I don't comment often... I just had to say that this is now in my top 5 most amazing things I've ever seen. It's a moment in history; humanity at the very tip of science, exploring, reaching out. It is beautiful and I can't stop watching it.
I am glad to know others feel the same way I do. What is lame, is how many people have no idea that this mission to Titan even happened. Most people I've shown the surface photos to were totally shocked to find out we have successfully landed a probe on the surface of Titan. The thing I like so much about this video is that it is the closest a human will ever get to experiencing what Huygens went through as it approached and landed on the surface of Titan.
Yeah, sadly you are right. I heard about Huygens at the time because I've been following the Cassini mission but I didn't know this video existed. It is just perfect, the sounds are incredible.
We'll said. It is sad most kids would rather get a Science lesson from B.o.B on "Why dem Earth so flat yo!" then pay attention to the really amazing progress and work done on behalf of our species.
the emotional whiplash i just went through: clicking on nasa's "titan touchdown" video to hear the most corporate advertisement music ever made; clicking to this video which is genuinely making me tear up. deserves to be put in a museum
Hard to believe there is just nothing alive there.. All that rock, liquid and gas, sitting there for billions of years, for no one.. Until that little robot dropped and broke the silence.
The landing is also sped up about 60x here. Which is why the sounds all sound so chaotic. Also interestingly, the probe experiences "normal" Earth like air pressure at an altitude of 7km. Titan's surface pressure is about 50% higher than Earth. So you wouldn't need a spacesuit on TItan, just a heated insulated suit, and some kind of enclosed breathing type helmet. The probe was only falling at about 3ft per second at landing.
Did you know that the Soviet landers on Venus didn't even use a parachute? The atmosphere is so thick (1/20 the density of water), the probes just plopped down on the surface, using their own form drag to slow down.
I actually did not know that! that's crazy. I find it funny how dedicated the soviets were to explore Venus, and were successful landing and taking photos from the surface - but cant seem to get a lander on Mars no matter what they do. I get that Mars is much farther away, but it seems like figuring out how to make a spacecraft survive the surface conditions on Venus would be far more difficult than landing on Mars, but I could be wrong.
The 360 degree panoramas produced by Huygens were taken with the same narrow view camera that took the surface picture. The panoramas were produced by twisting the parachute risers back on earth like a rubber band. Then when the parachute deployed during the decent the risers unwound and rewound causing the probe to spin around and around back and forth, which aimed the probe in every direction as it spun. It was a simple yet ingenious way to produce wide angle panoramas using a simple narrow view camera.
@Anton Z. As said from another person. The probe was made in the 90s and also "Budget". The word we all love and hate, the thing that could halt a nasa mission development or not. Even in the 90s, they could have put more cameras for a panoramic view. Even if they did avoid budget, "Space". Also a word we love and hate. And also why Nasa missions are halted in development. If better cameras were added, panoramas would be possible without the rubber band effect. But space is always something to think about when designing a spacecraft. Let's say if we wanted to add 3 other cameras on the bottom for panoramic images, we would have to sacrifice much needed science instruments during the decent. And these cameras would only be used once. That would be a waste of money. But what if we use a camera from a spacecraft's double to provide more cameras? Space kills the idea right?
@@theninjahackermanguydude It's not just the additional space on the probe its also the additional weight. Weight is the ultimate enemy for spacecraft designers. For every pound you add up at the top of the rocket it can take upwards of six pounds or more of propellant to lift it off the ground and send it on its way to its final destination. And another constraint is power consumption. That probe was battery powered and they probably wanted to reduce the power consumption to extend the battery life to extend the amount of time the probe would survive on the surface.
I watched this for the first time at an astronomy camp in Arizona two years ago when i was 13. I don't know why but it is one of my favorite videos. beautiful, mysterious, and anxiety inducing all at the same time. I cried at school watching Cassini's final mission livestream a few months after that camp. I watch this video often and my friend even sampled it in some music he made for me last year.
I never heard of the spacecraft until 2017 I even had weird plans of sending a spacecraft to retrieve it. I was like 16 years old. I only been diagnosed with autism in 2004.
@@Wadethewallaby2001i am also neurodivergent!!! People with autism/ADHD always have the most specific interests ever lol. Good luck on retrieving Cassini
I don't really like commenting on videos but this is an exception. I love this video because it makes me feel odd, in a good way. This video inspires me to actually do stuff. This is my favorite video now. I cannot stop watching this over and over again.
