Subj : 7 minutes of terror To : Wilfred van Velzen From : August Abolins Date : Tue Feb 23 2021 23:05:00 Hello Wilfred! ** On Tuesday 23.02.21 - 09:47, you wrote to me: AA>> I'm surprised that the module (before chute deployment) AA>> doesn't start tumbling and turning during the fastest AA>> approach. WvV> The heatshield shape is designed in such a way that it WvV> doesn't. They have experience with that since before the WvV> apollo program! ;) OK.. but considering the turmoil those capsules encounter upon reentry to Earth's atmosphere (which is thicker than Mar's) I am still surprised that something doesn't cause them to tip the wrong way and tumbling ensues. Entering Mar's atmosphere was less problematic. I get that the design is like a dart's and the air passing around it (drag) contributes to stablize it. It still seems amazing to me especially when supersonic speed is involved and a whole lot of shaking and internal heat could affect the electronics. AA>> The images were fantastic. The very last few seconds AA>> looked precarious when all the soil started to block the AA>> cameras though. WvV> That's how you know it's real! ;) Well.. a lot of things can still be faked. I wish we could have seen about 2 or 3 minutes more right after the landing as the dust cloud settles. Then it would seem more real to me. But the choreography of events one after another and hoping that there would be no malfunctions.. that's stressful. I was reading a bit on past missions to Mars, and on one of them a simple misundersting in the use of meteric vs british measuring system caused the mission to fail. -- ../|ug --- OpenXP 5.0.49 * Origin: (1:396/45.29) .