I'm glad to see that someone else is willing to just be honest and accept the universe for what it is instead of making up stories and pretending to know things that he cannot possibly know. Thanks for the comment!
As just an observer of science & not an expert this is very difficult to get my head around.It is truely amazing & proves to me that science is the answer & the way forward.I feel science should never take itself for granted but we should all embrace it.
This was an incredibly spectacular feat of engineering. Can only imagine the years of hard work and strenuous testing that went into this project. Its projects like these that fuel my lifelong dream for humanity to delve into space exploration. Thank you NASA!
So much progress since the first ever landing on Mars by the Soviet Union in 1971 (Mars Lander) to the US doing it in 1976 (Viking mission) and now this. Inspiring.
NASA remains grateful to Indian Space Agency for helping them with the mars mission which otherwise would have remained a distant dream. NASA looks forward working under the guidance of Indian Space Agency for all their future endeavors.
I hope there is a way NASA can post video of the actual landing, I want to see what this looks like in "real time", the live video, this would be the BEST! Thanks for the great video and explanation!
Ingenuity t its best, this video answered all the questions I may have had on the steps taken to fight the difficulties of this scheme. Hoping for the best now ...
Hard work and perseverance from these scientists are the only thing that lead to the creation of this technology, i hope your not trying to give credit where credit isn't due
Oh man, terraforming? I have never heard of that before in my life and would have no idea that it could be more complicated than scattering acorns on the Martian surface. I'll have to look it up. Sounds like a great idea!
Can anybody explain how NASA shoots video of curiousity original landing from distance.As we see the above video from long distance.I think all these videos are animated.if not so please explain.
Does anyone know where this video was pulled from? Particularly the first part? I'm writing a research paper and would really like to cite this video but... I just don't think having the word "youtube" in a citation would go over well. Can anyone help me?
"It looks a little bit crazy" Yeah! It looks completely insane. It's like first gen Star Trek concepts, with effects designed by Spielberg before E.T. I can't wait to see what happens.I hope it works so that people won't complain about it's cost. The cost, crash or land, is entirely worth it.
It's an amazing technological achievement, even if it would crash. I mean, look at what humanity can now do! If the curiousity lands without any complications, and I think it will, this event, for me, will be equal to first man on the moon. I mean, I'm speechless.. Wow, just wow.. Beauty of science! Go CURIOUSITY!
I think the planet's surface was not as dense as Earth's, so when the ice melts at the poles, Mars surface soil immediately pervasive because of the scale of ice on the planet slightly. Maybe when NASA scientists make rain clouds with large scale will commemorate mars surface. If the method is carried out continuously so that the soil on the surface of Mars will gradually solid
So how big actually this rover is? Also it's so annoying that US use old imperial unit system and timezones not in UTC, now i must checking everything ;/..
You can contact the owner of this channel and if that doesn't work try downloading the video, change format to flv or any other such file type and you should be ok, it's a NASA video anyway, isn't it?
there has to be more than just a problem with dust forcing them to use the Sky Crain maneuver, I can think of at least 2 simpler ways of doing it to avoid dust and rocket gasses.
Yeah, it grinded my gears to see that "zero margin of error" like it's some kind of super magical power. Giving a real number, whether it's 0.000 1 or 0.000 001 margin of error would be a real information.
If they could have got the decent stage to land else where after it separated instead of impacting the surface, those resources could be used, could have a charging station for the rover among other things. Still an amazing achievement!
i think they have more objectives than that, ones that are undisclosed. they dont tell us everything, i mean it cant just be about finding water again on there. that mission is incredibly expensive for that. but either way ur right, totally awesome.
OK, it seems the heat shield will separate from the craft when it reaches speed below sound speed. It sounds so risky. Who's to say the shield will move away and not be "stuck" to the craft even thought it's set lose? Hence the radar won't work... scary.
actually later study indicated that even though it appears to be fossilized bacteria there are other naturalistic means by which the structures could have been formed, the most recent study indicates that the meteorite alone isn't sufficient evidence to suggest that there was early life on mars. On that note I'm hopeful that curiosity will find something and I'm pretty sure creationists will try to rationalize or dismiss any discovery.
That's what they said, but the real reason they went with this approach is to be more accurate with the landing site. But it did work, congratulations NASA!
don't get me wrong, the progress that mankind has made in the last fifty years is very exciting. and it's pretty awesome to watch a robot land on another planet, but I think the mission itself is moot at this point. if the planet was or wasn't habitable is irrelevent, the real question is can we utilize the resources and strip that planet clean as well. all I'm saying is put more effort into antigravity and then each mission would cost a lot less and be less risky. that is very sensible.
Yes, I use add-on to my browser that do it for me. For me (central Europe) it will be in 7:31 on Monday (7:31 UTC+1 / 06.05.2012).