This has got to be the most fascinating place in the solar system outside of earth. Oceans, rain, a similar atmospheric pressure to earth. We have to go back!
Thank you for showing the real video without putting a spin on it or some kind of crappy commentary like these other people do on their channels with some kind of computer effects drawn up with it I can't stand that crap
So much info on one screen!! Thus really shows how raw data is collected by the probe, then scientist spend hours processing it all and it becomes a little two-paragraph blurb on the news.
This picture feels so isolated, distant, alien and unreachable, and yet Titan is so ridiculously close to our planet compared to the entire universe...
After NASA's 1969 moon landing... which is undoubtedly #1... Cassini/Huygens mission takes the #2 spot... in my opinion... in all of humanity's exploration of Space. Supercool! NASA's 1976 pair of Viking 1 & 2 Martian Orbiters/Landers missions are collectively # 3. The Soviet's 1970s Venera missions to Venus collectively take the #4 spot... and... the rest of Space exploration... Is all just awesome and impossible to rank. For instance, NASA's New Horizons mission to Pluto/Charon was fairly unbelievable. But so was the far earlier Voyager 1 & 2 probes that are now the furthest objects from the Earth that humans made. And they're many AU past Pluto... out of the inner Solar System. That fact alone is stunning. Everything about Space Exploration is breath-taking!
This is the awesome, thanks for posting this... Watched it 6 times already, I guess the actual decent took 2and a half hrs, thanks for speeding it up... I don't get why there are so many dislikes. .
This tells us that the huygens probe was active for more then 3.5 hours. Most of which were doing operations in the atmosphere and some of which were doing surface operations
@sallytoothfuck They had the Ulysses spacecraft which launched in 1992. Huygens didn't have RTGs because there would be no space and Huygens didn't need to last longer as it wasn't doing much science at the surface.
Most likely, since the probe is dead, it would be covered in some sort of dust, corroded and frozen solid. Pretty much like a sunken ship, just deteriorating. Since it landed 15 years ago, the state of it is probably worsened but it could also be intact, depends what happens with the weather on that planet.
Yes! for more videos like this!. Full of data presented in a recognizable and instinctive way. Yes!. I kept searching for a battery load or reserve, to really see the management of data beeing taken and sent.
Yes this is the interface scientists used to analyze the incoming data. Btw there was no live because radio signal needed 67minutes to reach Titan. The probe had to do everything by herself and send data back to Cassini. Sadly half of the data has been lost.
One of the greatest human achievement in space exploration ever! I do wonder why camera's usually suck (outside of Mars probes..) Billions of dollars spent and my 15 dollar security cam looks better than this landing recording.
To think this happened almost 20 years ago... Imagine how much more data we could capture, and the kind of footage we could bring back, with current technology. We need to seek out these distant worlds!
The cameras weren't recording, they were taking pictures. Huygens had 3 cameras that took pictures from below and a bit above the horizon. Said pictures were processed to a "fisheye" view as seen in this video for probably the best representation you can get of what Huygens saw as it descended. And remember, the video is speed up. It took nearly 3 hours to hit the surface, not 4 minutes, so the rotations seen in the video are much, much slower
It’s supposed to be a audio representation of the radar return from Huygens as it rotates and gets closer to the ground. The dings are when Huygens would take photos during its descent and each ding represents when a new image is taken. Notice when it hits the surface the radar return starts to fall rapidly and eventually die, this is because Cassini is moving away from the probe and eventually looses communication with orbiter when it moves out of range. This is because the lander has very limited power after it is detached from Cassini.
Not Cassini but Huygens. Mission's name is Cassini-Huygens. Cassini is the NASA transport for Huygens to Saturn's system, Huygens developed by ESA is both transport/orbiter for Titan moon and probe that went down to the surface of Titan.
I don't comment often... I just had to say that this is now in my top 5 most amazing things I've ever seen. It's a moment in history; humanity at the very tip of science, exploring, reaching out. It is beautiful and I can't stop watching it.
I am glad to know others feel the same way I do. What is lame, is how many people have no idea that this mission to Titan even happened. Most people I've shown the surface photos to were totally shocked to find out we have successfully landed a probe on the surface of Titan. The thing I like so much about this video is that it is the closest a human will ever get to experiencing what Huygens went through as it approached and landed on the surface of Titan.
