Spirit from Earth Lands on Mars
A traveling robotic geologist from NASA has landed on Mars
and returned stunning images of the area around the landing
site in Gusev Crater.
Mars Exploration Rover Spirit successfully sent a radio
signal after the spacecraft had bounced and rolled for
several minutes following its initial impact at 11:35 p.m.
EST (8:35 p.m. Pacific Standard Time).
"This is a big night for NASA," said NASA Administrator Sean
O'Keefe. "We're back. I am very, very proud of this team,
and we're on Mars."
Members of the mission's flight team at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., cheered and
clapped when they learned that NASA's Deep Space Network
had received a post-landing signal from Spirit. The
cheering resumed about three hours later when the rover
transmitted its first images to Earth, relaying them
through NASA's Mars Odyssey orbiter.
"We've got many steps to go before this mission is over, but
we've retired a lot of risk with this landing," said JPL's
Pete Theisinger, project manager for the Mars Exploration
Rover Project.
Deputy project manager for the rovers, JPL's Richard Cook,
said, "We're certainly looking forward to Opportunity
landing three weeks from now." Opportunity is Spirit's twin
rover, headed for the opposite side of Mars.
Dr. Charles Elachi, JPL director, said, "To achieve this
mission, we have assembled the best team of young women and
men this country can put together. Essential work was done
by other NASA centers and by our industrial and academic
partners."
Spirit stopped rolling with its base petal down, though that
favorable position could change as airbags deflate, said
JPL's Rob Manning, development manager for the rover's
descent through Mars' atmosphere and landing on the
surface.
NASA chose Spirit's landing site, within Gusev Crater, based
on evidence from Mars orbiters that this crater may have
held a lake long ago. A long, deep valley, apparently
carved by ancient flows of water, leads into Gusev. The
crater itself is basin the size of Connecticut created by
an asteroid or comet impact early in Mars' history.
Spirit's task is to spend the next three months exploring
for clues in rocks and soil about whether the past
environment at this part of Mars was ever watery and
suitable to sustain life.
Spirit traveled 487 million kilometers (302.6 million) miles
to reach Mars after its launch from Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station, Fla., on June 10, 2003. Its twin, Mars
Exploration Rover Opportunity, was launched July 7, 2003,
and is on course for a landing on the opposite side of Mars
on Jan. 25 (Universal Time and EST; 9:05 p.m. on Jan. 24,
PST).
The flight team expects to spend more than a week directing
Spirit through a series of steps in unfolding, standing up
and other preparations necessary before the rover rolls off
of its lander platform to get its wheels onto the ground.
Meanwhile, Spirit's cameras and a mineral-identifying
infrared instrument will begin examining the surrounding
terrain. That information will help engineers and
scientists decide which direction to send the rover first.
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