Legos are not just kids toys. With their architectural series covering famous buildings (Sears Tower, Frank Lloyd Wright houses, etc.) and legions of dedicated fans around the world making ever more complex projects, Legos have expanded their reach well beyond the Cartoon Network demographic.
The second Lego product to be produced this way is the Hayabusa Probe. This Japanese probe was the first spacecraft to fly to an asteroid, land and return a sample of said asteroid to the Earth using an ion thruster for propulsion.
The Lego version looks like a true collectors item and includes a figure representative of the probe's project manager. This would look great on your desk and is a great way to learn about some of our world's more overlooked space endeavors.
Buy Lego Hayabusa Probe...
Hayabusa Probe Wiki...
Which brings us to the second part of this post and what got me aware of the aforementioned to begin with. The Lego CUUSOO program has announced that the next model to be produced will be the Curiosity Rover. Already wandering around Mars, the Lego Rover will look similar to the one pictured here (this was the proposed model, Lego will create the final version).
It appears that geeks all over the world should rejoice and prepare to pilot their own rover around the Red Planet in the very near future! A collection of these realworld space program related Legos would be cool to see--a great teaching tool for kids and adults as well.
Lego CUUSOO Curiosity Rover page...
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