First Mars photos projected back from Curiosity Rover

Less than an hour ago, NASA accomplished a new feat of engineering supremacy with the landing of the Curiosity Rover to the surface of Mars – and the first photos from that craft have been sent back to Earth already. As it was revealed about and around the landing sequence for this craft, the delay between the tech on the planet now and us here at home on Earth is about 14 minutes. What we’re seeing now are photos taken from the Curiosity River and projected back to our planet in less than a half hour – fresh as we’ve ever seen them!

What you’re seeing are some rather dusty images straight from the Curiosity Rover as it’s touched down on the planet Mars. These are the first bits of data we’ll be receiving from the planet that’ll be able to be made sense of by the masses. For all information regarding new forms of life, little green men, and signs of water, we’ll have to wait a bit longer.

You’re seeing shadows of the rover as it sits on the surface of Mars as well as images of its wheels. There are only a few small images at the moment, but more are certainly on the way from NASA very soon. The reason the view right now is so very dusty is that the area surrounding the craft is essentially one massive cloud of debris blown up by the landing sequence. Subsequent shots of the surface of the planet will be clearer – we hope!

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Have a peek here at these rather tiny images and stick around as much more lovely versions and future shots appear. And have a toast for NASA – we’ve just lived through history!

[via Mars]


First Mars photos projected back from Curiosity Rover is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Curiosity makes Mars landing

5 days ago, we talked about how NASA will be broadcasting the Mars landing of the Curiosity Rover live at New York’s world famous Times Square. Well, since good things always come to those who wait, we have word that NASA’s Curiosity Rover has just landed on Mars, where its descent-stage retrorockets made their mark, guiding it for a safe landing on the Red Planet’s surface. The use of nylon cords helped lower the rover to the ground in the “sky crane” maneuver. Once the spacecraft’s electronics sensed an imminent touchdown, the connecting cords were severed, while the descent stage managed to fly itself out of the way. It landed sometime in mid-afternoon – which was approximately around 3 p.m. local Mars time at Gale Crater. Now, the continued search for extra-terrestrial life continues. Do you think that Curiosity will be able to handle the tasks that has been set before it, and what new discoveries will be made before this decade is over? [NASA page]

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: NASA and Microsoft release Mars Rover Landing game, NASA’s Viking robot found life on Mars in 1976?,

NASA Mars Rover Curiosity makes a perfect landing

Over the past few weeks we’ve been watching NASA’s work with their newest Mars Rover to make its way to the red planet. Three hundred and fifty million miles away from Earth, Curiosity landed on the planet after having worked through the sequence outlined by the group over the past few weeks. This mission was launched on the 26th of November, 2011, and has make its landing here on the 5th of August, 2012 with flying colors.

The entire sequence of events went exactly as planned as NASA live-streamed the entire event via their own set of feeds pushed through USTREAM. Of course one of the most interesting subjects surrounding this whole event was the delay between when the ship nears the atmosphere and when the actual rover touches down on the planet. Three ships have moved toward, past, and/or into Mars, those being named MRO, Odyssey, and MSL. The MSL unit is the one that contained Curiosity, and both Odyssey and MRO were sent to collect information about the landing of MSL’s payload – again, Curiosity.

Heartbeat Tones, as they’re called, let the crew know that all was well, and inside the “7 Minutes of Terror” tensions were high. Of course no matter how well prepared a crew such as this could have been, tensions would have been through the roof. Months of preparation and millions of dollars were already in the project and all there was to do inside the last set of minutes was wait.

“We have venting” – cruise Stage Separation – five minutes to entry – all was going well, it seemed.

And for 7 full minutes there was barely a sound save for the brief reports – then it happened. “We are processing data from the Odyssey. We have a connection but we don’t have any data yet. There we go.”

At this point the rover had already landed – in fact it’d landed right at the moment when NASA started to receive signals that the ship had entered the atmosphere. The vehicle flew down toward the surface of the planet at mach 2 – “parachute deployed” – “we are decelerating – 150 meters per second.”

Needless to say, the cheers got louder and more joyous each announcement of a plateau. “We are in powered flight. 500 meters from planet. Stand by for skycrane. 40 meters altitude. Skycrane has started. Expecting final cut shortly.” Each announcement became more exciting.

And then there was an explosion of cheers – it’d worked! Touchdown!

