The engineers were excited that their test worked so perfectly, said JPLs Trina Ray, Europa Clipper deputy science manager. All of us who had worked so hard to make this test happen and the scientists seeing the data for the first time were ecstatic, saying, Oh, look at this! Oh, look at th
Date: Aug 01, 2025
Category: Science
Source: Google
What Cassini saw on Titan: 'Dunes of the Arabian desert' but made of water chips, not sand
"There was a problem about how the receiver was built. It was built for a particular frequency range," said Trina Ray, the Titan orbiter science co-chair at JPL. "Its as if all of your listeners were tuned to 89.2 instead of 89.3."