NASA Mars Science Laboratory (Curiosity Rover) Mission Animation [HDx1280]
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 เม.ย. 2011
- Released April 4, 2011, courtesy of NASA/JPL: "This artist's concept animation depicts key events of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory mission, which will launch in late 2011.
- วิทยาศาสตร์และเทคโนโลยี
The entire human kind is proud of You NASA ♥️
Thanks to Mark Rober
@@JeeterJuice he worked on this thing for 5 years im glad it didnt go to waste
Except for flattards
@@JeeterJuice don't forget other people
What about ISRO?
3:13 “I have to go now, my planet needs me”
After that it crashes into the surface Xd
@@izanmunozmartin7587 yes, that was the joke.
@Dennis Frog Yes, it flies about 1/3 of a mile away and crashes
I have to go now my planet needs me
this entire program is what inspired me to return to college and finish my engineering degree at 30
Great job
Can we interest you in a sales position?
@InfiniteMushroom he is problably a NASA engineer now and doesnt TALK to people now.
Curiosity to perseverance : I see u copied my landing style
Tianwen-1 : no you copy me
Perseverance to Curiosity: you misspelled "perfected"
No, you copyed everything
@@HITESHKUMAR-ul2li l
To my knowledge, this is the most complex and risky autonomous space mission that has ever been attempted. I'm still flabbergasted that it actually worked to perfection.
+EnDSchultz1 What about the Rosetta mission that landed on comet Churi ? An awesome feat too (even more impressive in my opinion !)
+Ian cd you are right, curiosity is hitting a duck with a rock in a lake. rosetta is hitting a fly with a spit in a city.
I was referring to the descent and landing. Rendezvous in space is easy from an engineering and programming sense.We've been doing it for decades. The size of the target isn't really important as long as your math is good and your ship has thrusters precise enough to accurately produce velocity changes. Momentum does the rest. Furthermore, in deep space, commands for corrections can be sent from Earth, and don't need to be programmed. Thus, rendezvousing with an asteroid in zero gravity (a la Rosetta) really isn't any more difficult than inserting into a specific orbit around Mars.
The Curiosity landing, by contrast, had to enter the atmosphere, controlling its initial descent aerodynamically by rotating the heat shield/capsule, detach the skycrane, activate the hydrazine thrusters, nullify its horizontal velocity, hover gently to a few meters above the surface, lower the rover, detach the sling, and fly the skycrane clear...All using nothing but on-board sensors and data and fully autonomous control. And it landed perfectly to within a few kilometers of its target.
So, no. Rosetta is not comparable in technical, engineering, and programming difficulty to the landing of Curiosity. Not even close.
EnDSchultz1 Yeah, not convinced by your argument there. You seem to brush off the achievements of the Rosetta mission a bit quickly, while blowing out of proportion the Curiosity ones. (now don't get me wrong, Curiosity is amazing too !)
You could say we've been re-entering atmospheres for decades too. Doing it on Mars is basically just giving it sensors and programming it so that it does it without direct human control.
By the way, having an atmosphere is nice, it means you don't need as much fuel to decelerate. Meanwhile Rosetta had to go at just the right speed, to just the right place to orbit Churi - and they have very limited fuel to do so. And that's after a ten-year journey through space (compared to that, Mars is our neighbour). After that they had to drop Philae on a mess of a surface, again just at the right speed so that it didn't bounce off the comet - and they couldn't do it manually because it was (if I recall) 30 light-minutes away.
So let's just say both feats are amazing, aye ? Because saying that Rosetta is "not even close" in terms of difficulty is kind of just insulting towards the people who put so much hard work into it :) (not that I am one of them, but let's be considerate anyway)
EnDSchultz1 as all the evaluations, they change with the purpose considered.
you are considering the "flying" part of the project, but let's switch to the optimisation of the bare-metal hardware and we find that rosetta had to face serious challenges in terms of duration (hybernation in deep space) and resilience to "whatever" comes that far away; not mentioning all the previous manouvers (years-long) needed to GET to the point.
earth to mars paths are pretty known.
but as always, every project has different aims hence different perks and focuses, so we can even say it's pointless to compare technical difficulties.
BUT, one thing that rosetta achieved like no one: it was a first attempt and a success. we already tried to send rovers all over the system so we have know-how (which is HUGELY important). rosetta had none. and that's the main achievement.
Truly it is a great achievement by the NASA team. Thanks for posting it for the public view.
Hey I got this bridge in
San Francisco I want to sale you for a couple of million would you like to buy it if so just send the money pay pal to me and its yours you will make the money back on toll charges in a day or so its a real lucrative investment very fruitful and I encourage you to buy it.
