Difference between revisions of "Bat chart"

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[[File:Bat2.png |300px|thumb|right|Another Mars Bat Chart (From [http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/373665main_NASA-SP-2009-566.pdf]).]]
 
[[File:Bat2.png |300px|thumb|right|Another Mars Bat Chart (From [http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/373665main_NASA-SP-2009-566.pdf]).]]
  
A '''bat chart''' is a type of schematic used at [[NASA]] to illustrate various mission timelines and architectures.  A fundamental component of [[Powerpoint Engineering]], it is one of the first diagrams created when someone dreams up a new manned spaceflight mission.  Typically, a bat chart has Earth at the bottom, and the destination (e.g., Moon, Mars, NEO, etc.) at the top.  It is called a "bat chart" because it typically includes a lander of some sort hanging upside down (like a bat) on the top portion of the diagram.
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A '''bat chart''' is a type of schematic used at [[NASA]] to illustrate various mission timelines and architectures.  A fundamental component of [[Powerpoint Engineering]], it is one of the first diagrams created when someone dreams up a new manned spaceflight mission.  Typically, a bat chart has Earth at the bottom, and the destination (e.g., ISS, Moon, Mars, NEO, etc.) at the top.  It is called a "bat chart" because it typically includes a lander of some sort hanging upside down (like a bat) on the top portion of the diagram.
  
 
== Trivia ==
 
== Trivia ==

Revision as of 18:27, 8 February 2012

A Bat Chart showing an Earth to Mars mission architecture using multiple launches of the Falcon 9 rocket.
Another Mars Bat Chart (From [1]).

A bat chart is a type of schematic used at NASA to illustrate various mission timelines and architectures. A fundamental component of Powerpoint Engineering, it is one of the first diagrams created when someone dreams up a new manned spaceflight mission. Typically, a bat chart has Earth at the bottom, and the destination (e.g., ISS, Moon, Mars, NEO, etc.) at the top. It is called a "bat chart" because it typically includes a lander of some sort hanging upside down (like a bat) on the top portion of the diagram.

Trivia

See also