I remember watching launch live from NASA TV. I hope everything goes well at landing also!!
Hopefully everything will work fine and we'll get a huge amount of information. Good luck Nasa!
8:16 Amazing
we all lucky to witness this.
I am so proud of what all of you have done. Look forward to the updates now that you've achieved this much!
Really hope Curiosity makes it onto the Martian surface safely.
hello from the future: it did
@@theastronerd4090 yep and its very dusty now and its brother the Perserverance and ingenuity is now on mars and landed safely
I bet people in egypt would love this place
Congratulations!!!! To all of the people who worked so hard to make it happen. Thank you! You are truly fantastic.
incredible! Hope the rover makes it tonight, i cannot wait!
I'm glad to see that someone else is willing to just be honest and accept the universe for what it is instead of making up stories and pretending to know things that he cannot possibly know. Thanks for the comment!
As just an observer of science & not an expert this is very difficult to get my head around.It is truely amazing & proves to me that science is the answer & the way forward.I feel science should never take itself for granted but we should all embrace it.
This was an incredibly spectacular feat of engineering. Can only imagine the years of hard work and strenuous testing that went into this project. Its projects like these that fuel my lifelong dream for humanity to delve into space exploration. Thank you NASA!
So much progress since the first ever landing on Mars by the Soviet Union in 1971 (Mars Lander) to the US doing it in 1976 (Viking mission) and now this. Inspiring.
NASA remains grateful to Indian Space Agency for helping them with the mars mission which otherwise would have remained a distant dream. NASA looks forward working under the guidance of Indian Space Agency for all their future endeavors.
two dislikes ??? how could you dislike this video this is history good job NASA this is something to be proud of!!!!
Wow, I am amazed at the trouble it takes to land just one ton on Mars. Such a challenge!
Thanks so much for posting this video in such a timely manor. Your the best.
Because this is the coolest thing to ever land on Mars, and how it lands is kind of crazy.
It's so incredible to think all these technology is available today. I love this stuff!
Good Luck! It is a miracle that we were given the ability to create such technology.
What a time to be alive!
The better time to be alive would be the era where humans make actual first contact with aliens.
To see these lies and how people blindly fallow them, Yeah, what a time!
best of luck Curiosity! we are eager to hear your reports!
Nothing would make me prouder in humanity than a joint effort to one day see a colony on Mars.
A triumph of human intelligence! I'm so proud of this accomplishment! These cannot be more exciting!
I hope there is a way NASA can post video of the actual landing, I want to see what this looks like in "real time", the live video, this would be the BEST! Thanks for the great video and explanation!
It's amazing what human brains can achieve! Well done Sirs & mdms
Congrads on the touch down can't wait to see more
wow beautiful Robot & leanding system are really beautiful,,,
does anybody know what time the landing is in south africa? i know we are +2 some times heard we run on GMT or SAST. even heard UTC?
Ingenuity t its best, this video answered all the questions I may have had on the steps taken to fight the difficulties of this scheme. Hoping for the best now ...
Oooh! The suspense is killing me!
I'm staying awake till I hear news that it touched down safely.
GOOD LUCK CURIOSITY!
and what's the source of energy that it will use? i mean i dont see a clear cells on this machine and i am just wondering
Could anyone say me the landing time for GMT+1 (Germany). Thanks alot.
Science 1
Supernatural thinking 0
Darkblade was consise and to the point. He / She was very direct and if you have any questions (assuming you don't have google) I'd be happy to help.
Hard work and perseverance from these scientists are the only thing that lead to the creation of this technology, i hope your not trying to give credit where credit isn't due
This is some exciting stuff! It's a shame it's not getting more attention. I sure hope GAIA gets more love when that launches.
what is the song used at 7:57 ? anyone know ? it sounds like a soundtrack of suspence thriller.
THANK YOU For posting this! My Mother will love it. :)
It actually says in the video, mars has an atmosphere, it is 100x thinner than outs but it's there.
Looking forward to what they find.
Oh man, terraforming? I have never heard of that before in my life and would have no idea that it could be more complicated than scattering acorns on the Martian surface. I'll have to look it up. Sounds like a great idea!
Well done NASA - "For all mankind"
Can anybody explain how NASA shoots video of curiousity original landing from distance.As we see the above video from long distance.I think all these videos are animated.if not so please explain.
Does anyone know where this video was pulled from? Particularly the first part? I'm writing a research paper and would really like to cite this video but... I just don't think having the word "youtube" in a citation would go over well. Can anyone help me?
Good luck. It's complex but hope it makes it.
Thanks for upload
"It looks a little bit crazy"
Yeah! It looks completely insane. It's like first gen Star Trek concepts, with effects designed by Spielberg before E.T.
I can't wait to see what happens.I hope it works so that people won't complain about it's cost. The cost, crash or land, is entirely worth it.
