Author Topic: NASA's Next Mission to Mars Ready for Monday Launch  (Read 991 times)

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NASA's Next Mission to Mars Ready for Monday Launch
« on: November 16, 2013, 07:40:51 pm »
NASA's Next Mission to Mars Ready for Monday Launch
SPACE.com
By Miriam Kramer, Staff Writer  21 hours ago



This is an artist's conception of the MAVEN spacecraft.



NASA's next Mars probe is ready for a Monday launch to the Red Planet.

NASA's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution probe (MAVEN for short) is set to launch atop a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Monday (Nov. 18) at 1:28 p.m. EST (1828 GMT). You can watch MAVEN's launch on SPACE.com, courtesy of NASA.

"This Wednesday, we just completed our flight readiness review," Omar Baez, NASA launch director at Kennedy Space Center, told reporters during a news briefing today (Nov. 15). "Yesterday we held our mission dress rehearsal and this morning, we completed our NASA launch readiness review. All were very successful."

There is a chance that weather problems in Florida might delay MAVEN's launch. At the moment, NASA puts the odds of good weather at 60 percent for Monday, but the odds become less favorable as the week goes on, launch weather officer Clay Flinn said in the briefing.

The spacecraft's launch window officially extends from Nov. 18 to Dec. 7, but if the mission doesn't lift off before Dec. 23, the team will have to wait until January 2016 before Mars and Earth are ideally aligned for another attempt, MAVEN mission managers said.

NASA's MAVEN mission will take about 10 months to reach Mars after launching from Florida. Once in orbit around the Red Planet, the spacecraft will study the planet's upper atmosphere to help scientists determine how Mars turned into the cold desert it is today.

Scientists think that Mars was once a warm, wet world billions of years ago, but at some point in the planet's evolution that changed. Mars' atmosphere was lost to space possibly due to the sun's influence and other factors, and NASA is sending the school bus-sized MAVEN to Mars to look into how the planet actually lost its atmosphere, mission scientists explained.

"If you look outside of the [science] community, there's quite an interest in this mission," Baez said. "You wouldn't think so in that it's not as sexy as the rovers going over the planet, [but] this is kind of like a weather satellite for Mars providing relay and it's real science."

The $671 million MAVEN mission will spend at least one Earth year investigating the Martian atmosphere, and will be the 10th orbiter NASA has launched to Mars. It will join three other probes currently active in orbit around Mars: Mars Odyssey, the European Space Agency's Mars Express and NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.


http://news.yahoo.com/nasas-next-mission-mars-ready-monday-launch-220042609.html

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This Rocket Is Going to Mars with NASA's MAVEN Probe (Photos)
« Reply #1 on: November 16, 2013, 07:50:28 pm »
This Rocket Is Going to Mars with NASA's MAVEN Probe (Photos)
SPACE.com
By Miriam Kramer, Staff Writer  32 minutes ago



The Atlas 5 rocket set to carry MAVEN into space standing on its launch pad. Photo released Nov. 16, 2013.



CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The Atlas 5 rocket set to take NASA's next Mars probe into space Monday is on the launch pad. Earlier today (Nov. 16) the United Launch Alliance rocket housing the space agency's Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution spacecraft (MAVEN) rolled out onto the pad in preparation for the launch.

The 188-foot-rocket (57.3 meters) is scheduled to lift off from here at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 1:28 p.m. EST (1828 GMT) on Monday. At the moment, there is a still a 60 percent chance that weather will be favorable for the afternoon launch. You can watch the launch live on SPACE.com via NASA TV.

Once launched, MAVEN will spend about 10 months in transit to Mars, where it will then collect data about how the Red Planet became the cold desert studied today. Research suggests that Mars was one a wet world, but the influence of the sun and other factors caused the planet to lose its atmosphere. MAVEN is making its journey to Mars to more fully understand those changes.

