CAPSLOCKSTUCK
Spaced Out Lunar Tick
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2013
- Messages
- 8,578 (1.97/day)
- Location
- llaregguB...WALES
System Name | Party On |
---|---|
Processor | Xeon w 3520 |
Motherboard | DFI Lanparty |
Cooling | Big tower thing |
Memory | 6 gb Ballistix Tracer |
Video Card(s) | HD 7970 |
Case | a plank of wood |
Audio Device(s) | seperate amp and 6 big speakers |
Power Supply | Corsair |
Mouse | cheap |
Keyboard | under going restoration |
The build up has started (for me) and yes i get excited by stuff like this.
Nasa reveals new images of Pluto's four 'alien black spots' as it says New Horizons probe is back in action
The spacecraft entered ‘safe mode’, cutting contact with the Earth over the weekend, due to a timing flaw as it performed operations ahead of its fly past Pluto next week.
Scientists leading the mission say they hope to return the space probe to full operation by Tuesday and the mission to fly within 7,750 miles (12,500km) of Pluto on July 14 will go ahead as planned
'The computer was trying to do two things at the same time, and the two were more than the processor could handle at the same time, so the processor overloaded,' said Nasa's Glen Fountain, explaining the loss of contact.
'We knew it would take about an hour for the spacecraft to transmit to Earth from the backup computer.
'We started looking for signal on backup side, and found it when expected.
'We looked at data, figured out what was happening, and started to put a plan in place to recover.
The space agency released these never before seen images of the dwarf planet, the last taken before the team lost contact.
'These are the most recent high-resolution views of Pluto sent by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft, including one showing the four mysterious dark spots on Pluto that have captured the imagination of the world,' Nasa said before the briefing on the mission.
The Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) obtained these three images between July 1 and 3 of 2015, prior to the July 4 anomaly that sent New Horizons into safe mode.
The left image shows, on the right side of the disk, a large bright area on the hemisphere of Pluto that will be seen in close-up by New Horizons on July 14.
The three images together show the full extent of a continuous swath of dark terrain that wraps around much of Pluto’s equatorial region.
The western end of the swath (right image) breaks up into a series of striking dark regularly-spaced spots, each hundreds of miles in size, which were first detected in New Horizons images taken in late June.
Intriguing details are beginning to emerge in the bright material north of the dark region, in particular a series of bright and dark patches that are conspicuous just below the center of the disk in the right image.
In all three black-and-white views, the apparent jagged bottom edge of Pluto is the result of image processing. The inset shows Pluto’s orientation, illustrating its north pole, equator, and central meridian running from pole to pole.
The colour version of the July 3 LORRI image was created by adding color data from the Ralph instrument gathered earlier in the mission.
The left image shows, on the right side of the disk, a large bright area on the hemisphere of Pluto that will be seen in close-up by New Horizons on July 14.
The three images together show the full extent of a continuous swath of dark terrain that wraps around much of Pluto’s equatorial region.
The western end of the swath (right image) breaks up into a series of striking dark regularly-spaced spots, each hundreds of miles in size, which were first detected in New Horizons images taken in late June.
Intriguing details are beginning to emerge in the bright material north of the dark region, in particular a series of bright and dark patches that are conspicuous just below the center of the disk in the right image.
In all three black-and-white views, the apparent jagged bottom edge of Pluto is the result of image processing. The inset shows Pluto’s orientation, illustrating its north pole, equator, and central meridian running from pole to pole.
The colour version of the July 3 LORRI image was created by adding color data from the Ralph instrument gathered earlier in the mission.
Nasa reveals new images of Pluto's four 'alien black spots' as it says New Horizons probe is back in action
- Nasa lost touch with the space probe for 89 minutes on Saturday 4 July
- New Horizons' autopilot put spacecraft's main computer into 'safe mode'
- Scientists leading the mission hope to have it fully operation by 7 July
- New Horizons is due to be the first spacecraft to fly past Pluto on July 14
The spacecraft entered ‘safe mode’, cutting contact with the Earth over the weekend, due to a timing flaw as it performed operations ahead of its fly past Pluto next week.
Scientists leading the mission say they hope to return the space probe to full operation by Tuesday and the mission to fly within 7,750 miles (12,500km) of Pluto on July 14 will go ahead as planned
'The computer was trying to do two things at the same time, and the two were more than the processor could handle at the same time, so the processor overloaded,' said Nasa's Glen Fountain, explaining the loss of contact.
'We knew it would take about an hour for the spacecraft to transmit to Earth from the backup computer.
'We started looking for signal on backup side, and found it when expected.
'We looked at data, figured out what was happening, and started to put a plan in place to recover.
The space agency released these never before seen images of the dwarf planet, the last taken before the team lost contact.
'These are the most recent high-resolution views of Pluto sent by NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft, including one showing the four mysterious dark spots on Pluto that have captured the imagination of the world,' Nasa said before the briefing on the mission.
The Long Range Reconnaissance Imager (LORRI) obtained these three images between July 1 and 3 of 2015, prior to the July 4 anomaly that sent New Horizons into safe mode.
The left image shows, on the right side of the disk, a large bright area on the hemisphere of Pluto that will be seen in close-up by New Horizons on July 14.
The three images together show the full extent of a continuous swath of dark terrain that wraps around much of Pluto’s equatorial region.
The western end of the swath (right image) breaks up into a series of striking dark regularly-spaced spots, each hundreds of miles in size, which were first detected in New Horizons images taken in late June.
Intriguing details are beginning to emerge in the bright material north of the dark region, in particular a series of bright and dark patches that are conspicuous just below the center of the disk in the right image.
In all three black-and-white views, the apparent jagged bottom edge of Pluto is the result of image processing. The inset shows Pluto’s orientation, illustrating its north pole, equator, and central meridian running from pole to pole.
The colour version of the July 3 LORRI image was created by adding color data from the Ralph instrument gathered earlier in the mission.
The left image shows, on the right side of the disk, a large bright area on the hemisphere of Pluto that will be seen in close-up by New Horizons on July 14.
The three images together show the full extent of a continuous swath of dark terrain that wraps around much of Pluto’s equatorial region.
The western end of the swath (right image) breaks up into a series of striking dark regularly-spaced spots, each hundreds of miles in size, which were first detected in New Horizons images taken in late June.
Intriguing details are beginning to emerge in the bright material north of the dark region, in particular a series of bright and dark patches that are conspicuous just below the center of the disk in the right image.
In all three black-and-white views, the apparent jagged bottom edge of Pluto is the result of image processing. The inset shows Pluto’s orientation, illustrating its north pole, equator, and central meridian running from pole to pole.
The colour version of the July 3 LORRI image was created by adding color data from the Ralph instrument gathered earlier in the mission.