Yeah, sadly you are right. I heard about Huygens at the time because I've been following the Cassini mission but I didn't know this video existed. It is just perfect, the sounds are incredible.
Stuart Culshaw I watch this Video all the time. Absolutely fantastic work they performed.
We'll said. It is sad most kids would rather get a Science lesson from B.o.B on "Why dem Earth so flat yo!" then pay attention to the really amazing progress and work done on behalf of our species.
yo you are spittin straight facts stuart culshaw
I think this really exemplifies how technology can be both a science, and an art.
i watched this a while back in school and it seemed like no one cared and i was the only one to go home and watch it again.
people like watch clips and musics and how cook and porno ;(
@@reiterfares6441 Whats wrong with cooking videos? Theyre educational.
the emotional whiplash i just went through:
clicking on nasa's "titan touchdown" video to hear the most corporate advertisement music ever made;
clicking to this video which is genuinely making me tear up. deserves to be put in a museum
Sorry but it ain't NASA's but ESA's
The ominous sounds with the cluttered interface really make my spine chill.
This is science in space my friend
Atago1337 yep, it’s really interesting
I hope that Andy Turner and Ed Handley (Plaid) came and saw that video. It's so inspiring for their music too ~
Hard to believe there is just nothing alive there.. All that rock, liquid and gas, sitting there for billions of years, for no one.. Until that little robot dropped and broke the silence.
Tony Randall lol we totally think the same way. I’ve been wondering that for years!
because chimicals do not create anything it needs knowledge, it needs God!
@@almuhajer6760 This is not correct chemical processes can create aminoacids and after million years RNA.
@@almuhajer6760 There is no God out there. Yuri Gagarin said he looked and called for him, and got no response
@@almuhajer6760 rofl
The video includes sidebar graphics that show:
(Lower left corner) Huygens’ trajectory views from the south, with a scale bar for comparison with the height of Mount Everest; coloured arrows point to the Sun and to the Cassini orbiter.
(Top left corner) A close-up view of the Huygens lander highlighting large and unexpected parachute movements; there is a scale bar for comparison with human height.
(Lower right corner) A compass that shows the changing direction of view as Huygens rotates, along with the relative positions of the Sun and the Cassini orbiter.
(Upper right corner) A clock that shows Universal Time for 14 January 2005 (Universal Time is the same as GMT). Above the clock, events are listed in mission time, which starts with the deployment of the first of the three parachutes.
Sounds from a left speaker trace Huygens’ motion, with tones changing with rotational speed and the tilt of the parachute. There are also clicks that track the rotational counter and sounds for the probe’s heat shield hitting Titan’s atmosphere, parachute deployments, heat shield release, jettison of the camera cover and touchdown.
Sounds from a right speaker go with the Descent Imager/Spectral Radiometer activity. A continuous tone represents the strength of Huygens’ signal to the Cassini orbiter, which then relayed the signal to the Earth. Various chimes denote data acquisition by Huygens’ on-board instruments.
After landing, you see a colour image and a series of black-and-white images from the surface, which continue until contact is lost, but the view of a footprint on the left is an Apollo image of the surface of the Moon to show you the scale of the Titan surface view.
(Text © The Open University / Video courtesy of ESA/NASA/JPL/University of Arizona)
The landing is also sped up about 60x here. Which is why the sounds all sound so chaotic. Also interestingly, the probe experiences "normal" Earth like air pressure at an altitude of 7km. Titan's surface pressure is about 50% higher than Earth. So you wouldn't need a spacesuit on TItan, just a heated insulated suit, and some kind of enclosed breathing type helmet. The probe was only falling at about 3ft per second at landing.
PointyTailofSatan lol I like your name. Thanks for the additional info.
Did you know that the Soviet landers on Venus didn't even use a parachute? The atmosphere is so thick (1/20 the density of water), the probes just plopped down on the surface, using their own form drag to slow down.
Thank you for the information. The whole audio / video is a sensory junction box.
I actually did not know that! that's crazy. I find it funny how dedicated the soviets were to explore Venus, and were successful landing and taking photos from the surface - but cant seem to get a lander on Mars no matter what they do. I get that Mars is much farther away, but it seems like figuring out how to make a spacecraft survive the surface conditions on Venus would be far more difficult than landing on Mars, but I could be wrong.
