Author Topic: NASA's Maven spacecraft enters Mars orbit  (Read 439 times)

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NASA's Maven spacecraft enters Mars orbit
« on: September 22, 2014, 04:08:46 pm »
NASA's Maven spacecraft enters Mars orbit
Associated Press
By MARCIA DUNN  2 hours ago



In this artist concept provided by NASA, the MAVEN spacecraft approaches Mars on a mission to study its upper atmosphere. Late Sunday night, Sept. 21, 2014,NASA's Maven spacecraft entered orbit around Mars for an unprecedented study of the red planet's atmosphere following a 442 million-mile journey that began nearly a year ago. (AP Photo/NASA)



CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA's Maven spacecraft entered orbit around Mars for an unprecedented study of the red planet's atmosphere following a 442 million-mile journey that began nearly a year ago.

The robotic explorer successfully slipped into orbit around the red planet late Sunday night.

"I think my heart's about ready to start again," Maven's chief investigator, Bruce Jakosky of the University of Colorado, said early Monday. "All I can say at this point is, 'We're in orbit at Mars, guys!'"

Now the real work begins for the $671 million mission, the first dedicated to studying the Martian upper atmosphere and the latest step in NASA's bid to send astronauts to Mars in the 2030s.

Flight controllers in Colorado will spend the next six weeks adjusting Maven's altitude and checking its science instruments, and observing a comet streaking by at relatively close range. Then in early November, Maven will start probing the upper atmosphere of Mars. The spacecraft will conduct its observations from orbit; it's not meant to land.

Scientists believe the Martian atmosphere holds clues as to how Earth's neighbor went from being warm and wet billions of years ago to cold and dry. That early wet world may have harbored microbial life, a tantalizing question yet to be answered.

NASA launched Maven last November from Cape Canaveral, the 10th U.S. mission sent to orbit the red planet. Three earlier ones failed, and until the official word came of success late Sunday night, the entire team was on edge.

"I don't have any fingernails any more, but we've made it," said Colleen Hartman, deputy director for science at Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. "It's incredible."

The spacecraft was clocking more than 10,000 mph when it hit the brakes for the so-called orbital insertion, a half-hour process. The world had to wait 12 minutes to learn the outcome, once it occurred, because of the lag in spacecraft signals given the 138 million miles between the two planets Sunday.

"Wow, what a night. You get one shot with Mars orbit insertion, and Maven nailed it tonight," said NASA project manager David Mitchell.

Maven joins three spacecraft already circling Mars, two American and one European. And the traffic jam isn't over: India's first interplanetary probe, Mangalyaan, will reach Mars in two days and also aim for orbit. Jakosky wished the team well.

Jakosky, who's with the University of Colorado's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics in Boulder, hopes to learn where all the water on Mars went, along with the carbon dioxide that once comprised an atmosphere thick enough to hold moist clouds.

The gases may have been stripped away by the sun early in Mars' existence, escaping into the upper atmosphere and out into space. Maven's observations should be able to extrapolate back in time, Jakosky said.

Maven — short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission — will spend at least a year collecting data. That's a full Earth year, half a Martian one. Its orbit will dip as low as 78 miles above the Martian surface as its eight instruments make measurements. The craft is as long as a school bus, from solar wingtip to tip, and as hefty as an SUV.

Maven will have a rare brush with a comet next month.

The nucleus of newly discovered Comet Siding Spring will pass 82,000 miles from Mars on Oct. 19. The risk of comet dust damaging Maven is low, officials said, and the spacecraft should be able to observe Siding Spring as a science bonus.

Lockheed Martin Corp., Maven's maker, is operating the mission from its control center at Littleton, Colorado.

This is NASA's 21st shot at Mars and the first since the Curiosity rover landed on the red planet in 2012. Just this month, Curiosity arrived at its prime science target, a mountain named Sharp, ripe for drilling. The Opportunity rover is also still active a decade after landing.

More landers will be on the way in 2016 and 2018 from NASA and the European and Russian space agencies. The next U.S. rover is scheduled for launch in 2020; more capable than Curiosity, it will collect samples for possible return to Earth, and attempt to produce oxygen from atmospheric carbon dioxide. That latter experiment, if successful, would allow future human explorers to live off the land, according to NASA's John Grunsfeld, head of science missions and a former astronaut.

"This really is a quest of humanity," he said.