Visit SPACE.com for the latest MAVEN news, photos and videos. You can also follow MAVEN coverage through the Mission Status Center at SPACE.com's partner, Spaceflight Now.



SPACE.com reporter Miriam Kramer stands in front of the Atlas 5 rocket housing the MAVEN probe


http://news.yahoo.com/rocket-going-mars-nasas-maven-probe-photos-191423791.html

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NASA's MAVEN Takes Off To Study Mystery Of Climate Change... On Mars
« Reply #2 on: November 17, 2013, 02:25:14 am »
NASA's MAVEN Takes Off To Study Mystery Of Climate Change... On Mars
Eric Mack 11/16/2013 @ 7:24PM



Maven ready for launch atop an Atlas V rocket. (Credit: NASA)



NASA is set to launch its latest journey to Mars , via the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN orbiter  (MAVEN), which is scheduled blast off on top of an Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Monday afternoon. MAVEN will orbit and study the atmosphere of the red planet to try and learn why it may have gone from harboring water and an atmosphere more like that of Earth, to the cold, dry rock NASA’s rovers roam today.

There’s evidence that Mars was once a potentially habitable planet with lakes, oceans, clouds, rain and the whole bit billions of years ago.  But then something happened, and sun and space apparently conspired to strip away the Martian atmosphere and any remaining surface water, transforming it into the barren landscape that’s reminiscent of how the Southwestern United States might appear after, say, a billion year drought. Today the atmosphere of Mars is roughly 100 times less dense than that of Earth.

MAVEN’s trip to Mars will take 10 months, with arrival at the rouge rock set for next September, when it will begin to move into an elliptical orbit where it will pass through and sample the upper Martian atmosphere and also conduct ultraviolet imaging of the planet.

The basic idea is to take measurements that determine current rates of loss of atmospheric gases to space and then extrapolate back in time to try and figure out more about when, how and how quickly they were lost to the great void.

MAVEN was built by Lockheed Martin LMT -0.61% and will carry three instrument suites built jointly by NASA and labs at the Universities of California and Colorado. The craft is scheduled for a year-long data gathering mission, but often missions like this are extended, so long as the craft is able to function and return data.

While in orbit, MAVEN will also play a key role as a communications link between Earth and the NASA rovers — Curiosity and Opportunity — wheeling around the crimson dirt below. The two orbiters that currently serve this function are now aging and ready to be tagged out. This key function of the MAVEN mission is one of the reasons it was granted an exemption from being shuttered during this fall’s government shutdown.

Had the MAVEN mission team been sent home for those few weeks, it’s likely they would have missed the 20-day launch window that will open this week, and would not re-open for nearly two years.


http://www.forbes.com/sites/ericmack/2013/11/16/nasas-maven-takes-off-to-study-mystery-of-climate-change-on-mars/?partner=yahootix

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NASA's newest Mars flyer will explore atmosphere
« Reply #3 on: November 17, 2013, 02:41:36 am »
NASA's newest Mars flyer will explore atmosphere
Associated Press
By MARCIA DUNN 7 hours ago



FILE - In this Friday, Sept. 27, 2013 file photo, technicians work on NASA’s next Mars-bound spacecraft, the Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN), at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Fla. The robotic explorer is scheduled to blast off Monday, Nov. 18, 2013 on a 10-month journey to the red planet to study the atmosphere in an attempt to understand how Mars changed from warm and wet to cold and dry. (AP Photo/John Raoux)



CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA hopes its newest Mars spacecraft lives up to its know-it-all name.

The robotic explorer called Maven is due to blast off Monday on a 10-month journey to the red planet. There, it will orbit Mars and study the atmosphere to try to understand how the planet morphed from warm and wet to cold and dry.

"A maven is a trusted expert," noted NASA's space science chief, John Grunsfeld. Maven will help scientists "build a story of the Mars atmosphere and help future human explorers who journey to Mars."

The $671 million mission is NASA's 21st crack at Earth's most enticing neighbor, coming on the heels of the Curiosity rover, still rolling strong a year after its grand Martian arrival.

