was possible with the computing power available at the time... It really says a lot about the talent, brilliance and determination of the people that made it happen.
@AndrewBlucher
@AndrewBlucher 13 сағат бұрын
Oh, excellent pun!
@NoPegs
@NoPegs 17 сағат бұрын
WoopWoop! Spacecraft Sunday with Scott! =3
@Megaddd07
@Megaddd07 16 сағат бұрын
Another excellent video from Scott
@GlutenEruption
@GlutenEruption 15 сағат бұрын
Mindblowingly cool to think that a few man made diamond windows may well be lying intact on the surface of Jupiters metallic hydrogen core to this day 🤯
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
There was actually a much more serious problem than the ’snot’ on the dummy erase head discovered when the spare DMS (Data Management Subsystem - in the GLL Testbed failed a few hours after the flight problem. An LED used to detect End-of-Tape failed, allowing the clear leader at the end of the tape to travel through the mechanism to trip the beginning-of-tape sensor, locking the tape irretrievably at EOT. Opening the spare DMS to fix this issue allowed engineers Greg Levanas and Mike Johnson to diagnose the stuck tape issue and determine that the tape was almost certainly intact. Later we advanced the tape, demonstrating that it was in fact intact, and then wrapped up the potentially weakened spot in 25 wraps of tape to protect it. That plus the LED issue meant that we could not go to either end of the tape again. The software in the flight computer was modified to only move in playback mode and look for data patterns saved to the tape. These patterns became the new Beginning- and End-of-Tape markers, referred to as ‘New BOT’ and ‘New EOT.’
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
Imaginatively.
@KevinBalch-dt8ot
@KevinBalch-dt8ot 17 сағат бұрын
The novel “2001: A Space Odyssey” had a probe that fell through Jupiter’s atmosphere on a parachute but it also had a camera.
@patrickf.4440
@patrickf.4440 15 сағат бұрын
Though it may have had only a limited amount of time to function and be able to show anything (given clouds/clear areas/clouds, etc) a camera would have been nice. One lesson NASA/JPL seemed to have learned here was that all future spacecraft will definitely have cameras on them so that taxpayers will have cool visuals besides all the data.
@teeteetuu94
@teeteetuu94 14 сағат бұрын
@@patrickf.4440 Seeing how far tech and science advancement have come decades since this mission, I think it's safe to say it is feasible even with current technology.
@salty_berserker_channel
@salty_berserker_channel 14 сағат бұрын
Fantastic video Scott 🎉
@bernhardjordan9200
@bernhardjordan9200 16 сағат бұрын
That's a slower bitrate than a telegraph
@jasonlockhart4647
@jasonlockhart4647 16 сағат бұрын
Wonderful video scott
@Kostas1983
@Kostas1983 17 сағат бұрын
Hilarious. I was listening to a conversation about hypersonic flight and I wondered about the speed of the Galileo probe so I googled it five minutes ago. Then this drops...
@Nilguiri
@Nilguiri 17 сағат бұрын
¿Coincidence? Yes.
@giovannifoulmouth7205
@giovannifoulmouth7205 17 сағат бұрын
Now NASA must build a probe for Uranus! and it has to go deep!
@taras3702
@taras3702 15 сағат бұрын
I'm afraid most porn stars are way ahead of you there.....😂
@markholm7050
@markholm7050 16 сағат бұрын
I am ashamed to admit I had forgotten about the Galileo entry probe. Thank you for this excellent video.
@druspork7737
@druspork7737 14 сағат бұрын
Well that was fascinating. Cheers Scott.
@marcusalexander7088
@marcusalexander7088 17 сағат бұрын
Merry Christmas Scott and family.
@AndrewBlucher
@AndrewBlucher 13 сағат бұрын
Thanks Scott. So many details that we didn't hear about at the time. I think you've outdone yourself on this one :-)
@nopetuber
@nopetuber 16 сағат бұрын
Really heartbreaking how Galileo couldn't deploy its high gain antenna!
@beakytwitch7905
@beakytwitch7905 14 сағат бұрын
Awesome report. Thank you ! 😊
@NaRoonStarrider
@NaRoonStarrider 16 сағат бұрын
Nice vod Scott learned something new that I did not know about that mission.
@danielwalker5682
@danielwalker5682 16 сағат бұрын
Great documentary.
