Geez, whaddya think I am, a rocket scientist?

Posted by David on Friday, January 21, 2005 at 3:33 PM.

How can you expect me to remember everything?

Professor's Saturn Experiment Forgotten

SPOKANE, Wash. - David Atkinson spent 18 years designing an experiment for the unmanned space mission to Saturn. Now some pieces of it are lost in space. Someone forgot to turn on the instrument Atkinson needed to measure the winds on Saturn's largest moon.

"The story is actually fairly gruesome," the University of Idaho scientist said in an e-mail from Germany, the headquarters of the European Space Agency. "It was human error — the command to turn the instrument on was forgotten."

[ . . . ]

"I (and the rest of my team) waited and waited and waited," he wrote, as the probe descended. "We watched the probe enter and start transmitting data, but our instrument never turned on."

Officials for the European Space Agency said last week they would investigate to learn what happened. They were not available for comment on Thursday, nor did NASA officials immediately respond to telephone messages.

[ . . . ]

"In total, the core of our team has invested something like 80 man years on this experiment, 18 of which are mine," Atkinson wrote. "I think right now the key lesson is this — if you're looking for a job with instant and guaranteed success, this isn't it."

I will never again complain about months of work on a project being thrown away.


heather, on Friday, January 21, 2005 at 10:56 PM:

Whatever happened to good old fashioned post-it notes?

Although I guess the sticky stuff might wear off or dry up after 18 years ;-)

Thumbtacks still work well though.

- Milk
- Eggs
- Butter
- Activate instruments on space probe when it reaches saturn (ETA Jan 2005; command: go breakwind)
- Stamps
- Dry cleaning
- Dr Appt @ 4pm (to be safe, reschedule for after saturn mission)