When Maven reaches Mars next September, it will join three functioning spacecraft, two U.S. and one European. An Indian orbiter also will be arriving about the same time. Maven will be the 10th orbiter to be launched to Mars by NASA; three have failed, testimony to the difficulty of the task.

"No other planet, other than perhaps Earth, has held the attention of people around the world than Mars," Grunsfeld said.

Early Mars had an atmosphere thick enough to hold water and moist clouds, said chief investigator Bruce Jakosky of the University of Colorado's Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics in Boulder. Indeed, water flowed once upon a time on Mars, and microbial life might have existed.

"But somehow that atmosphere changed over time to the cold, dry environment that we see today," Jakosky said. "What we don't know is what the driver of that change has been."

Maven — short for Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution, with a capital N in EvolutioN — is the first spacecraft devoted entirely to studying Mars' upper atmosphere. India's orbiter will also study the atmosphere but go a step further, seeking out methane, a possible indicator of life.

Scientists theorize that some of the early atmospheric water and carbon dioxide went down into the crust of the Martian surface — there is evidence of carbonate minerals on Mars. Gases also may have gone up and become lost to space, stripped away by the sun, molecule by molecule, Jakosky said.

Maven holds eight scientific instruments to measure the upper atmosphere for an entire Earth year — half a Martian year. The boxy, solar-winged craft — as long as a school bus and as hefty as a 5,400-pound SUV — will dip as low as 78 miles above the surface for atmospheric sampling, and its orbit will stretch as high as 3,864 miles.

Understanding the makeup and dynamics of Mars' present atmosphere will help guide humans more safely to the planet's surface, especially if the ship takes advantage of the atmosphere for braking, Jakosky said. NASA targets the 2030s for the first manned expedition.

The spacecraft also holds an antenna and radio to serve as a communications relay for NASA's two active Martian rovers, Curiosity and Opportunity, as well as the next pair of landers to be launched in 2016 and 2020.

Maven is considered so important that launch preparations were allowed to resume a couple of days after the start of the 16-day government shutdown. Maven has one month to launch; Earth and Mars line up just so, just every 26 months. So if Maven isn't flying by mid to late December, the spacecraft will be grounded until the beginning of 2016.

The red planet is a notoriously tricky target. The world's overall success rate since the 1960s for a Mars mission is less than 50-50.

NASA has attempted the most, 20 launches so far, and has the best success rate: 70 percent. Russia, in second place with 18 Mars launches, has a dismal 14 percent success rate. China collaborated on one of the Russian flops. Europe and Japan have attempted one Martian mission apiece; the European Mars Express has had mixed results, while the Japanese effort fizzled.

"We're never a success until we're at Mars and we're taking data and getting the science that these folks envisioned back in 2003," when the idea arose, observed NASA project manager David Mitchell.

There's a light side to Maven.

Attached to one of Maven's solar wings is a DVD containing more than 100,000 names submitted by the public earlier this year, as well as more than 1,000 Japanese-style haiku verses, also penned by the public, and 377 student art contest entries.

The Maven team liked this haiku from an anonymous contributor:

"Amidst sand and stars/We scan a lifeless planet/To escape its fate."

But this haiku was the No. 1 public vote-getter, submitted by British blogger Benedict Smith:

"It's funny, they named/Mars after the God of War/Have a look at Earth."

___

Online:

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

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


http://news.yahoo.com/nasas-newest-mars-flyer-explore-atmosphere-192239488.html

Offline Geo

Re: NASA's Next Mission to Mars Ready for Monday Launch
« Reply #4 on: November 17, 2013, 11:14:56 am »
4 articles, and the only hard info I find is the transit time and the cost of the mission? ::)

Compare that to the article about the Indian Mars probe, where even the propulsion performances are discussed.


Okay, so we have here a $71 million mission with a probe massing 1,5 tons and a $671 million mission massing 2,5 tons.


 

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