___

Online:

NASA: http://mars.nasa.gov/maven/

University of Colorado: http://lasp.colorado.edu/home/maven/


http://news.yahoo.com/nasas-maven-spacecraft-enters-mars-orbit-083646080.html

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NASA's MAVEN successfully enters Martian orbit
« Reply #1 on: September 22, 2014, 04:29:50 pm »
NASA's MAVEN successfully enters Martian orbit
THE WEEK
Catherine Garcia     1:29am ET



After traveling 442 million miles over the past 10 months, NASA's MAVEN spacecraft made it to the red planet.

Quote


NASA        ✔   @NASA 
Follow
.@MAVEN2Mars is the 1st mission devoted to exploring Mars’ upper atmosphere in an effort to solve its climate mystery

11:05 PM - 21 Sep 2014

522 Retweets   504 favorites


Late Sunday night, MAVEN (short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution Mission) entered Mars' orbit; it was traveling more than 10,000 mph when it started the orbital insertion, which took 30 minutes. "I think my heart's about ready to start again," Bruce Jakosky, the MAVEN's chief investigator, told The Associated Press. "All I can say at this point is, 'We're in orbit at Mars, guys!'"

Quote


NASA        ✔   @NASA 
Follow
The team is seen celebrating @MAVEN2Mars' insertion around #Mars tonight @LockheedMartin mission control
 
11:13 PM - 21 Sep 2014

392 Retweets   494 favorites

 
MAVEN's mission is to study the upper atmosphere of Mars, and for the next six weeks, flight controllers will adjust the MAVEN's altitude and check its instruments. In November, it will begin probing the upper atmosphere, and is expected to remain in orbit for at least another year.

Scientists are hoping to gain some insight into how Mars went from being a warm and wet place billions of years ago to the cold and dry planet it is today.


http://theweek.com/article/index/268518/speedreads-nasas-maven-successfully-enters-martian-orbit

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NASA's MAVEN Mars probe safely brakes into orbit
« Reply #2 on: September 22, 2014, 05:39:04 pm »
NASA's MAVEN Mars probe safely brakes into orbit
By/William Harwood/CBS News/Sep 22, 2014 12:45 AM EDT



NASA's MAVEN spacecraft braked into orbit around Mars late Sunday almost exactly as planned, prompting cheers and applause at a Lockheed Martin control center near Denver where company engineers and NASA managers monitored the probe's arrival./ NASA



Ten months and 442 million miles outbound from Earth, NASA's MAVEN spacecraft fired its braking rockets Sunday to slip into orbit around the red planet, kicking off a $671 million mission to find out how much of the martian atmosphere leaked away in the distant past in an extreme case of climate change.

"What a night! You get one shot at Mars orbit insertion, and MAVEN nailed it tonight," said NASA project manager David Mitchell. "We've got a really happy crew in the building here, across the country and literally around the world."

Launched from Cape Canaveral atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket on Nov. 18, 2013, MAVEN's six engines ignited at 9:38 p.m. EDT, slowing the 2.5-ton spacecraft by about 2,750 mph to let the planet's gravity capture it in a roughly 35-hour elliptical orbit as planned.

"Based on observed navigation data, congratulations!" chief navigator David Folta told MAVEN engineers after the rocket firing ended. "MAVEN is now in Mars orbit."

After the burn, MAVEN re-oriented itself to aim its high-gain antenna back toward Earth, re-establishing a faster data link to give flight controllers a more detailed look at the spacecraft's performance. While that work was still in progress when a NASA news conference got underway, a preliminary look at the data showed the spacecraft was healthy and operating normally.

Speaking from spacecraft-builder Lockheed Martin's control center near Denver, Mitchell said the MOI rocket firing ran just 11 seconds longer than predicted, "which means MAVEN nailed it. Right on the money." The data from the spacecraft backed that up. The low point of the resulting elliptical orbit was very close to 236 miles, almost exactly what was expected.

"The preliminary look is that all systems seem to be healthy, we don't see anything that shows a problem," said Guy Beutelschies, MAVEN program manager with Lockheed Martin.

Flight controllers will spend the next six weeks checking out MAVEN's instruments, deploying booms and antennas and fine-tuning its orbit, firing the spacecraft's thrusters five more times to lower the high point to around 3,860 miles and the low point to less than 100 miles.