@YippyKiYay
@YippyKiYay 17 сағат бұрын
Amazing story telling 👏
@AntonioGarcia-ti9wc
@AntonioGarcia-ti9wc 16 сағат бұрын
Awesome, one of your best videos! Thank you!
@sebastianweise4790
@sebastianweise4790 14 сағат бұрын
Love that kind of stuff on a sunday late evening, thanks for this gem Scott! ❤😅
@paulbolus9399
@paulbolus9399 16 сағат бұрын
Thank you Scott!
@AIJenkins
@AIJenkins 14 сағат бұрын
Fascinating story, well done Scott. What an amazing journey and certainly a feat of engineering history. Thank you for making my day! 🚀
@ChristopherDoll
@ChristopherDoll 15 сағат бұрын
It makes me happy to think the diamond lens bits made it that far down into Jupiter. Very cool
@Turbo495
@Turbo495 15 сағат бұрын
I was born in 98 so I really appreciate you covering this. As always thanks for all the content!
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
The story was that the test harness for the centrifuge test was built by the same people who built the flight harness, from the same drawings so the same error was made, cancelling out the reversed Hi-G and Low-G signals. Lesson learned. I am glad Scott covered this error. I looked for documentation of it years later and found it had been effectively suppressed. As engineers we only learn from our mistakes if we share them.
@ericfielding2540
@ericfielding2540 16 сағат бұрын
Great explanation as usual. I was only a little surprised that Scott did not mention that the Galileo spacecraft and probe were built at JPL for NASA.
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
The Galileo Probe was built by the Hughes Aircraft Company under contract with the NASA Ames Research Center (Mountain View, California). My first flight activity (and first as lead) was to get the Probe released from the Galileo Orbiter, unblocking the 400 N main engine to allow the Orbiter Deflection Maneuver to get the Orbiter off its collision course with Jupiter and onto its orbital insertion trajectory. My office was also right next to the Probe Team’s offices at JPL, so I had many interesting interactions with them Bryon job-related ones. One of my most treasured mementos from my time at JPL is a special Probe Team pin that only very few were issued. RIP Pat Amelia, it was wonderful working with you.
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
… beyond job related ones…
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 14 сағат бұрын
Pat(rick) _Melia_
@KOZMOuvBORG
@KOZMOuvBORG 14 сағат бұрын
14:59 reminds me of the origin of Murphy's Law. There was a rocket sled experiment being done at Muroc/Edward's AFB where someone wired all the accerometers the wrong way, giving no results and the namesake engineer quipped "If Anything can Go Wrong, It Will".
@Tamburello_1994
@Tamburello_1994 16 сағат бұрын
VGER lives.
@mamulcahy
@mamulcahy 16 сағат бұрын
Incredible technology! Thanks for sharing!
@Jack_Rabbit71
@Jack_Rabbit71 13 сағат бұрын
Gotta love that Stella 90's caterpillar Stach in the build room!
@CumulusGranitis
@CumulusGranitis 14 сағат бұрын
Very nice deep dive into how Jupiter Atmospheric probe, (dropped off by Galileo as it approached Jupiter orbit insertion), survived Jupiter Entry and then what scientific data it gathered before reached "crush depth" at 24 bars pressure and imploded.
@3800S1
@3800S1 14 сағат бұрын
Finally! I've been waiting for a video on this. Info on the atmospheric probe is sparse at best and most of it exists as the original papers and jpl website from 1995 which has not changed for all these decades.
@pipcopur
@pipcopur 15 сағат бұрын
Thanks for this, always been interested in the Galileo mission. RIP Bill O’Neil, Ed Stone and the others involved in the mission who are no longer with us.
@fredfred2363
@fredfred2363 14 сағат бұрын
That is crazy Gs. To even design wiring would be so difficult. Interesting video. 👍🏻🇬🇧
@mikeissweet
@mikeissweet 13 сағат бұрын
Simply incredible 😮
@redcirclesilverx4586
@redcirclesilverx4586 13 сағат бұрын
Thanks Scott, I was a bit to young to remember this time but I absolutely remember learning about Allan hills worm rock and then spent my high school time painting a sojourner panoramic for school after I printed out every image from the panoramic camera and decorated the walls of my bedroom with it.😂
@vendasch666
@vendasch666 17 сағат бұрын
Everything was given us so simply I never realised how many problems did they have to overcome to push us a bit further as a humanity.
@dvdschaub
@dvdschaub 17 сағат бұрын
Outstanding!
