 Well, all I can say is, wow, and I'm not surprised that it's strange, because it usually is when you go there and make measurements. Well, I'm as excited as I expected I would be, the interplanetary space is full of activity that we really were not aware of. And they're also very quick, so we took images that are about 12 hours apart, and they're not there in the next image. And so they're very clear for two images, and then they're gone. Well, you go on a space mission, you always run into mysterious things, eventually figuring them out, but I wouldn't have expected anything like that. And so that's the beauty of the Parker Solar Probe mission, we're going so close and we're seeing all of this stuff for the very first time. As usual, when you have a space mission into an unknown place, you find remarkable things that you did not anticipate. I was very moved by the fact that that spacecraft is going off into the night sky, and he'll never come back. That's right. Sort of sad. Oh. I said, I had separation anxiety, I said it was like watching a member of the team, because after working with that spacecraft for so long, she became a person and she became part of the team. And to say goodbye to her was really, really tough. And always the little anxiety about will something go wrong, and the answer is no. This baby was built to perform and it's done its job flawlessly. She certainly has.