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Mars Rover Curiosity: An Inside Account from Curiosity's Chief Engineer | |||
Mars Rover Curiosity: An Inside Account from Curiosity's Chief Engineer |
网友对Mars Rover Curiosity: An Inside Account from Curiosity's Chief Engineer的评论
As an enthusiastic practicing engineer I found this account fascinating. When first I learned about the sky crane I was alarmed at the complexity of the whole arrangement in a mission where every gram was precious and there was no chance of a second try. The book, written from an engineering perspective gave me the train of logic that generated the outcome. I became convinced!
It's not much appreciated how much effort goes into a project like the Mars Lander. This book provides a clear insight into the sheer amount of hard work, hard thinking and hard discussion.
The book outlined a number of other interesting engineering solutions and, most importantly, the logic and constraints that lead to them. An aside chapter on some of the aspects of a manned Mars landing showed clearly the vast magnitude of such an undertaking.
"Mars Rover Curiosity" is the real deal. Author Rob Manning was JPL's Chief Engineer on the program, and he tells it like it was and is.
With excellent readability and page-turning immediacy, Dr. Manning recounts the trials and tribulations, successes and failures, joys and sorrows of NASA's effort to land a planetary rover on Mars using a seemingly crazy technique dubbed "sky crane." Curiosity was bigger, heavier, more complicated, more capable and more power-hungry than any other rover ever flown. Designing, building, testing, launching and operating it on a very tight schedule and within stringent funding constraints presented daunting challenges that sometimes brought the project to a virtual standstill. The stunning success of Curiosity's flawless touchdown on Mars on August 5, 2012, is a testament to the skill, dedication, ingenuity and hard work of the scientists, engineers and technicians who worked on it. This book is their story.
It's all in here: planning and budgetary meetings; design reviews; trade studies; hardware and software development, testing and integration; launch and interplanetary cruise flight; the landing's "seven minutes of terror;" Martian surface operations, and even some of the science results. Dr. Manning does not concentrate on any one topic to the exclusion of the others. As an unrepentant techno-geek, I tend to most enjoy spaceflight books that are filled to bursting with arcane technical minutia, and I usually pay less attention to the budgetary, programmatic and managerial material. Not so in "Mars Rover Curiosity." I found it fascinating from cover to cover. Its level of detail satisfied my geekiness, but should not be daunting to those readers not too familiar with the subject.
For an exciting tale of planetary exploration as new as tomorrow's headlines, pick up a copy of "Mars Rover Curiosity." As I said, it's the real deal.
I read Adam Steltzner's book on the MSL program, but it was mostly about his career and NASA. I was hoping to get some good tech about the MSL program with this book. But this book too is mainly people and politics. There is some tech buried in it, but I got tired of hearing about the NASA bureaucracy and the never-ending scramble for funding. Some pics, but they are small low-res grayscale on cheap paper. I'd gladly pay more for a comprehensive explanation of the technology with lots of color pics, graphs, charts, etc.
What a cool book. I loved it! Well written, it does an excellent job of telling its story, which is a lot more interesting that I had first believed. What a lot of garbage these guys had to endure to get this machine built! BRAVO to them and to the author who brought us this tale. Recommended if you like science, tech, NASA, tales of government stupidity or just want to know how we got that little guy up there on Mars.
if you like aerospace engineering, mars, descriptions of big projects from the inside, testing (even software testing), nasa, test results from a parachute in a high speed wind tunnel, learning about how to get a rover from space to the surface, and reading about how you can tell what is in rocks without touching them, then...you'll probably like this.
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