You indeed great oh God for having given such knowledge to explore the space and the celestial bodies you created by the word of your mouth.
its around 8 in the morning 8:17 on mars and about 8:31 till the signal gets to earth what i got from Ursa Astronomical Association news post on it.
Very cool video!!!
It's an amazing technological achievement, even if it would crash. I mean, look at what humanity can now do! If the curiousity lands without any complications, and I think it will, this event, for me, will be equal to first man on the moon. I mean, I'm speechless.. Wow, just wow.. Beauty of science! Go CURIOUSITY!
with the curent climate on mars its almost imposible for and eart plant to survive on mars but bio engeniring might help with thath
I think the planet's surface was not as dense as Earth's, so when the ice melts at the poles, Mars surface soil immediately pervasive because of the scale of ice on the planet slightly.
Maybe when NASA scientists make rain clouds with large scale will commemorate mars surface. If the method is carried out continuously so that the soil on the surface of Mars will gradually solid
i wanna know when it lands !
Congratulations!
Sa parachute sur mars ❓🤔❓
so much can go wrong with this landing, I hope everything goes well!
Does the law of falling bodies applies on mars? I saw that heat shield fall faster than the whole thing
@Ocrami08 danke hm da sitz ich noch im Bus ^^ - gibt's auch einen Liveticker oder einen Link zu deinem besagten Stream :)?
Safe landing curiosity.
Long life the sciences.
Good luck.
So how big actually this rover is? Also it's so annoying that US use old imperial unit system and timezones not in UTC, now i must checking everything ;/..
Hello Martians! We come in peace. We are Americ-
(sniff) (sniff?
I SMELL OIL!
No, that was sniffy Joe trying to find a child to shower with
You can contact the owner of this channel and if that doesn't work try downloading the video, change format to flv or any other such file type and you should be ok, it's a NASA video anyway, isn't it?
do we get 3D images?
love the inception music!
Agreed!
there has to be more than just a problem with dust forcing them to use the Sky Crain maneuver, I can think of at least 2 simpler ways of doing it to avoid dust and rocket gasses.
Great answer!
it's not really mars atmosphere supersonic, is it? it's the equivalent of mach 2 at 1 earth atmosphere
I can´t help it, I always picture this guy closing the conference with "Love me tender"
"Least crazy"!?
Now I'm interested, what other landing methods they considered? :)
Yeah, it grinded my gears to see that "zero margin of error" like it's some kind of super magical power. Giving a real number, whether it's 0.000 1 or 0.000 001 margin of error would be a real information.
If they could have got the decent stage to land else where after it separated instead of impacting the surface, those resources could be used, could have a charging station for the rover among other things. Still an amazing achievement!
Good one.
Grate job
FANTASTIC!
Imagine if we swapped our military budget with the NASA budget...
Curiosity make us proud!
i think they have more objectives than that, ones that are undisclosed. they dont tell us everything, i mean it cant just be about finding water again on there. that mission is incredibly expensive for that. but either way ur right, totally awesome.
Amazing. I'm happy it worked! :)
thank you!
This movie shows how difficult this "journey" to our neighbour - planet was. And you see, how long the signal comes reaching the earth..
Very true.
OK, it seems the heat shield will separate from the craft when it reaches speed below sound speed. It sounds so risky. Who's to say the shield will move away and not be "stuck" to the craft even thought it's set lose? Hence the radar won't work... scary.
has it landed yet?
i suppose it's possible due to Mars atmosphere being much thinner than Earths. Additionally it has a hole in the middle to let some air flow through.
actually later study indicated that even though it appears to be fossilized bacteria there are other naturalistic means by which the structures could have been formed, the most recent study indicates that the meteorite alone isn't sufficient evidence to suggest that there was early life on mars.
On that note I'm hopeful that curiosity will find something and I'm pretty sure creationists will try to rationalize or dismiss any discovery.
I agree with the exception you have to love the humor.
All the best Curiosity! lock your safety bell, because it will shake a little bit! kand safe!
Might be worth dragging myself out of bed, at 1am, just to see this
i went to Cal Tech and saw it getting built =]
Brilliant!
That's 05:30 GMT, looks like I need to set the alarm.
Amazing!
That's what they said, but the real reason they went with this approach is to be more accurate with the landing site. But it did work, congratulations NASA!
Very very exciting!!!!!
Absolutely, risks are part of the deal.
don't get me wrong, the progress that mankind has made in the last fifty years is very exciting. and it's pretty awesome to watch a robot land on another planet, but I think the mission itself is moot at this point. if the planet was or wasn't habitable is irrelevent, the real question is can we utilize the resources and strip that planet clean as well. all I'm saying is put more effort into antigravity and then each mission would cost a lot less and be less risky. that is very sensible.
Amizing
Amazing