@@doranyahsharahla7262 fake
Absolutely awesome. That is so cool. What a great combination of strategies and solutions. Happy trails for the whole mission. I can hardly wait to see it get there.
Glad to have been a part of this historical mission
This really is a masterpiece of engineering. It sat on top of 2,000,000 pounds of thrust, traveled through the intense radiation of space for 8 months and all that to touch down in a smooth manner a human would have survived. NASA engineers truly are a race on their own.
The part where the rover detaches and starts the thrusters freaks me out. SO MUCH in my mind wants to freak out and say that the thrusters won't upright it! I know better, obvs, but all the same....a masterpiece, like you said.
I mean, it doesn't have a brain that needs blood so it could pull a ton more g's than a human could
hi hello friends
Masterpiece of Cgi
Imagine this is a manned mission. How much radiation would they receive per day. 8 chest x Ray.
It's really interesting to see the advancement in technology between the landing tech of the old rovers vs new one. A lot of computerization in this landing, very cool.
And it worked- masterpiece of science to me!
How tf does this channel have les claypool interviews and mars rover landings, its like everything i love dammit
how can this not be cool..this is the epitome of cool
Nlo
Perseverance 2021: hold my beer
This is how I deliver Rovers on the Mun in Kerbal Space Program
Sumit Bishram that’s on purpose
@@GumballAstronaut7206 same
Way too much steps, we can do it there by less
Ksp is the best
ان الله حر يحب الحر
Hard to believe that it worked! Pure genius!
Hardest mission to ever be attempted. Im glad it worked out perfectly
The amount of planning this had to take is insane.
Huge kudos to JPL guys. It’s just phenomenal.
It's so cool that they uploaded this in 60 fps because it wasn't even a thing back then
This is so brilliant! The people who did this animation must be super intelligent! Wow!
Super
@@latapirta2759 Duper
I just saw it with Steven Price's gravity music, and it's duration it's almost perfect, tears appears quickly! Now it's your turn perseverance!
how truly complex was this mission! Kudos to all involved. This video should inspire the young to take more engineering oriented careers
The landing sequence is pure madness. On the other hand the bouncy balloons of the Sojourner lander were already quite wtf in 1996.
Mars is such a beautiful planet. Great animation.
This mission was performed by:
Jebediah K. Kerman
+aval1998 No its perfomed by Valentina K. Kerman
+aval1998 I vote for Valentina too !
Zamolxes77
Maybe it was Bob K. Kerman
hey what about bill
Great animation and cinematography. They did a really nice job on this.
This never gets old
That's some Kerbal Space Program shit right there.
Except in KSP it would take you like 50 attempts to stick that landing.
@@Twas-RightHere not with mechjeb/scripts.
But yeah, F5 and F9 is pretty great lol.
and you cant get cables in ksp
This animation is a major salute to the power and imagination of science, which together with the Arts, make up the twin pillars of Western Civilisation. May that dark age pillar that is built on faith and superstition, fear and the irrationale, fall at our feet so that we may pursue the future in the way that this animation suggests is possible.
This is a testament to how naïve people are that swalow this bullshit without question.
+onegative alien says the armchair engineer Hate America all you want but we are great achieving things your nations only dream off
Well said!
Faith? Really? If it was you landing on Mars, I am sure you'd pick up that faith pillar back pretty fast. lol.
Kuranı-Kerim Nur-35 Ayet.
Imagine being a little thing on Mars and you see a UFO drop off an alien
"Now then, how are we going to get this very expensive rover to safely land on Mars" "I've got an idea boss" "Are you completely deranged? Lets go with it anyway" This has to be one of the greatest achievements in space exploration ever along with landing a probe on a comet.
It almost looks like a real video. Fantastic.
"How my parents describe their daily trip to school"
🤣🤣🤣
Lel
Divided by countries united by parents journey to school 😂😂
@@rchackergaming3380 laugh extra loud
@@PhoenixHyena m
How amazing use of technology is!
Super cette animation et chapeau bas au gars du JPL pour cette prouesse technologique ! bravo !
Amazing work of engineering.
Thomas Levy ćq
on a cpu
Thomas Levy dj
Esplendydos!
Fascynantecoragem!
Why am here after 11 years
this made me excited
Never EVER doubt the science of JPL...They make things happen...
Well done to the Americans !!! Admittedly, you have great technology! Greetings from Russia
Максим thx I never knew we could do this
Молодцы, учёные! = Good job scientists!
In Mother Russia you don't go to Mars, you make Mars come to you.
KURWA AMERICAN
Am sure this team was made up of people from all over the world.
I get emotional watching this.
why.
