PDA

View Full Version : Pilots Aim to Catch Space Capsule in Air



Pooh
09-06-2004, 02:52 AM
Link (http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=624&ncid=624&e=1&u=/ap/20040905/ap_on_sc/genesis_capsule_1)

Pilots Aim to Catch Space Capsule in Air

Sun Sep 5, 1:01 PM ET

By PAUL FOY, Associated Press Writer

SALT LAKE CITY - In a harrowing feat high over the Utah desert Wednesday, two helicopter stunt pilots will try to snatch a floating space capsule that holds "a piece of the sun" and bring it safely down.

Their biggest fear: What if they flub it on live TV?

And that's entirely possible. The pilots rate it 8 or 9 on a difficulty scale of 10.

"It's like flying in formation with a giant floating jellyfish," says pilot Dan Rudert.

The stuntmen will be trying to hook the 400-pound Genesis capsule as it hurtles 400 feet a minute. Inside it are fragile solar wind particles — so small they're invisible — which scientists hope will reveal clues about the origin of our solar system.

The biggest challenge, the pilots say, will be flying at 40 mph nearly a mile above the desert without any visual reference points to judge distance or speed as they close in with hook and cable on the capsule.

The helicopter pilots will have five chances to snag the capsule in midair. Military pilots were unavailable for a mission that required them to commit to a task six years in the future. The civilian pilots have replicated the retrieval without fumbles in dozens of practice runs, but are terrified of failing as NASA (news - web sites) television broadcasts a worldwide feed.

If they miss and the Genesis capsule hits the ground hard, scientists say they'd have to spend months sorting through broken jewelry-studded disks holding the tiny solar wind particles.

There are other opportunities for the $260 million mission to go awry, too.

For NASA engineers a white-knuckle moment will be when the capsule must be steered through a "keyhole" high in the Earth's atmosphere. If the experts at California's Jet Propulsion Laboratory can't line up the precise entry and angle, Genesis will be waved off on an elliptical orbit of Earth, and another attempt would be made in six months.

Genesis has been moving in tandem with Earth outside its magnetic shield on three orbits of the sun. Now on a trajectory back home, it is picking up speed rapidly as Earth's gravitational pull brings it closer and will hit a top speed of 24,600 mph before the atmosphere slows the descent.

The Genesis mission marks the first time NASA has collected and returned any objects from farther than the moon, said Roy Haggard, Genesis' flight operations chief and CEO of Vertigo Inc., which designed the capture system.

Together, the charged atoms captured on the capsule's disks of gold, sapphire, diamond and silicone are no bigger than a few grains of salt, but scientists say that's enough to reconstruct the chemical origin of the sun and its family of planets.

Scientists will keep busy for five years after Genesis completes its wild ride back to Earth. It will take at least six months before they expect to learn much from the solar wind particles.

But they expect to learn the precise composition of the sun, which "has them all excited and drooling," said Don Sweetnam, Genesis program manager, who said the discovery could rewrite textbooks for the next generation.

Simply put, "We're going to bring a piece of the sun down to Earth," said Dr. Charles Elachi, director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "That's going to give us some fundamental understanding of our origin."

The electrically charged atoms Genesis has been collecting won't be like anything found on Earth, said Don Burnett, Genesis principal investigator at California Institute of Technology.

Scientists think these solar ions were found in the solar nebula, a giant molecular cloud of gas and dust that collapsed 4.6 billion years ago to form the sun and spin off the makings of hard rock planets.

Scientists have an easier time explaining how an object a mile wide can grow with the accumulating power of gravity into the size of the Earth, but aren't certain how a nascent planet forms from a cloud of gas and dust, said Burnett, who is a geochemist.

(This should be interesting to watch, especially if they mess up.)

Useruser666
09-07-2004, 12:43 PM
They capture film canisters and even whole satellites all the time with planes. I wonder why they are using helicopters though. Helos are slow at changing altitude and have slow airspeeds altogether.

Useruser666 :eyebrow

CommanderMcBragg
09-07-2004, 01:48 PM
This would be a piece of cake for me.

Why I remember having to safely catch a dropping damsel in distress with my trusty airplane when I only had one engine and one good eye.

KoriEllis
09-08-2004, 07:02 PM
It got messed up ...

http://i.cnn.net/cnn/2004/TECH/space/09/08/genesis.entry.cnn/top.genesis.inspection.ap.jpg

Genesis capsule crashes in Utah

(CNN) -- The Genesis return capsule crashed in the desert on Wednesday after its parachutes failed to deploy. The craft missed a mid-air retrieval meant to save the spacecraft from hitting the Earth.

"The capsule has suffered extensive damage. It has broken apart on the desert floor," said an official on NASA TV. "Hopefully, there will be enough evidence to see what went wrong. Whether there will be enough science left inside remains to be seen."

