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Nice Titan landing video


symesie04

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Sure many of you will have seen this before as its a little old hat now but I came across it recently on a moons course i did and thought it was well worth sharing as it has some great detail. Bottom left of video contains info regarding sun direction and Cassini orbiter as well as height comparison to Everest. Top left parachute info, lower right of image pane shows spin information. Lower right has signal strength etc etc.

Im linking it via my Google drive account as its 30mb and cant upload so not sure if this will work or not.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B5Luoq2lIyVjREEtR2RoNXF2YVU/view?usp=sharing

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Never watched that video before, it's very good indeed, makes it very exciting

to watch first time, I'm going to watch it again, probably more than that too.

thank's for posting.  

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There often seems interesting stuff that filters out (long) after these events. :)

Elsewhere, at the very point of landing, you glimpse low hills on the horizon?

With modern (amateur?) image processing, complete Venusian "panoramas"

are now available - Derived from the original distorted, close-up, viewpoints.

I sense some of Rosetta "cliff" images were "preemptive". But all good, imo! ;)

I still wish someone had put a basic camera on the Galileo (Jupiter) probe... :o

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There often seems interesting stuff that filters out (long) after these events. :)

Elsewhere, at the very point of landing, you glimpse low hills on the horizon?

With modern (amateur?) image processing, complete Venusian "panoramas"

are now available - Derived from the original distorted, close-up, viewpoints.

I sense some of Rosetta "cliff" images were "preemptive". But all good, imo! ;)

I still wish someone had put a basic camera on the Galileo (Jupiter) probe... :o

Well someone did process the landing images not long after the landing.  However they were a bit over enthusiastic.

http://www.saers.com/recorder/craig/titan/

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