During this so-called transition phase, the spacecraft will be used in concert with other Mars orbiters for a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study a comet during a close flyby. Comet C/2013 A1, known as Siding Spring, will pass within about 82,000 miles of Mars on Oct. 19, a remarkably close encounter expected to happen once in a million years.

"We are going to take advantage of this bonus opportunity to do science, and we'll be making observations of the comet itself and the Mars upper atmosphere before and after the comet arrives," Bruce Jakosky, MAVEN principal investigator at the University of Colorado, Boulder, in a pre-arrival news conference.

"We should learn a lot about the upper atmosphere from this natural experiment, watching the perturbation from the impact of gas and dust, and we're hoping to learn about the comet as well," he said.

But the primary goal of the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution -- MAVEN -- spacecraft is to study the martian atmosphere, repeatedly flying through its upper reaches to sample its constituents, map out its structure and measure how solar radiation and electrically charged particles from the sun affect its evolution.

Mars does not have an active magnetic field to shield the planet from the effects of such high energy radiation, which may act to carry away atoms and molecules in the upper reaches of the atmosphere.

"The evidence shows that the Mars atmosphere today is a cold, dry environment, one where liquid water really can't exist in a stable state," Jakosky said. "But it also tells us the ancient surface had liquid water flowing over it and we see evidence for lakes, for river channels, a lot of evidence for liquid water that required a very different climate than the one we have today.

"What that leads us to ask is, where did the water go? Where did the CO2 (carbon dioxide) go from that early environment? And it can go to two places, it can go down into the crust or it can go up to the top of the atmosphere where it can be lost to space."

MAVEN's instruments were designed to help scientists figure out "the extent to which stripping of gas out of the atmosphere to space may have been the driving mechanism of climate change."

"We study the top of the atmosphere because that's the place where the gas that is escaping resides, and it's a conduit through which the gas has to traverse as it goes from the lower atmosphere to the top where it can be stripped away by the solar wind or by other processes," Jakosky said.

"The question is whether over long periods of time this process, or any of the other processes that are operating, has been responsible for removing a lot of the gas. This is the major question we want to address."

The MAVEN spacecraft measures 37.5 feet across its two solar panels, weighs more than 5,000 pounds and is equipped with eight primary instruments and UHF radio gear designed to relay data back to Earth from rovers on the martian surface.

Six of its instruments will measure particles and fields, mapping out the interaction of the atmosphere with electrically charged particles from the sun and the impact of solar radiation. Two other instruments will carry out remote sensing and chemical analysis of particles in the red planet's atmosphere.

"We want to understand the driving forces, that is, the energy that comes in from the sun, from the solar wind and how the upper atmosphere responds and how the response leads to the escape of gas out the top," Jakosky said. "Even though the processes we're interested in operated billions of years ago, looking today we can understand the processes and how they operated and extrapolate backward in time."

MAVEN will join three other operational satellites currently circling the fourth planet: NASA's Mars Odyssey, launched in 2001; the European Space Agency's Mars Express, launched in 2003, and NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, launched in 2005.

In addition, India's Mars Orbiter Mission, or MOM, is expected to brake into orbit Wednesday.

NASA also operates two rovers on the surface, the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity, launched in 2003, and the nuclear-powered Mars Science Laboratory, or Curiosity, launched in 2011. Both rovers use Odyssey and MRO to relay science data back to Earth and to receive commands from flight controllers. MAVEN is equipped with similar relay gear and will serve as a backup for use as needed.

The over-arching goal of NASA's Mars exploration strategy is to characterize the past and present habitability of the planet, to look for signs of the organic compounds that are necessary for life as it is known on Earth and, eventually, to figure out whether life ever evolved on the fourth planet from the sun.

"Life by itself is not easy to identify, it's not easy to understand," said Jakosky. "And we're trying to understand the context in which life might have existed. Any life on Mars interacts with its planetary environment, we need to know what that environment is and how it's evolved over time.

"MAVEN is about looking at the history of the atmosphere in order to understand the history of that environment. So it's really telling us the boundary conditions around the potential for life. By understanding the processes by which the atmosphere changed, we're learning about the history of the habitability of Mars. And by looking at Mars relative to Earth and Venus, we're learning about the nature of planets and the history of atmospheres in general."

© 2014 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.


http://www.cbsnews.com/news/maven-mars-probe-closes-in-on-red-planet/?ftag=YHF4eb9d17

 

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