August 11, 2005
Space: NASA Set To Launch Latest Mars Probe
by Jeremy Bransten
An artist's conception of a future Mars mission
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Fresh from celebrating a successful shuttle mission, NASA on 12 August is due to launch the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The $720 million unmanned spacecraft is the largest and most sophisticated probe ever sent to the red planet. Its goal is to explore possible landing sites for future human travelers and to study the climate, geology, and distribution of water on the planet.
Prague, 11 August 2005 (RFE/RL) -- In the 30 years since the United States and the former USSR began sending probes to Mars, scientists have learned much about the red planet.
But that knowledge will have to be vastly improved if a manned mission to Mars -- as NASA plans -- is to have any chance of success.
The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter aims to do just that. The 2-ton spacecraft is due to arrive at its destination next March. Using the friction of the Martian atmosphere as a brake, it will then slowly dip into a low orbit some 300 kilometers above the surface.
From that position, scientists hope that the spacecraft, which is equipped with high-resolution cameras and radar equipment, will be able to map most of the Martian surface to an unprecedented degree.
The head of NASA’s Mars exploration program, Doug McCuistion spoke proudly of the orbiter’s capabilities at a news conference earlier this week.
“[The] Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is a weather satellite, a geological explorer, a communications satellite, and an expedition pathfinder hunting for landing sites for the future -- both robotic and human," McCuistion said. "It's got a critical strategic role in the Mars exploration program's 'follow the water' strategy.”
Peter Bond, of Britain’s Royal Astronomical Society, explained that to this point, knowledge of the Martian surface remains very general. Previous orbiting satellites have provided comparatively low-resolution photos. And the spectacular, high-resolution pictures shot by the United States' unmanned "Spirit" and "Opportunity" vehicles cover only a tiny portion of the planet. The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter should expand our view enormously.