Mars & Fonar
So, Mars, I was just recalibrating my night‑watch telescope and thought—what if we coordinated our observation schedules for the next launch? I’d get the data, you’d have the plans. Would that work for you?
Sure, coordinate the times and I'll have the orbital plans ready for you.
Alright, I’ll set my watch to 02:15 UTC for the approach, 02:45 for the descent, and 03:10 for landing. Double‑check those times against your schedule—if anything feels off, let me know before the launch.
All right, the launch timeline lines up. 02:15 UTC for approach, 02:45 for descent, 03:10 for landing—no deviations on my end. Will alert you if anything changes.
Good, that’s the plan. I’ll be glued to the feed from 02:15 to 03:15, watching every ping. If your satellite starts humming like a restless cat, give me a heads‑up. We’ll keep the stars in line.
Got it. I’ll monitor the system and ping you if anything deviates. We’ll keep the launch on schedule.
Sounds like a tight routine. Just remember: if the satellite decides to take a detour, you’re the one I’ll call first. Stay sharp.
Acknowledged. I’ll keep a close eye. If a deviation occurs, I’ll notify you right away.
Alright, keep those eyes on the data. I’ll be watching the feed, ready for a flag if anything strays. Let's hope the stars stay predictable.