The 360 degree panoramas produced by Huygens were taken with the same narrow view camera that took the surface picture. The panoramas were produced by twisting the parachute risers back on earth like a rubber band. Then when the parachute deployed during the decent the risers unwound and rewound causing the probe to spin around and around back and forth, which aimed the probe in every direction as it spun. It was a simple yet ingenious way to produce wide angle panoramas using a simple narrow view camera.
Wouldn't be using multiple cameras easier?
@@antonz.6238 It was 2005 and the probe was made in the 90s
So that's why it was spinning rapidly.
@Anton Z. As said from another person. The probe was made in the 90s and also "Budget". The word we all love and hate, the thing that could halt a nasa mission development or not. Even in the 90s, they could have put more cameras for a panoramic view. Even if they did avoid budget, "Space". Also a word we love and hate. And also why Nasa missions are halted in development. If better cameras were added, panoramas would be possible without the rubber band effect. But space is always something to think about when designing a spacecraft. Let's say if we wanted to add 3 other cameras on the bottom for panoramic images, we would have to sacrifice much needed science instruments during the decent. And these cameras would only be used once. That would be a waste of money. But what if we use a camera from a spacecraft's double to provide more cameras? Space kills the idea right?
@@theninjahackermanguydude It's not just the additional space on the probe its also the additional weight. Weight is the ultimate enemy for spacecraft designers. For every pound you add up at the top of the rocket it can take upwards of six pounds or more of propellant to lift it off the ground and send it on its way to its final destination. And another constraint is power consumption. That probe was battery powered and they probably wanted to reduce the power consumption to extend the battery life to extend the amount of time the probe would survive on the surface.
I watched this for the first time at an astronomy camp in Arizona two years ago when i was 13. I don't know why but it is one of my favorite videos. beautiful, mysterious, and anxiety inducing all at the same time. I cried at school watching Cassini's final mission livestream a few months after that camp. I watch this video often and my friend even sampled it in some music he made for me last year.
I never heard of the spacecraft until 2017 I even had weird plans of sending a spacecraft to retrieve it. I was like 16 years old. I only been diagnosed with autism in 2004.
@@Wadethewallaby2001i am also neurodivergent!!! People with autism/ADHD always have the most specific interests ever lol. Good luck on retrieving Cassini
@@Rickbone1055 🙁🪐🛰️🚀❌ I think it’s too late to retrieve it. X_X ruclips.net/video/2TQhyyepVcs/видео.htmlsi=V9KHZ1NBi-UK7KcW
I don't really like commenting on videos but this is an exception. I love this video because it makes me feel odd, in a good way. This video inspires me to actually do stuff. This is my favorite video now. I cannot stop watching this over and over again.
This has got to be the most fascinating place in the solar system outside of earth. Oceans, rain, a similar atmospheric pressure to earth. We have to go back!
And fortunately, we are! (In about 11 years 😅)
@hunnyjar8937 hell yeah dude 😎 🚁🚁🚁
-179:D
This was very awesome, the descent, and the best thing was the sounds when Huygens was sending images from his camera!
Thank you for showing the real video without putting a spin on it or some kind of crappy commentary like these other people do on their channels with some kind of computer effects drawn up with it I can't stand that crap
Totally agree. I can’t stand that sort of stuff either.
So much info on one screen!! Thus really shows how raw data is collected by the probe, then scientist spend hours processing it all and it becomes a little two-paragraph blurb on the news.
I want to watch this again, but before I do, I need to get really high
This is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen in my entire life. Absolutely stunning!!
To see a landing on another world is absolutely incredible, i had goosebumps the first time i watched it.
This picture feels so isolated, distant, alien and unreachable, and yet Titan is so ridiculously close to our planet compared to the entire universe...
The first Music Video from another celestial Body!
One of the best videos on the RUclips.
Teared up when i saw this the first time. I come back every now and then to cure my depressed ass.
After NASA's 1969 moon landing... which is undoubtedly #1... Cassini/Huygens mission takes the #2 spot... in my opinion... in all of humanity's exploration of Space. Supercool!
