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Originally posted by SpearMint
Originally posted by ArMaP
Originally posted by SpearMint
I saw this the other day, and I still can't quite figure out how it took the picture since there's no arms extending out of the image, do you know?
The "self-portrait" was made from 55 different images. When making an image like that (a panorama) several photos are taken of the same area, so the best parts of any photo can be chosen to make the final image, making it possible to remove part of the robotic arm where the camera was, for example.
Ah, thank you. I assumed it was a single image.
Originally posted by eriktheawful
Actually there's a very good reason for why things like wire bundles are exposed, the most important is: decreasing the amount of mass that had to be sent.
They could have covered all those wire bundles with some very nice looking covers, made from metal, plastics or other polymers, but in doing that they would have increased the amount of mass of the rover.
Increasing the mass increases the amount of fuel to get it to Mars. Worse, increasing the mass changes how to land. The larger the mass, the larger the chute would have needed to be, the more thrust the skycrane rockets would have needed to be.
Curiosity isn't a car on a show room floor. It's a data gathering instrument sent to another planet. Functionality using minimum mass was a priority over how "pretty" it should look.
Originally posted by cmdrkeenkid
reply to post by earthalien50
It's not a nuclear reactor, but a radioisotope thermoelectric generator. It uses heat from nuclear decay to generate electricity, not fission as in a nuclear reactor. They're pretty safe and have all sorts of applications.
Originally posted by ArMaP
reply to post by jaffer44
I have seen cases in which the fact that the wires were passing through a hole were the cause of a problem.