@dizbeliefdanbackhouse5807
@dizbeliefdanbackhouse5807 15 сағат бұрын
It's crazy how they could do that back then, imagine what there must be not tech wise. Thanks Scott 💚
@BenjySparky
@BenjySparky 17 сағат бұрын
Scott, you rock! Peace 🤘
@dakotamiller323
@dakotamiller323 17 сағат бұрын
My mentor professor Dr Eric Klumpe worked as an engineer on Galileo!
@nagjrcjasonbower
@nagjrcjasonbower 17 сағат бұрын
Nice!!! Keep it up! 🖖
@General12th
@General12th 16 сағат бұрын
Hi Scott! Fly safe! Doesn't radiative heating grow much faster with velocity than compression heating? How did the probe's retrograde side not melt under the plasma glow?
@illygah
@illygah 13 сағат бұрын
big fan of the new outro
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 14 сағат бұрын
The atmospheric-probe wasn't crushed by Jupiter's atmosphere, Scott, as it had pressure-equalising valves, the probe instead was cooked as it descended into the hotter, deeper layers before then melting and finally vaporising.
@taras3702
@taras3702 15 сағат бұрын
During peak heating and declaration, the heat shield reached temperatures high enough to emit X-rays. In short, the entry probe survived what amounts to a massive nuclear explosion before the parachute deployed and the heat shield was jettisoned. The heat shield turned out to have been barely adequate to protect the probe as two thirds of it burned away during entry.
@davesatxify
@davesatxify 16 сағат бұрын
Poetry. sheer poetry. of course the first time i typed that it came out Peotry.. lol. thanks Scott
@Kazick228
@Kazick228 15 сағат бұрын
I always see models of Galileo with the antenna jammed, makes sense as it was jammed. But I noticed now part of the dish has a dent in it. I wonder if that was part of the design or something else.
@josh3771
@josh3771 14 сағат бұрын
JPL has the most incredible people and engineering
@vovochen
@vovochen 14 сағат бұрын
Wow. Awe inspiring. I ceel a call towards JPL.
@Rebar77_real
@Rebar77_real 15 сағат бұрын
Very cool!
@itburnswhenip
@itburnswhenip 17 сағат бұрын
KSP > KSP2
@salty_berserker_channel
@salty_berserker_channel 14 сағат бұрын
It's interesting that what is now becoming the bottleneck of manned interplanetary travel is heat shields. This is a good sign. The delta v problems to go interplanetary are currently being addressed successfully.
@gustavgans6075
@gustavgans6075 17 сағат бұрын
Wouldnt the unsymmetrical antenna cause vibrations and make Imaging impossible?
@ururualeksi5082
@ururualeksi5082 14 сағат бұрын
It was probably balanced by something inside
@Gregory_Laborde
@Gregory_Laborde 13 сағат бұрын
The camera was on the despun side, thus stabilized for imaging. The asymmetrical antenna was pretty low-mass, and the CG of the Orbiter could be adjusted by moving the RTGs (which were _not_ low-mass) in or out using actuators. Interestingly, the mass properties of the Probe had been recorded somewhere and lost, making it impossible to determine the exact positions of the RTGs to be used during the Release (to avoid bumping the Probe as it departed the ‘throat’ of the Orbiter.) Lots of analysis ensued (mass properties of the Orbiter were not lost and the combined performance was well characterized) and reasonable RTG positions selected. Following Release the RTGs were repositioned again (for the last time?) to adjust the CG of the now Probe-less Orbiter.
@blazingdisciple4070
@blazingdisciple4070 13 сағат бұрын
What song is playing at the end of your videos? I can't find it anywhere!
@sebastiaomendonca1477
@sebastiaomendonca1477 14 сағат бұрын
I would give anything to see what that re-entry looked like from up close. Can you imagine the plasma?
@ondrejdvorak5107
@ondrejdvorak5107 16 сағат бұрын
250 G? how does crew handle that?
@KevinBalch-dt8ot
@KevinBalch-dt8ot 17 сағат бұрын
How much did the asymmetry of the under-deployed antenna affect the spin stabilization?
@DosGamerMan
@DosGamerMan 17 сағат бұрын
Changes in the supply chain? So no more asbestos is available?
@ChuckSwiger
@ChuckSwiger 14 сағат бұрын
g-switches - perfect example of Murphy's law.
@RaimarLunardi
@RaimarLunardi 13 сағат бұрын
wait, how Jupiter migrated inwards and why or did it stop???
