June 26, 2007 | our time will build eternity |
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Plan G For Mars Offers Much For Geological And Geophysical Exploration Cameron Park CA (SPX) Jun 22, 2007 The third general type of Mars Science Orbiter mission proposed by the MSO science advisory group's just-published report is "Geological and Geophysical Exploration" ("Plan G"), which would focus -- as its name suggests -- on the actual features and processes on Mars' mineral surface, rather than on its atmosphere or on the structures of its polar caps and their connection to Mars' climate record ... more Exploring The Polar And Climatic Processes Of Mars Cameron Park CA (SPX) Jun 22, 2007 Besides the possible "Atmospheric Signatures and Near-Surface Change" mission that I mentioned in my last installment, the "MEPAG" science team assigned to pick possible goals for NASA's big 2013 Mars Science Orbiter proposed two other general types of possible science mission for the craft. One is "Polar and Climate Processes" ("Plan P"). Mars' polar caps are among the most scientifically ... more Mars Experiment To Push Mental Endurance To The Limit Paris (AFP) June 20, 2007 You are in the vanguard of humanity, aboard a spaceship to Mars with five other men and women. For more than 17 months, with the perilous void surrounding your tiny refuge, the six of you will share the work and the heroics, battling emergencies, equipment glitches and other hazards on this pioneering mission. But you will also share your personal habits and prejudices... your body odours. ... more Spirit Gets A Solar Panel Spring Clean Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 20, 2007 Spirit got a second spring cleaning on Mars with a dust-cleaning event that increased power from the rover's solar arrays by 120 watt-hours (a 100-watt light bulb that burns for one hour uses 100 watt-hours of electricity). Spirit previously experienced dust-lifting winds in 2005. Energy from the rover's solar arrays is now higher than 600 watt-hours. After completing scientific studies ... more ESA Wants Space Pioneers For 520-Day Mars Experiment Le Bourget, France (AFP) June 19, 2007 The European Space Agency (ESA) on Tuesday called for applications for one of the most demanding human experiments in space history: a simulated trip to Mars in which six "astronauts" will spend 17 months in an isolation tank on Earth. Their spaceship will comprise a series of interlocked modules in an research institute in Moscow, and once the doors are closed tight, the volunteers will be cut ... more |
bruce-moomaw
asteroids mars-general |
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 18, 2007 Right now, Opportunity is safely perched on "Cape Verde" and is observing "Duck Bay" from above. The rover drove four out of the last five sols, covering 196.44 meters (644 feet). The fifth and final D-star (drive software) checkout step ran successfully on Opportunity on sol 1200. The dynamic path planner added in the latest flight software version is now ready for use. ... more Simulating The Effects Of Martian Dust On The Phoenix Lander Ann Arbor MI (SPX) Jun 15, 2007 Gusting winds and the pulsating exhaust plumes from the Phoenix spacecraft's landing engines could complicate NASA's efforts to sample frozen soil from the surface of Mars, according to University of Michigan atmospheric scientist Nilton Renno. Set to launch Aug. 3 from Florida, the $414 million Phoenix Mars Lander will use descent engines to touch down on the northern plains, where vast stores ... more Wandering Poles May Explain Ups And Downs Of Ancient Mars Shoreline Berkeley CA (SPX) Jun 13, 2007 Berkeley geophysicists claim that a new study demolishes one of the key arguments against the past presence of large oceans on Mars. Even from Earth, a large plain surrounding the planet's north pole looks like a sediment-filled ocean basin. In the 1980s, Viking spacecraft images revealed two possible ancient shorelines near the pole, each thousands of kilometers long with features like those found in Earth's coastal regions. ... more Opening The Hatch On The Mars Underground Cameron Park CA (SPX) Jun 13, 2007 As I mentioned in my last chapter, we have now definitely found the first caves on another world -- cave openings on the slopes of Arsia Mons ("Mt. Arsia", the southermost of the four great Tharsis shield volcanoes). These are volcanically-produced caves, rather than caves produced by water erosion or by the chemical erosion of minerals that can be produced by acidic water. They must be one of ... more |
bruce-moomaw
mars-mers mars-base |
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jun 09, 2007 Opportunity performed on sol 1194 a Visual Target Tracking (VTT) technology checkout (drive software) on a target called "Paloma." This VTT checkout tested VTT in combination with other drive software, Autonav and Visodom. The first segment was a blind (no Autonav or Visodom) VTT drive to back away from the target. The second segment combined VTT and Visodom to drive towards the target. ... more THEMIS Marks Milestone In Imaging Mars Tempe, AZ (SPX) Jun 08, 2007 The Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) aboard NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter marked a milestone May 4. An image from THEMIS showing Martian lava flows and wind streaks mingling with impact craters, became the 1,200th "Image of the Day" posted online. The Mars Space Flight Facility at ASU operates the site, which is updated every weekday with images and data from THEMIS. The first "Image of ... more In Search Of A Martian Future Cameron Park CA (SPX) Jun 06, 2007 The latest in a whole series of reports by NASA's scientific advisory groups on how to explore Mars has just been released ("An Astrobiology Strategy for the Exploration of Mars", written by a committee assembled by NASA a year ago) has just been released by the Space Studies Board of the National Research Council. Over the last few years, as new scientific information on Mars has finally ... more HiRISE Releases Thouands Of New Images Of Mars Via New Website Viewer Tucson AZ (SPX) Jun 05, 2007 Anyone connected by Internet can now see planet Mars better than at any time in history, through the eye of HiRISE, the most powerful camera ever to orbit another planet. A University of Arizona-based team that runs the High Resolution Imaging Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has just released more than 1,200 Mars images to the Planetary Data System, the U.S. space ... more |
exo-life
spacetravel mars-mers |
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