enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Deep space exploration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_space_exploration

    The International Telecommunication Union defines deep space to start at a distance of 2 million km (1.2 million mi) (about 0.01 AU) from Earth's surface. NASA's Deep Space Network has variously used criteria of 16,000–32,000 km (9,900–19,900 mi) from Earth.

  3. Bradbury Landing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradbury_Landing

    Bradbury Landing is the August 6, 2012, landing site within Gale crater on planet Mars of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) Curiosity rover. On August 22, 2012, on what would have been his 92nd birthday, NASA named the site for author Ray Bradbury , who had died on June 5, 2012.

  4. Experience Curiosity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Experience_Curiosity

    Experience Curiosity is an interactive web application developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory to celebrate the third anniversary of the Curiosity rover landing on Mars. [1] This 3D serious game [ 2 ] makes it possible to operate the rover, control its cameras and the robotic arm and reproduces some of the prominent events of the Mars ...

  5. Interplanetary spaceflight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interplanetary_spaceflight

    A spacecraft traveling from Earth to Mars via this method will arrive near Mars orbit in approximately 8.5 months, but because the orbital velocity is greater when closer to the center of mass (i.e. the Sun) and slower when farther from the center, the spacecraft will be traveling quite slowly and a small application of thrust is all that is ...

  6. Areosynchronous orbit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Areosynchronous_orbit

    An areosynchronous orbit that is equatorial (in the same plane as the equator of Mars), circular, and prograde (rotating about Mars's axis in the same direction as the planet's surface) is known as an areostationary orbit (AEO). To an observer on the surface of Mars, the position of a satellite in AEO would appear to be fixed in a constant ...

  7. Free-return trajectory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free-return_trajectory

    Sketch of a circumlunar free return trajectory (not to scale), plotted on the rotating reference frame rotating with the moon. (Moon's motion only shown for clarity) In orbital mechanics, a free-return trajectory is a trajectory of a spacecraft traveling away from a primary body (for example, the Earth) where gravity due to a secondary body (for example, the Moon) causes the spacecraft to ...

  8. Areostationary orbit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Areostationary_orbit

    Several factors make placing a spacecraft into an areostationary orbit more difficult than a geostationary orbit. Since the areostationary orbit lies between Mars's two natural satellites, Phobos (semi-major axis: 9,376 km) and Deimos (semi-major axis: 23,463 km), any satellites in the orbit will suffer increased orbital station keeping costs due to unwanted orbital resonance effects.

  9. Universe Sandbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universe_Sandbox

    Universe Sandbox is a series of simulation video games.In Universe Sandbox, users can see the effects of gravity on objects in the universe and run scale simulations of the Solar System, various galaxies or other simulations, while at the same time interacting and maintaining control over gravity, time, and other objects in the universe, such as moons, planets, asteroids, comets, and black holes.