So excited… I’ll be at JPL when they land this Curiosity rover on Mars. This baby is about 5x larger than the Spirit or Opportunity rovers and has 10x the scientific instrument payload. to pull this off will require more than the bounce used last time on Mars, and for the first lunar landing. JPL is using a novel soft-landing approach using a SkyCrane. The lander will hover using rockets about 25 feet above the Martian surface, then lower the rover on cables to the surface, cut the cables, then fly away leaving the rover on the surface.

If you have not seen what this looks like, the video animation is just incredible.

Erik and I had dinner with “Mars Czar” Scott Hubbard at the B612 excursion to Meteor Crater. Having led the robotic exploration of Mars, he was full of fascinating stories, like how the last rovers lasted so much longer than ever anticipated (swirling dust devils scrubbed the solar panels clean, over an over again). Or how the Viking lander saw chemical signals that indicated a desiccated planet devoid of life, and possible pre-launch contamination from fluorinated compounds, but this may a byproduct of the sampling technique, and Curiosity may finally discover water and perhaps life in Mars. They want to set expectations low. =)

15 responses to “Are You Curious?”

  1. The invite… a great sentiment for the Fourth of July
    IMG_1434

    That’s how they roll…
    Screen Shot 2012-07-03 at 1.47.39 PM video and more from the JPL Mars Science Laboratory

  2. Those are MR-80B (Aerojet manufactured) thrusters….direct derivative of the engines used on the Mars Viking landers in the 70’s. An acquisition target for the collection, some day 🙂 ….

  3. Always curious:) Fireworks on Mars are the most wonderful:)

  4. it’s so funny they build it so dust-free and then drop it on soil :-))

  5. they just like the bunny suits

    I forgot – we built one of these long ago…

    signs of life

  6. If they’re blasting rockets at the ground I’m pretty sure they’ll be able to find water. Strike that — I guess they’re monopropellant hydrazine.

  7. I need this ride! great shot, will be watching the landing too!

  8. What a great time to be alive.

  9. Yes! …witnessing "the most momentous day in particle physics of the century" — Garrett Lisi
    Lisi’s Lab

  10. I am curious…YELLOW……….Anyway I hope they got that metric/standard measurement down pat and hope this thing don’t splatter on a set of boulders………….

  11. > bike-R – metric IS the standard for science!
    the other one, British Imperial units, is non-standard in science.

  12. OOOps, guess they never told this JPL team back in 1999 when they used the wrong measurements for a metric mishap…….Oh welll, you loose some and win some……..

    articles.cnn.com/1999-09-30/tech/9909_30_mars.metric.02_1…

  13. and a photo of our B612 posse, with the first "Mars Czar" Scott Hubbard to my left, and founder astronauts Ed Lu (over 250 days in space) Rusty Schweickart (Apollo 9)

    B612 at USVP

  14. and now.. China’s rover looks to have similar wheels! 🙂 The Red Planet

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