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NASA Readies Next Mars Mission // NASA's next Mars mission to spot new landing sites
AP on Bakersfield Californian ^ | 8/8/05 | Alicia Chang - AP

Posted on 08/08/2005 9:56:55 AM PDT by NormsRevenge

LOS ANGELES - A year and a half after twin robot rovers thrilled space fans with their hijinks on Mars, NASA is heading there again.

A fourth Mars orbiter is set to blast off Wednesday, carrying some of the most sophisticated science instruments ever sent into space. Circling the Red Planet, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter will scan the desolate surface in search of sites to land more robotic explorers in the next decade.

"It's time we start peeling back the onion layer and start looking at Mars from different vantage points," said project manager James Graf of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.

Like the three current spacecraft flying around Mars — including a European orbiter — the latest probe will seek evidence of water and other signs that the planet could have hosted life. The $720 million mission, which launches from Cape Canaveral, Fla., will also serve as a communications link to relay data to Earth.

Its powerful camera can snap the sharpest pictures yet of the planet's rust-colored surface, with six times higher resolution than past images.

NASA took its first close-up pictures of Mars in 1965 when the Mariner 4 spacecraft zipped past the planet and snapped fewer than two dozen photos.

Since then, numerous probes that have landed, orbited or passed the planet have shot tens of thousands more images. But only about 2 percent of the planet has been viewed at high resolution.

"There are many unanswered questions about Mars," project scientist Richard Zurek said.

The two-ton reconnaissance orbiter will be NASA's last Mars orbiter this decade. Belt-tightening forced the space agency to cancel a $500 million mission planned for 2009.

However, two more landing attempts are set during the next four years. Scientists hope to use the orbiter's detailed mapping to scout safe landing sites for the Phoenix Mars and Mars Science Laboratory missions slated for 2007 and 2009, respectively.

The information gleaned by the spacecraft could also help scientists decide where to send a lander during the next decade to return the first samples of Martian rocks and soil to Earth.

The stationary Phoenix lander will use a long robotic arm to explore the icy plains of the planet's north pole. Later, the mobile Mars Science Laboratory will analyze rocks and soil in finer detail than the rovers Spirit and Opportunity, which have uncovered geologic evidence of past water activity since parachuting to opposite ends of Mars last year.

The solar-powered rovers are still trekking across the Martian surface, even though scientists had not expected the six-wheeled machines to last more than three months in the hostile Martian environment.

The reconnaissance orbiter will also try to find two ill-fated spacecraft — NASA's Mars Polar Lander and Britain's Beagle 2 lander — which lost contact during separate landing attempts. Earlier this year, the company that operates a camera aboard one of the current Mars orbiting spacecraft — the Global Surveyor — found what appeared to be the wreckage of Polar Lander based on grainy black-and-white images.

The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter will launch aboard a Lockheed Martin Atlas V rocket for its two-year mission. It will adjust its flight path until it reaches Mars' orbit in mid-March next year. Then it will use the friction of the atmosphere to lower itself to about 190 miles above the surface.

Along with its telescopic camera, the orbiter's payload includes ground-penetrating radar that can probe up to a third of a mile beneath surface rock and ice for evidence of water. Other instruments can track daily weather changes and identify minerals.

Today, Mars is cold and dry with large caps of frozen water at its poles. But scientists think the planet was a wetter and possibly warmer place eons ago — conditions that might be conducive to life.

After the imaging phase, the orbiter will switch to its other role as a communication relay for Mars lander missions. It will be equipped with a powerful high-gain antenna that can transmit 10 times more data per minute than the current trio of satellites that includes NASA's Global Surveyor and Mars Odyssey and the European Space Agency's Mars Express.

"We will have a fire hose of data coming back instead of bringing it back through a little garden hose," Graf said.

The spacecraft's primary mission ends in 2010, but scientists say it has enough fuel to last until 2014.

___

On the Net:

Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter:

http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/mro/


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: lander; landingsites; mars; mission; nasa; phoenix; readies; spot

1 posted on 08/08/2005 9:56:57 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge

Let's get the shuttle down tomorrow first.


2 posted on 08/08/2005 9:59:11 AM PDT by mtbopfuyn (Legality does not dictate morality... Lavin)
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To: NormsRevenge

Credit: NASA

Countdown Nears: Final Tests

The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft performed an integrated system test with its Atlas V rocket on Monday, August 1, 2005, in the Atlas Vertical Integration Facility. This test confirmed the team’s ability to communicate with the orbiter atop the rocket. Preparations are underway for a final simulated countdown on Thursday, August, 4, 2005.

Pictured is the encapsulated Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter inside the Vertical Integration Facility on Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.


3 posted on 08/08/2005 9:59:24 AM PDT by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi ... "To remain silent when they should protest makes cowards of men." -- THOMAS JEFFERSON)
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To: NormsRevenge

"A year and a half after twin robot rovers thrilled space fans with their hijinks on Mars,"



Both are still operating, moving along amd still sending photos back daily.


4 posted on 08/08/2005 10:08:13 AM PDT by cripplecreek (If you must obey your party, may your chains rest lightly upon your shoulders.)
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To: NormsRevenge


.