@Videoman2000
@Videoman2000 13 сағат бұрын
If you ever read the the 2001: Space Odyssey book, they describe such a mission there.
@HensleyTG
@HensleyTG 17 сағат бұрын
Cool video 📸
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 13 сағат бұрын
Given how Jupiter's interior is in regards to the atmospheric-probe's fate the end of this video should be "I'm Scott Manley, fry safe"😉😁😈.
@hyperturbotechnomike
@hyperturbotechnomike 17 сағат бұрын
I always thought Venera was the toughest. Never knew about the jupiter one before.
@clippership8381
@clippership8381 13 сағат бұрын
Smart Guys on that heatshield. BTW I'm looking forward to a video on the lost Intelsat in GEO in Oct 2024
@arcitejack
@arcitejack 16 сағат бұрын
Did we not name the probe??
@vaughnuhden
@vaughnuhden 16 сағат бұрын
Could we catch some or all that energy while descending through the atmosphere?
@davidjernigan8161
@davidjernigan8161 14 сағат бұрын
There's probably a few chemicals and materials that were used in the Apollo heat shield that are no longer available
@graemepennell
@graemepennell 17 сағат бұрын
20 gigawatts.... 20 gigawatts..... Great scot.... We needed 1.21 for time travel!!!!
@crackedemerald4930
@crackedemerald4930 16 сағат бұрын
how does the probe get crushed? do the instruments and the probe itself all have sealed internal volumes to crush? why couldn't they leave then open or have them open so the pressure equalizes?
@olasek7972
@olasek7972 15 сағат бұрын
Clearly scientific instruments, data transmitters can’t be vented so something must be sealed… you can get pressure to equalize but then you aren’t getting any useful data, plus this isn’t just pressure, forgot about the temperature 😂
@joshzwies3601
@joshzwies3601 14 сағат бұрын
Have you read the space opera Saga of Seven Suns? The opening scene in the first book is about turning gas giants into artificial stars.
@Spedley_2142
@Spedley_2142 16 сағат бұрын
Is there anything left of the probe? Could you go and get the remains or has it dissolved/melted away?
@Jay-cf6dz
@Jay-cf6dz 16 сағат бұрын
Just like your brain, it melted away
@olasek7972
@olasek7972 16 сағат бұрын
think harder 😮
@Spedley_2142
@Spedley_2142 15 сағат бұрын
@@Jay-cf6dz Shouldn't you be busy on Twitter?
@FrisoGorter
@FrisoGorter 15 сағат бұрын
That "hole in the clouds" was nearly the size of our planet at the time.
@Willbrse
@Willbrse 17 сағат бұрын
230g? Kenny Brack be like "hold my beer"
@yes_head
@yes_head 16 сағат бұрын
Sounds like 'the little probe that... sorta could.'
@thomasafb
@thomasafb 14 сағат бұрын
and years later, the spacecraft followed its probe into Jupiter
@nickashton3584
@nickashton3584 15 сағат бұрын
love it
@maksymilianpasternak8529
@maksymilianpasternak8529 16 сағат бұрын
Video length: 21:37 Me: Coincidence? I THINK NOT!
@mccpcorn2000
@mccpcorn2000 16 сағат бұрын
Note to NASA: Next time you do something like this, stick a camera on it!
@olasek7972
@olasek7972 16 сағат бұрын
with 128 bits/second scientific data was far more important than any photos that would probably be not very exciting to begin with
@mrmadmaxalot
@mrmadmaxalot 16 сағат бұрын
Was thinking this myself. The tech has progressed so much that we almost certainly would if it were designed today.
@ImieNazwiskoOK
@ImieNazwiskoOK 13 сағат бұрын
Aside from what the first person said, honestly I feel like there wouldn't be that much to see. Aside from reentry (for which the camera would probably need some special protection at the very least from the light alone) it's just going down into the atmosphere.
@applicablerobot
@applicablerobot 14 сағат бұрын
New outro music? No no no no no
@MrEricmopar
@MrEricmopar 16 сағат бұрын
Am I the only one that started playing The Blue Danube in my head, during the spin stabilized segment? 🙂
@GerardStainsby-s4s
@GerardStainsby-s4s 13 сағат бұрын
The random loose particles shown at the probe separation should have straight paths (with, of course, their individual rotations, presumably too small to see at the given scale) rather than the spirals shown... 😉
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