You're viewing a single thread.
I love this sort of thing. Like NASA engineers calling an explosion a "rapid unscheduled disassembly."
158 0 ReplyOr a data breach an "emergent distributed backup"
87 0 ReplyOur data is federated
16 0 ReplyOr ‘I dunno what was wrong, but banging it helped’ as ‘percussive maintenance’.
8 0 Reply
At the first days of planning their Moon landing, NASA came out with lithobraking for the times the capsule wouldn't slow down enough.
Then, some 20 and something years lather, when planing their Mars landers, they decided that no, lithobraking is a perfectly fine thing to do and the landers would use it by design.
So be wary of rocket scientists making jokes.
75 0 Replyfor the record... the engineering behind that was quite sound.
it's their ability to use consistent units of measurements that's in question.
27 0 ReplyWell that was when they performed lithobraking with a satellite, but they also did lithobraking on purpose for several rover landings
5 0 ReplyYes. And the rover landings worked.
(Technically it was aerobraking on the observer.)
1 0 Reply
For anybody like myself who doesn't know enough ancient greek.. Lithos means rock...
13 0 ReplyWell, if there’s no humans on board and the bots can take the impact, why not?
4 0 ReplyIf you lithobreak into a low gravity object with enough momentum and at an angle you may return into orbit
1 0 Reply