All was well, the Curiosity Rover had landed successfully. Joy for all and the work could start once again. Now we all get to have a peek at the red planet once again. Have a look at our timeline of this event and stick around SlashGear for big findings from the rover for some time to come.

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NASA Mars Rover Curiosity makes a perfect landing is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


NASA Curiosity Mars landing live video feed live in last half-hour

Over the past few weeks we’ve been prepping for the big day – today – when NASA releases the Curiosity Mars Rover to the red planet with live feeds from all directions. If you’re currently tuning in, you’ll want to head over to http://www.ustream.tv/nasajpl and watch live and direct from NASA. Once you’ve watched the whole set of events, head back to SlashGear to see our full report on the landing.

Everything that’s happened over the past few weeks and months since the original November launch of this ship can be found in our SlashGear 101 guide of NASA’s Curiosity Mars Landing Start to Finish. You’ll also want to check out the featured column by NASA’s own Gavin Mendeck who kindly worked with SlashGear to bring you a feature directly from the heart of the operation. That feature goes by the name of Countdown to Mars: Thoughts from a NASA Curiosity engineer.

The video below shows how the landing will take place:

What you’ll be seeing if you tune in to the live feed as well as the guide video above is the following situation:

• Entry Interface
• Peak Heating
• Hypersonic Aero-Maneuvering
• Parachute Deploy
• Heatshield Separation
• Radar Data Collection
• Backshell Separation
• Powered Descent
• Sky Crane Rover Separation
• First Contact
• Touchdown

Stick around as we’re head down this historic path to Mars. Let us know what you think we might find on the way there!


NASA Curiosity Mars landing live video feed live in last half-hour is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Watch NASA’s Curiosity rover touch down on Mars, live at 1:30AM EDT

Watch NASA's Curiosity rover touch down on Mars, Live at 1:30 AM ES

You watched the launch, bit your nails over computer simulations and even played the game, and it all comes down to today: NASA’s Curiosity rover is about to land on Mars. The $2.5 billion vehicle has been en route to the red planet for eight months, and in a few short hours will spend seven terrifying minutes blindly making its way to the Martian surface — only to make NASA scientists wait another full seven before reporting on its success or failure. The rover is flying solo.

That doesn’t mean we can’t be there in spirit, however: NASA TV will be broadcasting the event on Ustream, offering commentary from the minds behind the rover, as well as audio from mission control. The Curiosity Cam, which runs from 11:30PM until 2:00AM EDT and 3:30AM to 4:30AM EDT, will offer commentary from the scientists and engineers behind Curiosity, while a second feed (at NASA JPL Live, which runs from 11:30PM onward) will play audio from mission control. If all goes to plan, NASA will be able to share an image from Curiosity’s navigation cameras, confirming its safe arrival on the Martian surface. Sounds like a hell of a show to us.

Read on to view the Curiosity Cam right here or check out the source links below to prep your evening (or early morning) viewing for yourself. Let us know your own thoughts on Curiosity’s landing in the comments.

Update: Touchdown confirmed! The entire sequence went perfectly to plan, and rover Curiosity is now on the surface of Mars and sending telemetry data.

Update: NASA’s press conference is now happening live.

Continue reading Watch NASA’s Curiosity rover touch down on Mars, live at 1:30AM EDT

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Watch NASA’s Curiosity rover touch down on Mars, live at 1:30AM EDT originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 05 Aug 2012 22:36:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Handy Animation Gives You The Step by Step Breakdown of the Curiosity Landing [Space]

The Mars Rover Curiousity landing will be going downs soon, but before it does, take the opportunity to get familiar with the step by step process of how it’s supposed to happen. More »

Countdown to Mars: Thoughts from a NASA Curiosity engineer

This weekend we will see Curiosity attempt a dramatic Mars landing inside of Gale Crater. Its mission will be to study the Martian rocks to determine how they were formed and try to answer whether conditions on Mars once could have supported life in its most simple form – tiny, microbial cells. The rover’s intended destination after landing is a series of layered rock outcrops on the slopes of Mount Sharp. These layers were spied from orbit only a few years ago and appear to provide a geological record of Mars spanning hundreds of millions of years that Curiosity can spend months touring and reading back to us on Earth. With Curiosity’s hypersonic entry guidance, this is the first Mars rover that could safely land inside Gale and reach these layers.