1st Man on Earth's Moon:

Eagle Scout NEIL ARMSTRONG


1st Man on the planet MARS:

Eagle Scout ____ ________ ?

.


5 posted on 08/08/2005 10:08:41 AM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: NormsRevenge

Prayers for another success. Mars has been a tough act to string successes together!

Remember people, English or Metric, just pick one and stick with it!!!!!!!!


6 posted on 08/08/2005 10:14:41 AM PDT by MarineBrat (We are taxed twice as much by our idleness. -- Benjamin Franklin)
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To: NormsRevenge

"A year and a half after twin robot rovers thrilled space fans with their hijinks on Mars"

"hijinks" what was it a summer comedy? Never heard landing on another planet called hijinks. IF man goes to mars would they call it slapstick?


7 posted on 08/08/2005 10:41:34 AM PDT by jbwbubba
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To: ALOHA RONNIE

I think all the moon walkers were Scouts no?


8 posted on 08/08/2005 10:42:51 AM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: mtbopfuyn

I'm worried with all this money spent on these unmanned Mars missions we won't have the money to spend risking people's lives to take out the trash at the International Space Station.


9 posted on 08/08/2005 10:42:56 AM PDT by Strategerist
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To: Strategerist

Yeah, thats all Discoversy crew did. take out trash.

Right. Good work. Great research buddy.


10 posted on 08/08/2005 10:43:43 AM PDT by Names Ash Housewares
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To: NormsRevenge
In grammar school, I marveled at sputnik gliding across the night sky. IN high school, project Mercury fired my imagination. Just getting out of college, I saw the U.S. land on the moon. I expected so much more to come. I've aged waiting. If anyone told me 36 years ago that this is where we would be in our efforts at space exploration, I would have thought them feeble minded. So many years. Space shuttle up ...space shuttle down over and over and over again. These things must be pretty decrepit by now. Yet on and on they go. We regress with the main task being to get one of these decrepit hulks and its crew back safely. If we progressed at this rate in the 20th century, we would have bombed Hiroshima with a biplane.
11 posted on 08/08/2005 10:56:57 AM PDT by isrul
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To: jbwbubba

" "hijinks" what was it a summer comedy? Never heard landing on another planet called hijinks. IF man goes to mars would they call it slapstick?"

It's the AP. I think word selection is key. Hijinks would be an attempt to minimize the accomplishment, and to marginalize the space program as something superfluous.


12 posted on 08/08/2005 11:03:29 AM PDT by brownsfan (It's not a war on terror... it's a war with islam.)
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To: Strategerist; Names Ash Housewares

"...we won't have the money to spend risking people's lives to take out the trash at the International Space Station."

Ding ding ding ding, we have a winner!

In every thread someone will pop in to tell everyone on it how stupid/useless/irrelavent the topic in question is. Only took 9 posts in this thread.


13 posted on 08/08/2005 11:07:51 AM PDT by brownsfan (It's not a war on terror... it's a war with islam.)
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To: Strategerist
risking people's lives to take out the trash at the International Space Station

small words erupting from a small, crabby mind.

14 posted on 08/08/2005 11:09:13 AM PDT by NautiNurse ("I'd rather see someone go to work for a Republican campaign than sit on their butt."--Howard Dean)
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To: Strategerist
I'm worried with all this money spent on these unmanned Mars missions we won't have the money to spend risking people's lives to take out the trash at the International Space Station.

We don't need to go to Mars ever, for any reason. Except for feel-good politician legacy building.
15 posted on 08/08/2005 11:15:27 AM PDT by mysterio
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To: Names Ash Housewares

From www.scouting.org

The Boy Scouts of America teaches young people to be good citizens and trains them to become leaders. These qualities are also found in the U.S. astronaut program. Of the 321 pilots and scientists selected as astronauts since 1959, more than 180 were Scouts or have been active in Scouting: 40 Eagle Scouts, 25 Life Scouts, 15 Star Scouts, 26 First Class Scouts, 17 Second Class Scouts, 12 Tenderfoot Scouts, three Explorers, 29 Cub Scouts, 11 Webelos Scouts, and five with unknown ranks.

Of the 12 men to physically walk on the moon's surface, 11 were involved in Scouting.


16 posted on 08/08/2005 11:15:32 AM PDT by wyattearp (The best weapon to have in a gunfight is a shotgun - preferably from ambush.)
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To: NormsRevenge

The recent mission where we smashed into a comet...

Why couldn't we have actually landed on the comet and hitched a ride, sending a stream of data from where ever it went?


17 posted on 08/08/2005 11:21:48 AM PDT by marron
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To: Names Ash Housewares

.

According to the Boy Scouts of America...

11 of the 12 Astronauts that have walked on Earth's Moon...

...were Boy Scouts.

.


18 posted on 08/08/2005 12:20:02 PM PDT by ALOHA RONNIE ("ALOHA RONNIE" Guyer/Veteran-"WE WERE SOLDIERS" Battle of IA DRANG-1965 http://www.lzxray.com)
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To: NormsRevenge
Anyone for skiing?


19 posted on 08/09/2005 6:44:32 PM PDT by Ma3lst0rm (Where are the little green men in snowsuits?)
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