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Mars Exploration Rover Mission
JPL ^
| 1-3-04
| JPL
Posted on 01/03/2004 9:33:30 AM PST by bonesmccoy
Mission Timeline: Entry, Descent, and Landing
The entry, descent, and landing (EDL) phase begins when the spacecraft reaches the Mars atmospheric entry interface point (3522.2 kilometers or about 2,113 miles from the center of Mars) and ends with the lander on the surface of Mars in a safe state.
The rovers will arrive during the latter half of the northern winter/southern summer on Mars. Rover A will land at approximately 2:00 p.m. local time on Mars (with Earth set an hour after landing), whereas Rover B will land at around 1:15 p.m. local time on Mars (with Earth set as long as two-and-a-half hours after landing). That means that both rovers will land in the Martian afternoon while the Earth is still in view, allowing the Earth to receive the landing signal if the lander is on the base petal.
Entry, descent, and landing for the Mars Exploration Rover mission is an adaptation of the Mars Pathfinder method:
An aeroshell and a parachute decelerate the lander through the Martian atmosphere.
Prior to surface impact, retro-rockets are fired to slow the lander´s speed of descent, and airbags are inflated to cushion the lander at surface impact.
After its initial impact, the lander bounces along the Martian surface until it rolls to a stop.
The airbags are then deflated and retracted, and the lander petals and rover egress aids are deployed.
Once the petals have opened, the rover deploys its solar arrays, and places the system in a safe state. Communications during entry, descent, and landing will occur through a pair of low-gain antennas, one mounted on the backshell and the other on the rover itself. About 36 ten-second radio tones will be transmitted to Earth during descent through the atmosphere, which takes approximately six minutes. These tones are coded to indicate the accomplishment of critical steps in the entry, descent,and landing timeline. [More on these tones in the communications section]
A step-by-step guide to everything that will happen will be provided prior to entry, descent, and landing.
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: jpl; mars; nasa; nasatv; space
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To: RightWhale; RadioAstronomer; Howlin
i don't get it.
How's that rock so smooth?
Is that erosion from wind?
Or is that erosion from water?
If it's from water, we're in for some gnarly science return!
2,761
posted on
01/06/2004 2:13:40 PM PST
by
bonesmccoy
(defend America...get vaccinated.)
To: Momaw Nadon
Is that a "mark" from the air bag?
Or, is that a shred of torn air bag sitting on the surface?
2,762
posted on
01/06/2004 2:15:01 PM PST
by
bonesmccoy
(defend America...get vaccinated.)
To: bonesmccoy
Good question.
I don't know the answer.
2,763
posted on
01/06/2004 2:18:24 PM PST
by
Momaw Nadon
(Goals for 2004: Re-elect President Bush, over 60 Republicans in the Senate, and a Republican House.)
To: bonesmccoy
" Is that a "mark" from the air bag? Or, is that a shred of torn air bag sitting on the surface?"Looks like some sort of fossilized Martian sea critter to me.
To: bonesmccoy
JPL said they are thinking dried seabed. Could still be water or ice farther down. Look for seaweed. :)
2,765
posted on
01/06/2004 2:23:21 PM PST
by
RightWhale
(Repeal the Law of the Excluded Middle)
To: Momaw Nadon
2,766
posted on
01/06/2004 2:39:40 PM PST
by
Momaw Nadon
(Goals for 2004: Re-elect President Bush, over 60 Republicans in the Senate, and a Republican House.)
To: bonesmccoy
They (NASA,JPL person) said it is "soil" disturbed by airbag retraction. They expressed interest because of the look of the marks.
To: bonesmccoy; KevinDavis
The Nova program is repeating and updating the mission at 8 pm tonight.
How about initiating your ping list?
2,768
posted on
01/06/2004 5:06:58 PM PST
by
HighWheeler
(Death is better than taxes because death doesn't get worse every year.)
Comment #2,769 Removed by Moderator
To: HighWheeler; Normal4me; RightWhale; demlosers; Prof Engineer; BlazingArizona; ThreePuttinDude; ...
I think this thread deserves a re-ping...
Space Ping! This is the space ping list! Let me know if you want on or off this list!
2,770
posted on
01/06/2004 6:00:26 PM PST
by
KevinDavis
(Let the meek inherit the Earth, the rest of us will explore the stars!)
To: bonesmccoy
If it was unearthed... (unMarsed??) by the landing... then it would defintitely interest the scientists
2,771
posted on
01/06/2004 6:04:10 PM PST
by
GeronL
(Ah daunt yous spiel cheekier ether)
To: bonesmccoy
It might not be a rock.... it might be MUD!! OK, probably not...
2,772
posted on
01/06/2004 6:06:08 PM PST
by
GeronL
(Ah daunt yous spiel cheekier ether)
To: bonesmccoy
#2754= That does look like mud, and those small rocks look like something from a stream bed.... could something BIG be sitting right next to the lander?? This could become the luckiest lander mission of all time!
2,773
posted on
01/06/2004 6:09:59 PM PST
by
GeronL
(Ah daunt yous spiel cheekier ether)
To: KevinDavis; Howlin
Thanks.
Howlin, are you on the ping list of Kevins?
To: Ernest_at_the_Beach; KevinDavis
I sure hope so. Maybe we should publish it on a thead like the do over on the daily threads so we can all have it in case somebody is "absent."
2,775
posted on
01/06/2004 6:24:56 PM PST
by
Howlin
(Bush has stolen two things which Democrats believe they own by right: the presidency & the future)
To: Howlin
What has been happening?
The NASA feed doesn't seem to be very consistant,
mostly puff pieces etc.
I sure wish they would stay with more live programing on this.
2,776
posted on
01/06/2004 6:27:00 PM PST
by
tet68
To: tet68
what do you think it is in #2754??
2,777
posted on
01/06/2004 6:31:08 PM PST
by
GeronL
(Ah daunt yous spiel cheekier ether)
To: tet68
CSPAN just finished with todays briefing and is showing it again later!
To: Momaw Nadon
Just pondering why so many small rocks spread relatively uniformly over such a large area.
To: P.O.E.
former floor of a lake??
2,780
posted on
01/06/2004 6:49:55 PM PST
by
GeronL
(Ah daunt yous spiel cheekier ether)
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