As interest and enthusiasm mounts for one of the greatest exploration missions of the last decade, it is worth remembering what it took to get here and consider what should be next. We’ve been fortunate to witness a golden age of Mars exploration over the last fifteen years of orbiters, landers, and rovers. The successful international missions of Mars Global Surveyor, Pathfinder, Mars Odyssey, Mars Express, Spirit, Opportunity, Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and Phoenix have helped us “follow the water”.

The assumption, given our experience here on Earth, is that where there was water on Mars there may also have been life. The probes orbiting Mars have been outfitted with a dazzling array of sensors and cameras to identify sites that may have been formed or affected by the presence of water. All this feeds into the landing site selection process using the best available data to find sites that are also safe to land at. The rovers have found proof of water in the past, confirming what we see from orbit, and Phoenix found ice just inches under the surface in the far north regions of Mars.

“Is life still there, hidden in the ground?”

As we explore Mars, we are learning how Mars formed and changed throughout its history. This will help us understand the history of the Earth better as well. Mars is right next door and formed the same time as the Earth did, but how did Mars come to be so different? And despite its differences, did life exist on Mars too? Is life still there, hidden in the ground? In ways we can never predict, we are all enlightened and benefit from discoveries in the jungles or the deep oceans of Earth, the microscopic intricacies of the human genome, the elusive Higgs particle, and delving into the puzzles and opportunities that space exploration presents.

Besides the science, why do we do this? Why spend the years of dedicated effort, the long days away from our families, the meticulous designing, building, and testing? Why do we feel that emotional rush when we attempt a nearly impossible task, or when we watch someone make such an attempt? Theodore Roosevelt offered a fitting answer. “Far better is it to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even through checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.”

It is no coincidence that as Jet Propulsion Laboratory engineers monitor Curiosity on its Mars approach and landing this weekend, only a few miles away the Mars Society is convening its 15th international conference. Enthusiastic people from all over the world and of various professions are discussing how we should reach and perhaps settle Mars this century. If you want to dare mightily, I cannot think of anything more challenging or fitting for the 21st century.

But getting humans to Mars is technically very difficult, and while we don’t yet know how to do it we have a few promising ideas. Curiosity had to give up the proven airbag technique because of its weight, and human missions will be much more massive. Curiosity has a few things important to a future human mission: it will demonstrate a hypersonic guided entry to land close to a site, and radiation sensors to inform what environment a crew and vehicle would withstand throughout the whole mission.

“We have never been more prepared than we are right now”

There is so much more to figure out and test. The recent Mars program has been set up to test things incrementally, to build off of what has been done before. Before we bring people to and from Mars, we can bring something from Mars back home to study. Curiosity has an incredible miniature laboratory tucked inside of it, but it can only carry so much instrumentation with it. We can use the orbiters, what Curiosity and other landers find, to help us pick out the rocks that will tell us the most about Mars. We have never been more prepared than we are right now to mount a sample return mission or begin the preparations for a human expedition.

The question facing the American administration and Congress is whether to support one now, in a time where NASA is seeing flat-lined budgets with other high-profile, billion dollar programs such as Webb Space Telescope, the heavy-lift launch vehicle, and the Orion human exploration spacecraft wrestling for those funds.

As America is dealing with large budget deficits, it is unlikely that NASA will receive enough funding to successfully finish all of these this decade, let alone a Mars sample return mission. With Congress focusing on issues of the magnitude of trillions of dollars it will be difficult to get their attention for programs on the order of billions. Expect no decision on anything of significance until after the American presidential and congressional elections this fall. If Mars exploration is to continue, public support is very important so that the politicians can accurately gauge the interest and the benefits.

There have been two grand periods of exploration of Mars. The first was led by a vanguard of American and Soviet probes in the 1960s and 1970s, radioing back amazing pictures of the largest volcanoes and canyons found in our solar system. That first period, suffering many failures as we learned how to reach to Mars, culminated in the successful Viking orbiters and landers.

And then, Mars was left alone — it seemed lifeless to our 1970s technology. The American Mars exploration team that had pulled off so many successes over those dozen years, that had engineered how to land safely on Mars, was scattered. Much of the talent and engineering knowledge from those early days of Mars exploration was lost. Today’s period of exploration had to assemble a new team, tempered by the successes and failures of recent missions, to attempt something as audacious as Curiosity.

We find ourselves again at the crossroads for Mars exploration. Dare we follow where curiosity leads us? Do we decide instead to start over again later this century?