Jesus is Lord hey it’s been 4 years do you remember this comment
@@Galaxy_J hey its been 1 year, do you remember this comment?
My Parents be like THIS IS THE PATH I TAKE TO GO TO SCHOOL.
Really well animated wow
Just think. You were born at the right time in history where not only was this possible, but we actually made it happen. We are living in a true golden age of human achievement. Nowhere in history except for the moon landings has humanity achieved so much in so little time.
We are truly blessed to be living in this age. Just think, Curiosity is STILL OUT THERE, RIGHT NOW, roving around on Mars. Every time it turns its wheels, every valley it traverses, every cliff and hill it spots with its cameras are new frontiers that human kind has never seen before. God bless human ingenuity and our ability to make dreams come true.
Allah'ın son dini İslamdır. Madem semavi dinlere ve gönderilen kitaplara inanıyorsun o zaman bu kitapların sonuncusu olan Kuranı Kerim'ide araştırmalısın.
Or more pessimisticly:
Born too late to explore the world, born too early to explore the universe. ._.
NASA IS GREAT. REALLY COMMENDABLE. ALSO FEELING PROUD OF ISRO
editing is perfect
Who ever is holding up that camera in space is a beast
Oh you think you're so slick attempting a woosh
Amo tudo isso!!top ..a ciência é tudo!!
Imagine a 4th grader building this for his/her's egg drop science experiment 🤣😂🤣
An incredible achievement. I bow down in awe to Nasa
Cakemaker
I appreciate it. Thanks
Whenever I see this again, I'm flabbergasted. When she landed, I stayed up into the deep night to 'whitness' it live. Absolutely awesome feat.
It sadly also flabbergasts me enormously that there are actually a lot of people who don't 'believe' this has happened ! The average intelligence of mankind is indeed dropping fast...
ขาย
Same here! I remember that 2012 August night so well, it was so exciting. I remember no body I knew really cared but I was extremely excited about it. It really was nerve wrecking waiting for that data to come back to earth to confirm the landing. When it arrived I shouted with joy as did the entire world. Gosh what a great time we live in
GTfour01
@Northstarrr Oh yes. Doubting everything scientific, only using science when it's needed to manipulate(climate change, Corona).
It's far easier to controle people that are in doubt about even the most obvious things, then it is to control well educated and knowledgable people. This is also why the left has taken over the entire educational system.
@Northstarrr Ah, I see you're well indoctrinated by the left too. Shedding anything remotely critical to the leftist dogma's as 'conspiracy theories'. Easy and lazy. Means you don't have to think critically. It means you're a good drone.
The landing process looks a lot riskier than previous missions, I really hope that nothing goes wrong. Good luck to NASA and all us who love scientific exploration.
Absolutely amazing
IT WORKED !!!!!!!! AWESOME JOB NASA AND JPL !!!!!!!!!
first of all lets hear 1 big awwww! for the poor sky crane. thanks for very carefully lowering our a few million dollar toy but you can go fly off and crash now. whoosh! as if it had a choice. its programed to take itself out of the game and view.lol. but for real here, in the real air drop you can't even tell when the shoot lets go and the jets engage. so smooth of a first landing. this kind of animation I love. WELL DONE NASA! And I read someone from the great land of Russia in here. Great sport you are Mak! by the way I'm hafe Ukraine. or maybe I should be saying, Cuz!
Thank you nasa thank you nasa
A question: minute 3:15, when module left curiosity on ground. Where did it fly after ?
It flew to crash on the ground.
You have made good works thanks Wonderful
The powerful and intelligent scientist of NASA actually seemed us as "They holding supreme power of Bramha"
Namaste from India
Caramba! A estrutura é incrível! Fico imaginando como que o curiosity se mantém, se é a bateria, como que é? Mas enfim, é magnífico isso!
Nao sei se vc ainda vai ler minha resposta ou se já teve acesso a informacao. Mas lá vai.
Ele tem um gerador nuclear que pela decadencia de radiacao, gera calor e deste calor gera eletrecidade.
The best animation i ever see in my life
The camera pointing in mars before landing is a real on cam
OK
wow what a beautiful landing nice video
i wonder if how'd they they took d video
manika manika omg how dumb can you be i ussualy dont comment but this makes me mad.
Thanks to camera man he is risking his life film this:
*Just kidding*
Patience was beautiful
AMAZING
That's how I land my Rovers in Kerbal Space Program!
3.6k people: I just don’t like how they had the nerve to land a rover on Mars like that
Amazing rover!I love NASA!I hope I will be an astronaut when I grow up!!!!!
