I just got back from a trip and one of my stops was a tour of the Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena. They build and run a wide variety of satellites, mostly Earth observing and solar system exploration including the Mars Rovers and Cassini.
The first stop was their little museum. The room is dominated by a full scale model of the Galileo spacecraft that studied Jupiter. Galileo was a fairly large satellite as you can see.
We got to see the testing facility where they have a working replica of the Mars rovers. Spirit is currently stuck on Mars. They are trying to recreate the conditions as close as they can so they are burying its wheels (it has used a camera on a boom to photograph them so we know roughly how deep they are buried) and built a platform that gives the same incline the rover is resting on. Now they are trying different techniques to get it unstuck.
And they are already hard at work on the next mission, the Mars Science Laboratory. Here is part of the six-wheeled rover.
The clean room holds a wide variety of other pieces that will go into the Mars Science Laboratory as well.
Finally, we stopped by the control room. This is where the commands are sent to and data is received from the spacecraft.
JPL is a small city. Probably a couple of thousands of people work there on different projects. They have multiple cafeterias/restaurants, a credit union, fitness center, post office, recreation facilities and lots of other things you expect from a small city. I worked at Fermilab and it was very similar there.
It's just cool to be where science is done.Reprinted with permission from the Half-Astrophysicist Blog.
That's very cool!
ReplyDeleteThings the regular person doesn't know about what goes on behind the scenes.
You hang either at the coolest places or the nerdiest. I can't decide! ;>
ReplyDeleteWas this a paid junket or simply a vacation?
I was attending a meeting. I get paid to go places like this!
ReplyDeleteI found out an old friend got a job at SpaceX, the company that is building the Falcon 1 and Falcon 9 rocket. Next time I am in LA,I am going to try and get a tour there.
I'd love to see something like this in Racine. Mayor Dickert, please go to NASA and come home with a space laboratory or science firm or some sort of technological production facility so that our children have both a reason to study and to stay in Racine when they graduate.
ReplyDelete