Is CNN serious or is this a joke?

RomeoTheCat

Warlord
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
221
http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/space/03/18/bat.shuttle/index.html#cnnSTCText

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Florida (CNN) -- A bat that apparently had trouble flying instead tried to hitch a ride on the space shuttle Discovery, NASA officials said.

The free tail bat was last seen clinging to the space shuttle Discovery's external fuel tank just before launch.

The animal was last seen clinging on the foam of the external tank of the space shuttle moments before the Discovery launched, officials said.

NASA officials had hoped the bat would fly away on its own, but admitted the bat probably died quickly during Discovery's climb into orbit.

Discovery's seven-member crew, which lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on Sunday, is on a 14-day mission to deliver supplies needed to expand the International Space Station.

NASA officials noticed the bat before shuttle's liftoff and brought in a wildlife expert to look at video images of it. The expert said it appeared to be a free-tailed bat that probably had a broken left wing and an injured right shoulder or wrist.

The launch pads at the space center are near the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, so NASA has sirens to scare away animals that get near the shuttles.

The bat isn't the first to try hitching a ride into space. NASA officials said they noticed one of the creatures on a tank of a shuttle in 1998. That bat flew away as the shuttle's massive engines ignited.

The crew of the Discovery safely docked at the International Space Station on Tuesday. It was unclear whether its stowaway was still clinging to the shuttle.

Is CNN serious or is this an attempt at a joke? At first I wrote it off as a joke but then someone reminded me that CNN reported that Columbia was traveling at 17 times the speed of light when it broke up so now I'm not so sure.
 
At first I wrote it off as a joke but then someone reminded me that CNN reported that Columbia was traveling at 17 times the speed of light when it broke up so now I'm not so sure.
That sounds like a typo; light instead of sound (sorry VRWC)
 
Poor bat :(
 
Could it possibly be ... humor?
 
At best it is poor reporting, probably written by someone who doesn’t have a clue. The main fuel tank separates from the shuttle as it is entering orbit after the main engines use all the fuel and cut off. So if the bat was still clinging onto the tank (an extremely unlikely scenario anyway) it would have fallen into the earth’s atmosphere with the tank, and not still be clinging to the “shuttle”.

I hate it when they (news organizations in general) get stupid details like this wrong – like when they have a story about a 737 but show a picture of a 747, or talk about an F-16 but show stock footage of F-15s or F-18s. :gripe:
 
Or it was merely a simple typo that nobody caught. Occam's Razor strikes again.
 
Surely you mean 17 times the speed of sound. :crazyeye:


I don't mean 17 times the speed of sound or 17 times the speed of light. I didn't write either article.

All I'm saying is this article must have passed through many hands at CNN & nobody questioned the part about it's unclear if the bat made it to the ISS?
 
Or it could those damn Soviet Communists LOL
 
For god's sake, it's called humor.
 
Oh come on guys, there's no way in hell the bat can still cling on to the shuttle during launch, it would have experienced a 3G, which isn't much by human standards but to a bat it is.

And when the shuttle is travelling through the atmosphere the bat would just vaporize...
 
Back
Top Bottom