After 11 years on Mars, Curiosity continues to climb the slopes of Mount Sharp
After 11 years on Mars, Curiosity continues to climb the slopes of Mount Sharp
On Aug. 6, 2012, NASA’s Mars Science Laboratory mission, comprised of the new Curiosity rover, officially…
Love that thing. Please survive a litt longer!
18 0 ReplyDamn I didn't think it had been that long! That thing is putting in some serious overtime.
13 0 ReplyThe team that programs the daily instruction set is doing so too.
9 0 Reply
I wish the Wikipedia article for this thing had a chart showing which sensors are still operational and what they're used for, like they do for Voyager 1 & 2. Somebody needs to clean up that article and add that section in.
10 0 ReplySomebody needs to clean up that article and add that section in.
I nominate @[email protected] to add that section into the Curiosity Wikipedia article.
All in favour (upvote below) : all against (downvote below)
19 2 ReplyBad idea. People who aren't knowledgeable about a subject, have no business editing the article about it.
I nominate a person who actually works at NASA. Don't make my dumbass do it or I'll just get banned again for vandalism.
2 0 Reply
To think its original mission was supposed to only last around 2 years and yet it's still going. So proud of the work they do out at NASA.
5 0 Reply11 years?! Geez. It feels like yesterday when people were talking about it landing on Mars.
3 0 Reply1 0 ReplyI wonder, as a rover program goes on and gets closer to its end, do the controllers get more daring?
1 0 Reply