File:NASA-MarsCuriosityRover-TeamOfWomen-20140626.jpg
原始檔案 (1,155 × 541 像素,檔案大小:815 KB,MIME 類型:image/jpeg)
摘要
描述NASA-MarsCuriosityRover-TeamOfWomen-20140626.jpg |
English: NASA's Curiosity Rover Team Today Features Women
June 26, 2014 http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.php?release=2014-205
To celebrate reaching this longevity milestone, which had been set as one of the mission's goals from the start, the Curiosity team planned staffing a special day, with women fulfilling 76 out of 102 operational roles. "I see this as a chance to illustrate to girls and young women that there's not just a place for them in technical fields, but a wide range of jobs and disciplines that are part of the team needed for a project as exciting as a rover on Mars," said Colette Lohr, an engineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California. "There's no practical way any one person could learn all the disciplines needed for operating Curiosity," she said. "It takes a team and we rely on each other." Disciplines range from soil science to software engineering, from chemistry to cartography, in duties ranging from assessing rover-temperature data freshly arriving from Mars to choosing where to point the rover's cameras. Descriptions of the roles, along with names and locations of the team members filling them today, are part of Curiosity Women's Day information available at: Lohr's role today is strategic mission manager, which means she is responsible for review and approval of plans being developed and modified during the day for rover activities more than three or four days in the future. She and most of the other engineers and managers on the team are at JPL in California. Today's team, not atypically, also includes members working in 11 other U.S. states, from Massachusetts to Montana, and four other nations: Canada, France, Russia and Spain. Each of the rover's 10 science instruments has people responsible for evaluating newly received data and planning to get more data. Other scientists participating in operations serve on theme groups that pull together information from multiple instruments and choose priorities for upcoming activities. Curiosity Deputy Project Scientist Joy Crisp of JPL helped organize the special day and will fill the project scientist role, providing scientific leadership in the strategic planning process. She said, "The team has both scientists and engineers, but it's one team working together to accomplish the mission goals." Each day's rover activities must be planned to fit within budgets of how much time, power and data-downlink capacity are available. The operational roles fall into categories of tactical, supra-tactical and strategic, which focus, respectively, on the next day's rover activities, the activities two to five days ahead, and planning for weeks or months ahead. "While some people are focused on today's plan for tomorrow, we need other people to be looking further ahead," Crisp said. "We wouldn't be able to plan complex activities for the rover if we started from scratch each day. We do a lot of work to get a head start on each day." The operations team for Curiosity is larger than the operations teams for the previous generation of rovers, NASA's Mars Exploration Rovers Spirit and Opportunity. In an experience similar to Women's Curiosity Day, one day in February 2008, Spirit's tactical operations team of about 30 people was almost entirely women. NASA's Mars Science Laboratory Project is using Curiosity to assess ancient habitable environments and major changes in Martian environmental conditions. JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, built the rover and manages the project for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington. For more information about Curiosity, visit: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/msl , http://www.nasa.gov/msl and http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/ You can follow the mission on Facebook and Twitter at: http://www.facebook.com/marscuriosity https://twitter.com/marscuriosity Guy Webster 818-354-6278 Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. [email protected] 2014-205 |
日期 | |
來源 | http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/images/msl/20140626/womenworkingonmsl-full.jpg |
作者 | NASA/JPL-Caltech |
授權條款
Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse |
本作品由NASA創作,屬於公有領域。根據NASA的版權政策:“NASA的創作除非另有聲明否則不受版權保護。”(參見:Template:PD-USGov/zh,NASA版權政策或JPL圖像使用政策) | ||
警告:
|
在此檔案描寫的項目
描繪內容
16 7 2013
檔案歷史
點選日期/時間以檢視該時間的檔案版本。
日期/時間 | 縮圖 | 尺寸 | 使用者 | 備註 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
目前 | 2014年6月27日 (五) 13:28 | 1,155 × 541(815 KB) | Drbogdan | User created page with UploadWizard |
檔案用途
下列頁面有用到此檔案:
全域檔案使用狀況
以下其他 wiki 使用了這個檔案:
- uk.wikipedia.org 的使用狀況
詮釋資料
此檔案中包含其他資訊,這些資訊可能是由數位相機或掃描器在建立或數位化過程中所新增的。若檔案自原始狀態已被修改,一些詳細資料可能無法完整反映出已修改的檔案。
相機製造商 | NIKON CORPORATION |
---|---|
相機型號 | NIKON D800 |
作者 | Brandon Buie |
版權所有人 |
|
曝光時間 | 1/200 秒 (0.005) |
光圈值 | f/5.6 |
ISO 速率 | 100 |
資料產生的日期時間 | 2013年7月16日 (二) 08:44 |
焦距 | 28毫米 |
寬度 | 1,200 px |
高度 | 801 px |
每像素位元 |
|
像素合成 | RGB |
方位 | 標準 |
像素數量 | 3 |
水平解析度 | 72 dpi |
垂直解析度 | 72 dpi |
使用軟體 | Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows |
檔案修改日期時間 | 2013年7月29日 (一) 18:28 |
曝光模式 | 手動 |
Exif 版本 | 2.3 |
數位化的日期時間 | 2013年7月16日 (二) 08:44 |
APEX 快門速度 | 7.643856 |
APEX 光圈 | 4.970854 |
APEX 曝光補償 | 0.66666666666667 |
最大陸地光圈 | 3 APEX(f/2.83) |
測光模式 | 模式 |
光源 | 不明 |
閃光燈 | 閃光燈未開啟、強制閃光燈關閉 |
文件建立時間數據亞秒數 | 90 |
文件數位化時間數據亞秒數 | 90 |
色彩空間 | sRGB |
X 軸焦平面解析度 | 204.84020996094 |
Y 軸焦平面解析度 | 204.84020996094 |
焦平面解析度單位 | 4 |
感光模式 | 單晶片彩色區域感測器 |
檔案來源 | 數位相機 |
場景類型 | 直接照像圖片 |
自訂影像處理 | 一般程序 |
曝光模式 | 手動曝光 |
白平衡 | 自動白平衡 |
數位變焦比率 | 1 |
35 毫米膠片焦距 | 28毫米 |
場景拍攝類型 | 標準 |
場景控制 | 無 |
對比度 | 標準 |
飽和度 | 標準 |
銳利度 | 標準 |
主體距離範圍 | 不明 |
相機序號 | 3016498 |
使用鏡頭 | 24.0-70.0 mm f/2.8 |
詮釋資料最後修改日期 | 2013年7月29日 (一) 11:28 |
原始文件唯一識別碼 | C4F0B51354F475BB679D0E01901E587F |
IIM 版本 | 4 |