Not a surprise at all….
And dirt. Probe parts and dirt.
And some rocks.
Well, it almost worked.
WHAT?! NO CHEESE?
I love it! Well, they have to filter that noise out of the results one way or another.
…bits of blue cheese…
Obviously defective. He’ll have to repeat the experiment until he gets the desired results. No matter how much it costs.
JPL has done it again.
From a certain point of view, it is. “There is no such thing as a failed experiment; it can always serve as a bad example.” :)
Now - let’s go have our separate versions of Nuclear Coffee and do something useful. :))
My question is, did he find traces of Alice?
Anybody find any spleen among the debris?
Even failure provides data. Usually.
well THAT was 40 billion well spent!
Science fiction? No. Stranger than fiction.
Isaac Asimov would have slapped him silly.
Didn’t we do this recently with the moon?
yes we did, and it was successful.
http://lcross.arc.nasa.gov/news/arc-101609.htm
After crashing probe after probe after probe, it was finally determined that the moon – now the size of a baseball – is composed of moon rock.
I had to explain to two people at work that 1) yes the two probes did crash into the moon, 2) no it was not an accident.
What’s this I hear about two Ford Probes crashing into each other on the moon? If it’s not one thing, it’s another.
Emily Latella
Color!!!!!!!!!!
So says spectrographic analysis.
margueritem about 15 years ago
Not a surprise at all….
rayannina about 15 years ago
And dirt. Probe parts and dirt.
And some rocks.
ejcapulet about 15 years ago
Well, it almost worked.
Dutchboy1 about 15 years ago
WHAT?! NO CHEESE?
Rakkav about 15 years ago
I love it! Well, they have to filter that noise out of the results one way or another.
3hourtour Premium Member about 15 years ago
…bits of blue cheese…
alan.gurka about 15 years ago
Obviously defective. He’ll have to repeat the experiment until he gets the desired results. No matter how much it costs.
wicky about 15 years ago
JPL has done it again.
Rakkav about 15 years ago
From a certain point of view, it is. “There is no such thing as a failed experiment; it can always serve as a bad example.” :)
Now - let’s go have our separate versions of Nuclear Coffee and do something useful. :))
Digital Frog about 15 years ago
My question is, did he find traces of Alice?
alan.gurka about 15 years ago
Anybody find any spleen among the debris?
Motivemagus about 15 years ago
Even failure provides data. Usually.
Nighthawks Premium Member about 15 years ago
well THAT was 40 billion well spent!
jpozenel about 15 years ago
Science fiction? No. Stranger than fiction.
wicky about 15 years ago
Isaac Asimov would have slapped him silly.
rdh288 about 15 years ago
Didn’t we do this recently with the moon?
Nelly55 about 15 years ago
yes we did, and it was successful.
http://lcross.arc.nasa.gov/news/arc-101609.htm
Sherlock Watson about 15 years ago
After crashing probe after probe after probe, it was finally determined that the moon – now the size of a baseball – is composed of moon rock.
drtom01 about 15 years ago
I had to explain to two people at work that 1) yes the two probes did crash into the moon, 2) no it was not an accident.
gordrogb Premium Member about 15 years ago
What’s this I hear about two Ford Probes crashing into each other on the moon? If it’s not one thing, it’s another.
Emily Latella
giratina08 over 12 years ago
Color!!!!!!!!!!
David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace over 5 years ago
So says spectrographic analysis.