Tag Mars

To Boldly Go Nowhere At All

You might have seen the news reports about more evidence of water on Mars. The human exploration of Mars is still a long, long way off, but the ESA’s “Mars 500″ mission simulation has reached a significant milestone. As of August 15, the “astronauts” have broken the record for the longest time spent in isolation: 438 days The record was previously held by a Russian cosmonaut aboard the space station Mir in 1994-95. The 438 days represent about 85% of the total duration of an anticipated mission to Mars, reflecting time traveling in both directions and a stay on the surface. The experiment is scheduled to come to a conclusion on November 5.

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Interstellar Vandalism

smily-mars-face

So, it was bad enough when some smart-ass alien drew a smiley face on Mars, but in the last couple of weeks, space punks have stepped it up a notch.

jupiter_scar

First they went and left this big tire mark on Jupiter, and you just know that sucker isn’t coming off without some serious scrubbing, but now some hyperspace hoodie has thrown a great big rock right through one of Saturn’s rings and broken the damn thing. Look:

saturn_f-ring

I suppose next week someone is going to TP Uranus!

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Red Planet Review

New Mars Rover

Remember the story about the asteroid that is headed straight for Mars? Phil Plait, who writes the Bad Astronomy Blog, reports that the odds of the asteroid hitting Mars have actually improved…so now it’s only 96% unlikely to happen. He also pooh-poohs the suggestion that it’s not an asteroid at all but the long-lost Mars Observer space probe that disappeared just as it was about to enter Martian orbit several years ago. By calculating the asteroid’s path backward, he says, it’s easy to disprove that idea. Funny how science lets you figure things like that out without having to take it on faith, eh?

Wired reports that NASA is well-underway on designing the next-generation Martian lander intended for launch in 2009. As you can see at the top of this post, the new design is much larger (the Mini Cooper is shown in the picture as a comparative object — the rover is almost as big as the car) and more robust. The picture does not show the science package that will be incorporated into the final vehicle, but Wired says plans include the ability to vaporize soil samples for spectroscopy from up to 60 feet away and a tiny plutonium battery that would be used to keep the rover alive when the solar panels don’t recharge.

When it gets down to brass tacks, though, I doubt few of us will really be satisfied with all of this interest and exploration of Mars until we get some people “on the ground”. That day is still pretty far off, but the groundwork is being laid. This fantastic post from the Spanish blog Fogonazos has a ton of information about the “Mars Analogue Research Station” project , a joint venture between NASA, the Canadian Space Agency, The SETI Institute, and the Mars Institute. They’ve built self-contained research stations in the Arctic, where terrain and climate conditions are most like what astronauts will encounter on Mars, and the crews try to simulate extra-terrestrial expedition conditions as much as possible.

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They Send One Of Yours To The Hospital, You Send Two Of Theirs To The Morgue…That’s The MARTIAN Way!

lgms.jpg

Over the weekend we learned that the Viking probes NASA sent to Mars in the 1970s may have indeed found signs of life, but might have killed the organisms by exposing them to the wrong chemicals.

So this morning I read that the Mars Orbital Surveyor satellite is presumed dead since it stopped responding a few months ago.

NASA might be to blame for uploading a bum software patch that overheated the battery, but personally I wonder if the LGM’s are just getting a little old-fashioned payback for us taking out their homies. Sort of like an interplanetary gang war.

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