NASA's 1976 pair of Viking 1 & 2 Martian Orbiters/Landers missions are collectively # 3. The Soviet's 1970s Venera missions to Venus collectively take the #4 spot... and... the rest of Space exploration... Is all just awesome and impossible to rank. For instance, NASA's New Horizons mission to Pluto/Charon was fairly unbelievable. But so was the far earlier Voyager 1 & 2 probes that are now the furthest objects from the Earth that humans made. And they're many AU past Pluto... out of the inner Solar System. That fact alone is stunning. Everything about Space Exploration is breath-taking!
懐かしいですね。
鮮明な映像で見れて感謝です。
気圧単位がミリバールと言うのも時代を感じます。
When I was a little bit younger, I thought that that was speed-up sound, that was recorded by the probe :D
how lonely of a process- thank you for making each breeze a calculated precision!
R.I.P Cassini
1997-2017
This is the awesome, thanks for posting this... Watched it 6 times already, I guess the actual decent took 2and a half hrs, thanks for speeding it up... I don't get why there are so many dislikes. .
34
Great job man.
Missing only the wind michrophone detector during probe descent.
Regards.
This tells us that the huygens probe was active for more then 3.5 hours. Most of which were doing operations in the atmosphere and some of which were doing surface operations
Really incredible, too bad the only thing that halted it was a dead battery.
Well sun is far away meaning engineer don't use solar panel they just use battery why they never put rtg?
@sallytoothfuck They had the Ulysses spacecraft which launched in 1992. Huygens didn't have RTGs because there would be no space and Huygens didn't need to last longer as it wasn't doing much science at the surface.
@@gabrielfantin2397 rtgs are expensive and heavy
What is the condition of this equipment now, after have landed
Frozen, I would guess
Most likely, since the probe is dead, it would be covered in some sort of dust, corroded and frozen solid. Pretty much like a sunken ship, just deteriorating. Since it landed 15 years ago, the state of it is probably worsened but it could also be intact, depends what happens with the weather on that planet.
eaten by the titans
@@alenparker3056 it rains methane and ethane.
It would probrobly be buried in the soil by now. Also its electronics would probrobly be all corroded and destroyed.
It sounds so completely alien. It's terrifying!
This is like a dream sound...emotional indeed.😭😍❤️
why i missed this video for so long? i`m out of words. thank you so much for sharing this.
Absolutely amazing.
Yes! for more videos like this!. Full of data presented in a recognizable and instinctive way. Yes!. I kept searching for a battery load or reserve, to really see the management of data beeing taken and sent.
Truly - OUT of THIS WORLD AMAZING.
Is this the interface the scientists on the ground saw live? Or is this touched up for viewers?
Yes this is the interface scientists used to analyze the incoming data. Btw there was no live because radio signal needed 67minutes to reach Titan. The probe had to do everything by herself and send data back to Cassini. Sadly half of the data has been lost.
Awesome how Titan had a blue sky above the haze.
Audio sounds like a Stockhausen piece.
Honestly THIS is the video that's impressivr
I didn't know stockhausen was working for ESA.
Good science makes beautiful music!
Titan is my favorite planet and can’t believe this is real
That’s just so fascinating think about. Landing a probe in deep space, on a satellite of a gas giant, and all of that was made more then 20 years ago
Kate's cloud got this❤
Am I the only person who finds this interface creepy? haha
yes
Man, the audio driving me nuts.
can't believe it's been 15 years. damn.
sir. your profile picture is perfecto
what does all the sounds mean
It highlights the instruments used to gather data
Huygens out hete dropin bangers on titan and no one gon notice
One of the greatest human achievement in space exploration ever!
I do wonder why camera's usually suck (outside of Mars probes..)
Billions of dollars spent and my 15 dollar security cam looks better than this landing recording.
Alright, but whats with that music? D:
this video is very fascinating but the sounds kinda creep me out
3:39 the countdown part must have been the most exciting but nervous part of the mission since the mcc had to time it right
Can be posible to do the same with Rover perseverance?
Very interesting when look all lending time to "Parametres".
So about when did Huygens encounter the entry interface? At what altitude? I see that the pressure reached 1 millibar at an altitude of about 330 km.
Not sure what you mean by entry interface. Care to elaborate?
Huygens just landed on Titan and lasted like... 3 minutes because of the extreme cold so thats all it recorded
Richie086 By 'entry interface', I mean, when did it start experiencing noticeable drag?
