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NASA launches most capable and robust rover to Mars

During a nearly two-year prime mission after landing in August 2012, the rover will investigate whether the Gale Crater region has ever offered conditions favorable for microbial life.

By NASA/JPL Published: November 28, 2011
MSL launch
NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft, sealed inside its payload fairing atop the United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, clears the tower at Space Launch Complex 41 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The mission lifted off at 10:02 a.m. EST November 26, beginning an eight-month interplanetary cruise to Mars.
Photo by NASA/Bill White

NASA began a historic voyage to Mars with the Novevember 26 launch of the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), which carries a car-sized rover named Curiosity. Liftoff from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station aboard an Atlas V rocket occurred at 10:02 a.m. EST.

“We are very excited about sending the world’s most advanced scientific laboratory to Mars,” NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. “MSL will tell us critical things we need to know about Mars, and while it advances science, we’ll be working on the capabilities for a human mission to the Red Planet and to other destinations where we’ve never been.”

The mission will pioneer precision landing technology and a sky-crane touchdown to place Curiosity near the foot of a mountain inside Gale Crater on August 6, 2012. During a nearly two-year prime mission after landing, the rover will investigate whether the region has ever offered conditions favorable for microbial life, including the chemical ingredients for life.

“The launch vehicle has given us a great injection into our trajectory, and we’re on our way to Mars,” said Mars Science Laboratory Project Manager Peter Theisinger of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. “The spacecraft is in communication, thermally stable, and power positive.”

The Atlas V initially lofted the spacecraft into Earth orbit and then, with a second burst from the vehicle’s upper stage, pushed it out of Earth orbit into a 352-million-mile (567 million kilometers) journey to Mars.

“Our first trajectory correction maneuver will be in about two weeks,” Theisinger said. “We’ll do instrument checkouts in the next several weeks and continue with thorough preparations for the landing on Mars and operations on the surface.”

Curiosity’s ambitious science goals are among the mission’s many differences from earlier Mars rovers. It will use a drill and scoop at the end of its robotic arm to gather soil and powdered samples of rock interiors, then sieve and parcel out these samples into analytical laboratory instruments inside the rover. Curiosity carries 10 science instruments with a total mass 15 times as large as the science- instrument payloads on the Mars rovers Spirit and Opportunity. Some of the tools are the first of their kind on Mars, such as a laser-firing instrument for checking the elemental composition of rocks from a distance and an X-ray diffraction instrument for definitive identification of minerals in powdered samples.

To haul and wield its science payload, Curiosity is twice as long and five times as heavy as Spirit or Opportunity. Because of its 1-ton mass, Curiosity is too heavy to employ airbags to cushion its landing as previous Mars rovers could. Part of the Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft is a rocket-powered descent stage that will lower the rover on tethers as the rocket engines control the speed of descent.

The mission’s landing site offers Curiosity access for driving to layers of the mountain inside Gale Crater. Observations from orbit have identified clay and sulfate minerals in the lower layers, indicating a wet history.

Precision landing maneuvers as the spacecraft flies through the martian atmosphere before opening its parachute make Gale a safe target for the first time. This innovation shrinks the target area to less than one-fourth the size of earlier Mars landing targets. Without it, rough terrain at the edges of Curiosity’s target would make the site unacceptably hazardous.

The innovations for landing a heavier spacecraft with greater precision are steps in technology development for human Mars missions.

In addition, Curiosity carries an instrument for monitoring the natural radiation environment on Mars, important information for designing human Mars missions that protect astronauts’ health.

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5 stars
RICHARD MCCONNELL said:
We've all got our fingers crossed for a smooth trip and a safe landing in tip-top order. Let's hope for a perfect mission. If it's anything like the Rovers we can hope for a long extended mission, especially with a nuclear power plant with a predicted life of ten years.
5 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
Lowering that rover from the rocket supported platform without the cables getting stuck on reels, getting tangled up, or snapping, will need a bit of luck. And then the cables need to be separated from the rover. Keep your fingers crossed that one of those big sand storms doesn't start before it gets to Mars. That could mess up whatever they are using to measure the distance to the ground. It gives me 9 months to worry.
If it does all work, don't plan on a big announcement that they found evidence of life. I'm not being an old pessimist (lie), but finding life on another planet in the same solar system would be quite extraordinary. I hope I'm wrong because the space program would get one heck of a boost if DNA was detected. And I love rockets, having made many gunpowder mixture ones from scratch myself. Even if you had never seen a big rocket, standing 30 feet from the launch of a little one would instinctively tell you that the device has potential. They don't hang around for long. I wonder if that is what inspired that Russian to do all those calculations that got space travel going? Or was it just too cold to go outside and he got bored having no more science books to read and no cable TV? The RD-180 engine on the bottom of the little rocket picture up there was made in Russia. And we still have ICBMs pointed at each other. Go figure. Money talks, as they say.
5 stars
THEOPHANIS KATAPODIS from PENNSYLVANIA said:
Good Luck Curiosity! Have a safe journey and a soft landing!
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