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Spirit On Final Approach To Mars [Rover 1]
spacedaily.com ^ | 30 Dec 03 | staff

Posted on 12/30/2003 5:14:59 PM PST by RightWhale

Spirit On Final Approach To Mars

Pasadena - Dec 30, 2003

NASA's Spirit rover spacecraft fired its thrusters for 3.4 seconds on Friday, Dec. 26, to make a slight and possibly final correction in its flight path about one week before landing on Mars. Radio tracking of the spacecraft during the 24 hours after the maneuver showed it to be right on course for its landing inside Mars' Gusev Crater at 04:35 Jan. 4, 2004, Universal Time (8:35 p.m. Jan. 3, Pacific Standard Time.) Spirit's twin, Opportunity, will reach Mars three weeks later.

"The maneuver went flawlessly," said Dr. Mark Adler, Spirit mission manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

This was Spirit's fourth trajectory correction maneuver since launch on June 10. Two more are on the schedule for the flight's final three days, if needed. Adler said, "It seems unlikely we'll have to do a fifth trajectory correction maneuver, but we'll make the final call Thursday morning after we have a few more days of tracking data. Right now, it looks as though we hit the bull's-eye."

The adjustment was a quick nudge approximately perpendicular to the spacecraft's spin axis, said JPL's Chris Potts, deputy navigation team chief for the NASA Mars Exploration Rover project. "It moved the arrival time later by 2 seconds and moved the landing point on the surface northeast by about 54 kilometers" (33 miles), Potts said. The engine firing changed the velocity of the spacecraft by only 25 millimeters per second (about one-twentieth of one mile per hour)

. For both NASA rovers approaching Mars, the most daunting challenges will be descending through Mars' atmosphere, landing on the surface, and opening up properly from the enclosed and folded configuration in which the rovers arrive. Most previous Mars landing attempts, by various nations, have failed.

Each rover, if it arrives successfully, will then spend more than a week in a careful sequence of steps before rolling off its lander platform. The rovers' mission is to examine their landing areas for geological evidence about past environmental conditions. In particular, they will seek evidence about the local history of liquid water, which is key information for assessing whether the sites ever could have been hospitable to life. Opportunity will land halfway around Mars from Spirit.

As of 13:00 Universal Time (6 a.m. PST) on New Year's Day, Spirit will have traveled 481.9 million kilometers (299.4 million miles) since launch and have will have 5.1 million kilometers (3.2 million miles) left to go. Opportunity will have traveled 411 million kilometers (255 million miles) since its July 7 launch and will have 45 million kilometers (27.9 million miles) to go, with three remaining scheduled opportunities for trajectory correction maneuvers.


TOPICS: Extended News; Government
KEYWORDS: crater; lander; mars; nasa
While Beagle 2 may have met its doom in an unexpected crater, Rover is aimed to land IN A CRATER. One man's junk is another man's treasure.
1 posted on 12/30/2003 5:15:00 PM PST by RightWhale
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To: RadioAstronomer; Sabertooth; petuniasevan
space ping
2 posted on 12/30/2003 5:29:55 PM PST by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: RightWhale
Bump

http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/home/

3 posted on 12/30/2003 5:35:11 PM PST by NormsRevenge
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To: RightWhale
It's not that NASA and JPL are keeping the data from all those probes from the public. They really are quite tasty to Martians.
4 posted on 12/30/2003 5:53:31 PM PST by martian_22 (Send more probes. They're delicious.)
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To: martian_22
It would be hard to conceal the fact of data transmission. The failed probes are indeed silent.
5 posted on 12/30/2003 5:55:19 PM PST by RightWhale (Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
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To: RightWhale
Amazing. We can put a spacecraft within a whisker of a comet's tail from millions of miles away. We can launch space probes that still function 30 years after they were designed to go silent. We can see into the most distant, ancient corners of the universe with crystal clarity. But we can't land a rover on Mars worth a crap. Here's to hoping that Spirit doesn't land ass-akimbo like the rest of them.
6 posted on 12/30/2003 6:03:54 PM PST by Viking2002
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To: Viking2002
There's a little green dude down there offering killer deals on used exploration probes! ;)
7 posted on 12/30/2003 6:21:36 PM PST by Axenolith (Tag, y-o-u a-r-e i-t...)
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To: Viking2002
That was old NASA.

NASA gets away with blatant age discrimination AND Some reader feedback.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1007763/posts
8 posted on 12/30/2003 8:28:06 PM PST by quietolong
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To: RightWhale
Cue circular lights and sinister VOICE:

"People of Earth, we are the Mysterians! Your efforts to find us with your probes will fail. You will never discover our secrets, NEVER."


9 posted on 12/30/2003 11:35:44 PM PST by DarthMaulrulesok ("I bid you stand, Men of the West" - Lord of the Rings, Return of the King.)
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To: quietolong; Viking2002
race discrimination's not beneath NASA either:

http://www.spaceprojects.com/minority-contracts

The place is a plantation, which keeps blacks down & dependent on the tax-leeching bureaucrats while all of society suffers.
10 posted on 12/31/2003 3:47:21 AM PST by Analyzing Inconsistencies
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To: RightWhale
Any chance it is scheduled to land in the just discovered Craterus Beaglus Deux?
11 posted on 12/31/2003 3:49:29 AM PST by thoughtomator ("I will do whatever the Americans want because I saw what happened in Iraq, and I was afraid"-Qadafi)
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