NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

steve

With "LOD" Since 1997
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040104/ap_on_sc/mars_rover&cid=624&ncid=716

NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars
5 minutes ago Add Science - AP to My Yahoo!


By ANDREW BRIDGES, AP Science Writer

PASADENA, Calif. - A NASA (news - web sites) rover plunged through the atmosphere of Mars and bounced down upon its rocky surface Saturday night, beginning a mission to roam the Red Planet in search of evidence that it was once suitable for life.

Scientists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory let out whoops of joy and embraced one another as signals from the Spirit rover indicated it had survived the landing.

"This is a big night for NASA — we are back!" NASA administrator Sean O'Keefe crowed at a celebratory news conference, relishing a success that came just 11 months after the agency's Feb. 1 Columbia space shuttle disaster.

When the spacecraft stopped bouncing, the four-petaled lander that contains the rover was standing upright. That will make unfolding it easier, said Chris Jones, director of planetary flight programs at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

"That is how we hoped it would land," Jones said.

Spirit was expected to emerge from inside the flowerlike lander within its first 90 minutes on Mars, after it retracts the air bags that cushioned its landing. Spirit also should deploy its solar arrays during that time.

It is one of two-identical six-wheeled robots expected to roam the planet for 90 days, analyzing Martian rocks and soil for clues that could reveal whether the planet was ever a warmer, wetter place capable of sustaining life.

Mission officials said the rover could start snapping pictures of Mars late Saturday night.

"We could get part of a panorama this evening. There's nothing better," said JPL's Matthew Golombek, who helped pick the rover's landing site on Mars.

The rover won't trundle off on its own for another nine days, however.

The rover relied on a heat shield, parachute and rockets to slow its descent to Mars. Eight seconds before landing, a giant set of air bags inflated to cushion its bouncy landing.

It was not immediately clear if the air bags sufficiently protected the rover, enclosed inside a four-petaled lander, from the jarring landing.

But up until the landing everything was proceeding flawlessly, with Spirit appearing on track to make a "bull's-eye" landing within a cigar-shaped ellipse inside Gusev Crater, a Connecticut-sized indentation just south of the Martian equator, navigation team chief Louis D'Amario said.

"This is essentially perfect navigation. We couldn't have possibly hoped to do better than this," D'Amario said.

Previously, about two of every three attempts to land spacecraft on Mars have failed. The latest apparent failure was the British Beagle 2 lander, which has not been heard from since it was to have set down on Mars on Christmas.

"It's an incredibly difficult place to land. Some have called it the 'death planet' for good reason," said Ed Weiler, NASA's associate administrator for space science.

NASA's last attempt at landing on Mars, in 1999, failed when a software glitch sent the Polar Lander crashing to the ground. Since then, the space agency has increased oversight of its missions.

"We have done everything we know to do to ensure these missions will be a success," said Charles Elachi, director of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

The $820 million NASA project also includes a twin rover, Opportunity, which is set to arrive on Mars on Jan. 24.

The camera- and instrument-laden rovers were designed to spend 90 days analyzing Martian rocks and soil for clues that could reveal whether the Red Planet was ever a warmer, wetter place capable of sustaining life.

Today, Mars is a dry and cold world. But ancient river channels and other water-carved features spied from orbit suggest that Mars may have had a more hospitable past.

"We see these intriguing hints Mars may have been a different place long ago," said Steve Squyres, the mission's main scientist.

The rovers were built to look for evidence that liquid water — a necessary ingredient for life — once persisted on the surface of the planet. A direct search for life on Mars is at least a decade away, NASA scientists said.

Together, the twin robots were launched in the most intensive scientific assault on another planetary body since the Apollo missions to the moon, said Orlando Figueroa, director of NASA's Mars exploration program.

NASA launched the 384-pound Spirit and its twin in hopes they would become the fourth and fifth U.S. spacecraft to survive landing on Mars. Twenty other spacecraft from various nations have failed.