EXCELLENT CGI ANIMATION CONGRATULATIONS
Curiosity looks so sad after the rocket thingy crashes.. like it doesn't know why it's there and where all the humans went. then it drives along trying to find humans.. lasering a cat to death along the way
You think THAT's sad? In that case you may not know that Curiosity is programmed to play "Happy birthday to you" to itself every year on its birthday.
I didnt know that. I just looked it up and heard it, its extremely depressing :D
Ossum much more information
I see what you did here ;)
Man, I was stressed out just watching this.....
Go see the spirit/opportunity landing, seeing the airbags bouncing around is relaxing.
Understandable, Enkii Muto
javalin597
Já é possível se escutar som no vácuo? Adoro a modernidade por isso!
well done NASA.Because you are perfectly done this work
Those who accomplished this are stars, every one.
There would be no sounds but dont tell anyone. Serously who made this ?
SimPi People would complain saying the sound doesn't work...
There will be sound. Mars has quite a good atmosphere.
Wait! You can hear the wind blowing on Mars if you were there. Now you are educated!
The pressure is less than one percent of earths atmosphere but there are still plenty of gases. Enough for flight by a drone (potentially. They are testing it for the next rover). I’d argue there is probably also enough to carry sound. It would be different I’m sure- but still present.
Props to the cameraman geeeeees.. give this person a raise
@Fred Cink are you serious? You've gotta be kidding me
R/Whoooosh
@Fred Cink r/whooosh, go google that phrase you brain dead idiot that doesn't know what a joke means.
Central Aviation u could have atleast used the sARcaSTIc fONt
@@zanediezeljuan8999 yA i KnOw RiGhT? ThIs pErSon sHoOting tHiS vIdEo nEeDs a HiGheR wAge
and i been learning about this
One of the best thing about dude is that he never takes credit for himself when he archives something He always respect us, the audience and his team and he is polite in all his videos We congratulate ourselves on this achievement
03:56 Did I hear somebody yelling.
Proud of you NASA
Very powerful and amazing video thanks for sharing
Where is real footage?
We forgot to ship a second rover just to film Curiosity.
Real footage is hard to come by, since there´s no people living in Mars to film it...
He probably mean the real footage from CURIOSITY, we all know there are no humans on Mars...
I seen real rover footage on the Nasa Channel,
also the footage is here on you tube...
You can always see it on the NASA channel...
2020🖐️🖐️
Very good at shooting, I like to watch.
It's the least crazy idea ! Simple and clean.
Who the heck thinks this stuff up? Yet try to get a train to travel a few miles down a track and arrive on time - impossible!
Yes, because a train is the same as a rocket, right?
Sarge Rho Well done. You win Idiot of the Month Award. Now you can add it to the rest of your collection.
Mysterious Squirrel It's trying to communicate, I think. It speaks some weird gibberish.
HES IMPLYING THAT WHY CAN WE SEND A ROVER TO THE MOON IN UNDER 10 HOURS BUT A TRAIN CANT GET TO A STOP ON TIME WHEN ITS 25 MINUTE AWAY
Facade Thank you. It's sad when you have to draw someone a picture to make them understand the sentence.
THERE IS NO SOUND IN SPACE!
It is assumed that Mars has an atmosphere substantial enough to carry sound, I've never really gone there to check, but I think even 10 millibars is enough to allow for at least a small amount of noise.
Seventythird I meant after it left Earth's atmosphere, it was in space and when it passed the camera at about 0:34, there was sound, when there should have been none. Also, I would think that sound would travel on Mars due to its atmosphere. I've actually never checked to see how thin it's atmosphere is, but I've always thought sound would travel on Mars...
Hope that clears up the confusion... if there was any...
AdamofBlastWorks it's an animation
maxracer176 I know, I was making a joke about reality
***** How is it lame? No really? What makes it lame versus just not a good joke... It wasn't even supposed to be a joke exactly, more of laughing about something silly, on my part, and pointing it out to others, making them think about it, and maybe have a laugh too.
Or are you just joking around too?
Great making
Amaizing!! ❤
Obama is making sure no one comes from space to take his precious 'merica.
I very likes
Santu Mondal
if u go into settings u can turn off external camera wobble
This is the most beautiful clip I've ever seen.
fake vedio not reel anoter nASA li,e hid flot Erth
ofcourse they dont have cameras on mars ther re created it of hoe it looked
Thank u
Andromeda galaxy abstains 24.000.000.000.000.000.000 km from earth and you can see it in the sky. This distance is incredible.
Youer laboratory performance is very carefully operated for helpful NASA team
FANTÁSTICO, PARECE FILME D FICÇÃO CIENTÍFICA 🤔