Countdown to Mars: Thoughts from a NASA Curiosity engineer is written by Gavin Mendeck & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Mars Curiosity Rover’s Secret Key to Victory: Peanuts And Superstition [Space]

When you’ve got a landing sequence as complicated as the Curiosity’s and seven or so minutes of radio delay, there are plenty of things that can go horribly wrong. Fortunately, the folks at mission control have secret insurance up their sleeves: peanuts. More »

Check Out These Maps To Find Your Local Mars Rover Curiosity Landing Party [Space]

The Mars Curiosity Rover landing is kind of a big deal. There are going to be seven terrifying minutes as the $2.6 billion vehicle executes its wildly complicated descent to the surface. Can you think of a better reason for a party? More »

SlashGear 101: NASA’s Curiosity Mars Landing Start to Finish

In order for you to be prepared for the NASA Curiosity rover mission to Mars that’s going to touch down – if all goes according to plan – on August 5th, we’ve put this simple guide together for you! What you’ll find here is a step-by-step showing of how the landing will occur as well as a round-up of some interesting promotions and videos NASA has worked up to make sure the whole world knows about the landing. The NASA Curiosity rover Mars landing livestream video will be popping up tomorrow in the evening – get knowledgeable right now!

You’ll want to begin with the extremely entertaining and easy-to-understand video presented by NASA which shows how the landing will go down. This process starts with the organization that is running the whole show: the Mars Science Laboratory. This group will attempt to land the Mars rover Curiosity on the surface of the planet Mars on the 5th of August, 2012, the spacecraft carrying the rover having been launched back on the 26th of November, 2011.

Once the spacecraft is in the correct location near Mars, the lander will be launched and will be on the ground in 7 minutes. Entry, Descent, and Landing, is the sequence that will take place in 7 minutes, this sequence is also known as EDL and – in the video above – “7 minutes of terror.” This is because the signals that are being sent back to Earth telling NASA how far the landing craft has gotten take 14 minutes to arrive. In other words, the landing will take place in a span of minutes that NASA cannot see until 7 minutes after the landing -or crash – has occurred.

The sequence is marked by the following action points:

• Entry Interface
• Peak Heating
• Hypersonic Aero-Maneuvering
• Parachute Deploy
• Heatshield Separation
• Radar Data Collection
• Backshell Separation
• Powered Descent
• Sky Crane Rover Separation
• First Contact
• Touchdown

The capsule enters the atmosphere, a parachute deploys, a heat-shell separates from the craft, the backshell separates from the craft, the craft fires rockets to slow itself down, a crane lowers the rover, and the craft (minus the rover) rockets back upward and away, leaving the rover to live on Mars forever.

All of that make sense to you? It’s like a giant sandwich – the craft pulls off pieces of bread and filling as it reaches the planet, with the final component – let’s call it the pickle – being all that’s left in the end. Click the image here to see a larger version of the guide which will make it all clear – thanks NASA!

From here you’ll want to know where to watch it all go down live (delayed, of course, but just as live as you’re going to see it without actually being on Mars to watch it.) Our list of feeds can be found in the [NASA Curiosity Livestream post] created earlier this week.

Next have a peek at a collection of NASA promotions of this launch as set up and out over the past few weeks – all the way back to the first announcement of the mission back near the end of 2011!

NASA outlines obstacles to the mission while Star Trek legends all details are a go for the landing which will take place on Monday. Have a peek at William Shatner and Wil Wheaton demonstrating the sequence that will take place on Monday morning as well.

Those of you on non-PC machines will want to take a peek at the Xbox 360 Kinect game that’ll allow you to take part in the landing from your own own. On that note you’ll also want to see the iPad and iPhone apps created by NASA for at-home watchers as well. For collectors of oddities from events such as these, NASA has collaborated with Mattel toys to create a Hot Wheels rover so you can keep this Mars exploration with you on your desk forever.

After the launch is complete, you should know that NASA has confirmed that they won’t go to Mars alone when the first manned-mission takes place. And finally, for those of you that want to track this mission all the way back to our first mention of it, head to the posts on the launch, the waiting on the launch pad, and to James Cameron’s involvement in the whole project – hint: it has to do with 3D cameras – imagine that!

Also be sure to stick around here on SlashGear as we continue to cover this historic space mission with features and news bits throughout it’s on-Mars life as well!


SlashGear 101: NASA’s Curiosity Mars Landing Start to Finish is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.