Scientists are taking advantage of the closest approach Mars has made to Earth in 60,000 years. NASA intends to send spacecraft to Mars at regular 26-month intervals, or each time the Earth laps the Red Planet as they both circle the sun.

The highly anticipated Spirit landing follows another important American space mission. On Friday, a NASA spacecraft flew through the bright halo of a distant comet to scoop up less than a thimbleful of dust that could shed light on how the solar system was formed.
 
RE: NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

Geez, there are some conspirators here that still don't believe we went to the moon. How do you expect them to believe this? :)

A great achievement by a great bunch of scientists.

We went to the moon? When?
 
RE: NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

I have a question!!! NASA is beaming because they finally made it to MAR'S right.... Then what happenrd July 4 1997? http://mpfwww.jpl.nasa.gov/rovercom/images/sojrov2.jpg


The Mars Pathfinder (formerly known as the Mars Environmental Survey, or MESUR, Pathfinder) is the second of NASA's low-cost planetary Discovery missions. The mission consists of a stationary lander and a surface rover. The mission has the primary objective of demonstrating the feasibility of low-cost landings on and exploration of the Martian surface. This objective will be met by tests of communications between the rover and lander, and the lander and Earth, and tests of the imaging devices and sensors.

The scientific objectives include atmospheric entry science, long-range and close-up surface imaging, with the general objective being to characterize the Martian environment for further exploration. The spacecraft entered the Martian atmosphere without going into orbit around the planet and landed on Mars with the aid of parachutes, rockets and airbags, taking atmospheric measurements on the way down. Prior to landing, the spacecraft was enclosed by three triangular solar panels (petals), which unfolded onto the ground after touchdown. (See image above.) The lander and rover operated until communication was lost for unknown reasons on 27 September.


The rover "Sojourner" is a six-wheeled vehicle which is controlled by an Earth-based operator, who uses images obtained by both the rover and lander systems. Note that the time delay is about 10 minutes, requiring some autonomous control by the rover. The primary objectives were scheduled for the first seven sols (1 sol = 1 martian day = ~24.7 hours), all within about 10 meters of the lander. The extended mission included more analyses of nearby rock and soil and more tests of the rover capabilities.

Wow! We landed on Mars! Now how do we feed the rest of the nation and give everybody health care?
Just a thought!
 
RE: NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

Tune in Sunday?? For what? If I've read the press release correctly, they are going to venture a whole 32 feet from the lander!! WOW...32 feet of exploration!! WOOHOO!!! It would almost be like walking into the desert and turning on a camera and walking 32 feet, then pawning it off as a great exploration video...LOL...of course, I could have misunderstood the press release, which would make me a dumbass....
 
RE: NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

I'm not sure that it was "faked", but when I saw a space capsule in a museum, the opening was puny. I mean VERY small. I don't think I could get in naked, let alone with a huge space suit and bubble-helmet. It is VERY tiny. How did they get in/out of that thing? That fact alone would be enough to fuel the "conspiracy theory" groups...But based on the fact that thousands of people were involved in the project, and that the assumption is they were all "in" on the hoax would seem silly. You figure at least ONE of them would have tried to debunk the hoax by now...

Here is the "hoax" web-site: http://www.ufos-aliens.co.uk/cosmicapollo.html


*Just to clarify, the capsule I saw I think was a repro, and not the real thing.*
 
RE: NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

You figure at least ONE of them would have tried to debunk the hoax by now...

Or you could say, out of all the thousands involved in this "hoax", how the heck did they keep all of them quiet about this gigantic hoax they were involved in?

It's just silly to think that for 35 years they could convince all these people to keep their mouths shut about trying to fool the world.

http://members.tccoa.com/lastmrk/Images/lastmrk2.jpg
 
RE: NASA Rover Touches Down on Mars

Yeah..that's what I was getting at. Hard to keep even ONE person from flapping their trap...but thousands? But that web site does make some interesting points. Long read..but interesting..
 
Back
Top