Matthew Ferrie At the start of its atmosphere probably
Meme Gaming HD I mean, how tall is Titan's atmosphere? It's confusing because a planet's atmosphere doesn't have an abrupt boundary...
To think this happened almost 20 years ago... Imagine how much more data we could capture, and the kind of footage we could bring back, with current technology. We need to seek out these distant worlds!
This gives me start of a weird but strangly good song vibes and now I want to hear this song that doesn't exist.
Strangely enough, the twinkle sounds really reminds me of Pac-Man for some odd reason
Where can I find more videos similar to this one
ruclips.net/video/MWU-22zdR9M/видео.html
beautiful
Can somebody make a real-time version of this?
It would be more than 3 and a half hour, so yeah..
@@habu2010 I would watch it.
blink blink blink blin blin wooooooooooooooooohhh blink blink blink
How is it that the probe appears to be spinning yet the image is completely still?
The cameras weren't recording, they were taking pictures. Huygens had 3 cameras that took pictures from below and a bit above the horizon. Said pictures were processed to a "fisheye" view as seen in this video for probably the best representation you can get of what Huygens saw as it descended. And remember, the video is speed up. It took nearly 3 hours to hit the surface, not 4 minutes, so the rotations seen in the video are much, much slower
Answered in full. Thank you.
Panorama
would fit on Kid A
Like this dj!
the interface sound effects and visuals remind me of a weird ds game that never existed
Is not a game dude my god you dont know is in real life is real life a game someone is playing
@@ilikeo4710 He means it it like a game, not that it is really a game.
Bye Cassini we Will never forget your images
How did I didn't know that this has happened until now? ._.
Fascinating
I don’t know why but this video makes me sad
at first glance I thought that looked like my dinner
Amazing.
Why does the signal strength ping reset after each probe rotation? Is it because the probe is only facing Earthwards during that time?
It's because that's when its facing cassini. It sent the datat to cassini and then cassini sent it to earth.
Is it crash landing probe ..... That's why signal get lost .... How do this video get viral on RUclips ... ? Or where do this video get from ..?
The following video contains
Glitching colored imagery and cursed sounds which may be photosensitive to some viewers
Can someone explain why it’s making these sounds?
It’s supposed to be a audio representation of the radar return from Huygens as it rotates and gets closer to the ground. The dings are when Huygens would take photos during its descent and each ding represents when a new image is taken. Notice when it hits the surface the radar return starts to fall rapidly and eventually die, this is because Cassini is moving away from the probe and eventually looses communication with orbiter when it moves out of range. This is because the lander has very limited power after it is detached from Cassini.
@@Richie086 Thanks!
I actually thought this was music for like half a minute until I realized it was the data the thing was sending
I ⚠️ was born on January 15, 2001. I was diagnosed with autism in 2004. And I never heard of this amazing spacecraft until 2017.
This soundtrack is called "two slot machines talking to eachother across different casinos" by Kid Koala
Definitivamente Cine 👏🗿
did it lose signal or what?
yes
It lost signal for 4 hours after landing on Titan
7.5 km above ground level, Titan has the same air pressure that you find on Earth's sea level!
Its cool how such a small moon as a denser atmosphere than the earth.
Sweet!
Air temperature -180 degrees at ground level. That’s cold as phak!
Cool nobody tried to land our planet but we almost did a lot.
Ali Gh wut?
I don't know the huygens trajectory
is this the original sound of titans atmosphere?
Fuck, this is so beatiful
Not a single In 'n Out?
I think. It was walking, then fire, titan. Next?
What are all those cheerful sounds? ahahah sure looks like NASA needs a little break.
so 8-bit
i like when it just stops
and simply starts waiting
to be interested
tick each time
it loses telemetry
a paced heartbeat
good to know skys still blue on titan too-
you kinda get the layers of the atmosphere with the type of parachute being a measure of the medium of air- wow
Cassini took pictures not video.
Not Cassini but Huygens. Mission's name is Cassini-Huygens. Cassini is the NASA transport for Huygens to Saturn's system, Huygens developed by ESA is both transport/orbiter for Titan moon and probe that went down to the surface of Titan.
Rip Huygens
1997-2005
Why is this alittle scary
Later..:
Hughes:finally i can ser a abrir a titan!
rip headphone users?
what if huygens survive
It didnt
If it survived it would transmit data from the surface for a few hours before dying. But it didnt survive.