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Rover captures video from asteroid's surface


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I'm not sure 15 photos taken 6 minutes apart count as video footage. Seems like a bit of an oversell.

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1 hour ago, DirtyDocMartens said:

I'm not sure 15 photos taken 6 minutes apart count as video footage. Seems like a bit of an oversell.

Yeah, too back Stanley Kubrick is dead. The Japanese should have gotten him to fake their footage. ;) 

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Wow we see some pebble and rocks, incredible that tiny gravity can bring stuff together like that. Was thinking of a solid rock but it's more complex, intriguing.

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Smooth touchdown on an object thats moving at a speed of 34km/sec and in a distance of 300M km to Earth. Plus: well focused images taken. Well done!

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On 29/09/2018 at 1:43 AM, Jon the frog said:

Wow we see some pebble and rocks, incredible that tiny gravity can bring stuff together like that. Was thinking of a solid rock but it's more complex, intriguing.

Gravity is still by far the weakest of the known forces.

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16 hours ago, Black Monk said:

Gravity is still by far the weakest of the known forces.

Not from where am standing. Most of me seems unduly attracted to the south pole lately. 

/saggy old guy

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This is so cool...
Can't wait for the conspiracy guys, analyzing these images :D

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