Teams are attempting to recover the craft. NASA has warned them that a "live mortar" or explosive charge designed to deploy the chutes may still be armed.

NASA officials at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California said that long-range cameras did not detect the parachutes that should have slowed the craft.

"There was no drogue chute or parafoil," said a JPL spokesman. "Under those condition, the Genesis capsule hit the ground at about 100 mph."

NASA officials located the spacecraft around noon on Wednesday after it dug into the desert soil. NASA footage shows the craft tumbling rapidly through the air before hitting the ground with enormous force.

The return of the Genesis capsule was supposed to be visible for many in the U.S. as the capsule made a fiery ride across the skies of Oregon, northeastern Nevada, southwestern Idaho and western Utah.

By 11:55 am EDT, it reached the roof of the atmosphere, about 410,000 feet, glowing like a streaking meteor. Somewhere during that descent, something went wrong.

NASA officials were optimistic about the mission in the days leading up to the return of the Genesis capsule.

"We are bringing a piece of the sun down to Earth," said Charles Elachi, the director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. "That's going to give us some fundamental understanding of our origins."

Scientists say the data will not only reveal the composition of the sun, but illuminate how our planet could have formed from clouds of stellar dust.

"Four and a half billion years ago, all of the matter of the solar system, including us, was part of a giant molecular cloud," said Don Burnett, principal investigator for the Genesis mission. "Genesis is providing the chemical composition of that solar nebula. ...The material is still stored for us in the surface of the sun."

Two helicopters were poised above a Utah Air Force base to snag the Genesis spacecraft's return capsule. The sturdy container contained atomic isotopes collected as particles streaming off the sun, known as the solar wind.

The unorthodox midair retrieval would have snagged the first extraterrestrial samples since the Apollo missions in the 1970s.

Genesis collected the particles over the last two years on special tiles made from silicon, diamond, gold, sapphire and other materials. The solar particles, embedded in the collector tiles, were ejected at about 280 miles per second (450 km/s) from the sun's scorching corona or outer atmosphere.

Genesis was designed to fill in an astronomical blank spot about the sun's makeup.

"What we've been missing is a starting point," says Burnett. "These samples allow precise measurements of the abundance of elements and isotopes in the sun."

Our star accounts for 99 percent of the mass in the solar system. It is composed mostly of isotopes of hydrogen and helium and includes 60 other elements including neon, argon carbon, nitrogen, oxygen and iron.

In all, Genesis has collected the equivalent of a few grains of the material. Scientists say that is enough to keep researchers busy for decades.

"In some cases, we will be studying these one atom at a time," said Burnett who estimates there will be a "billion billion" atoms available for study.

"We'll have a reservoir of solar matter," he said. "We can meet the requirements for (studying ) the solar composition through the 21st century."

Genesis mission
Launched in 2001 from Cape Canaveral, the Genesis spacecraft traveled beyond the protective cloak of Earth's magnetosphere for two years before heading home. Because of Earth's electromagnetic field, much of the sun's deadly radiation and material never reaches the planet's surface.

In April, the craft ejected a 500-pound return capsule for return to Earth.

It has been approaching the planet at a leisurely 600 mph. By the time it reached Earth's atmosphere, the craft was racing toward the planet at more than 25,000 mph. It was supposed to use a series of parachutes to slow its descent.

On Wednesday, it entered the atmosphere around 11:55 am ET above Oregon and later plunged into Utah desert. Both the drouge and main parachute, a wing-like parafoil, did not deploy.

This daring retrieval method would have protected the samples and sensitive instruments during reentry. The possibility of a serious crash was not discussed at press briefings.The chance for success were good according to NASA's retrieval partner in the mission, the aerospace firm Vertigo.

"If they can find it, the success rate is very high," said Vertigo official Roy Haggard.

A modified helicopter -- with a winch, hydraulic capture pole and hundreds of feet of line -- would have followed the capsule by radar until it snagged the parafoil. Because the Genesis capsule repressurized in the upper atmosphere, scientists wanted to minimize the sample's exposure to air and possible contamination.

Scientists hoped that once the samples had been secured at a NASA facility, scientists could breathe easy. That won't happen now.

CosmicCowboyXXX
09-08-2004, 07:18 PM
well....those Hollywood stunt pilots are superbly trained after six years to catch something falling out of the air with their helicopters and the net...

I suggest a blockbuster movie plot where someone kicks Michael Moores fat ass out of an airplane and those guys try to catch him...

sure hope that one has the same result too...hehehe

Hook Dem
09-09-2004, 01:33 AM
Cosmic Cowboy...Thats a damn good idea but his fat ass would probably bring the chopper down early.:rollin