- Jul 23, 2004
- 6,617
- 14
You guys know about the mission....will for this who don't, read the follwing
The cosmic collisions are expected to kick up tons of moon dirt in giant debrisplumes that will then be scanned for signs of water ice suspected to be buried beneath the floor of a permanently shadowed crater at the lunar south pole.
Here is a HQ live stream to NASA TV were you can watch it happen live.
Just copy and paste it into Windows Media Player or VLC player or etc....
High Quality Stream (Different link from nasa website):
http://playlist.yahoo.com/makeplaylist.dll?id=1368163
The two vehicles are due to separate late tonight and the first impact is set for 7:31 a.m. EDT (1131GMT). That's when the 42-foot (13-meter) long Centaur rocket stage will plow into the crater Cabeus at the moon'ssouth pole. NASA will start broadcasting the event live on NASA TV at 6:30 a.m. EDT (1030GMT).
The cosmic collisions are expected to kick up tons of moon dirt in giant debrisplumes that will then be scanned for signs of water ice suspected to be buried beneath the floor of a permanently shadowed crater at the lunar south pole.
Here is a HQ live stream to NASA TV were you can watch it happen live.
Just copy and paste it into Windows Media Player or VLC player or etc....
High Quality Stream (Different link from nasa website):
http://playlist.yahoo.com/makeplaylist.dll?id=1368163
The two vehicles are due to separate late tonight and the first impact is set for 7:31 a.m. EDT (1131GMT). That's when the 42-foot (13-meter) long Centaur rocket stage will plow into the crater Cabeus at the moon'ssouth pole. NASA will start broadcasting the event live on NASA TV at 6:30 a.m. EDT (1030GMT).