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NASA Launching Two Mars Rovers in June

shaniber writes "NASA is planning the launch of the Mars Exploration Rovers this month. The rovers are scheduled for two two separate launches, between June 5th and July 15th. These rovers will both work as robotic geologists, including a human-eye height panoramic camera and a miniature thermal emmision spectrometer amongst their scientific equipment. NASA plans on webcasting the launches, as well. A press kit, with many more details, is also available as a pdf."

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  1. The payload by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    The science payload's page is on Cornell's site here.

  2. Quick Facts (from PDF) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    Quick facts (from the PDF in case you can't read PDF's, or don't RTFA's)

    Spacecraft

    Cruise vehicle dimensions: 2.65 meters (8.7 feet) diameter, 1.6 meters (5.2 feet) tall
    Rover dimensions: 1.5 meter (4.9 feet) high by 2.3 meters (7.5 feet) wide by 1.6 meter (5.2 feet) long
    Weight: 1,062 kilograms (2,341 pounds) total at launch, consisting of 174-kilogram (384-pound) rover, 365-kilogram (805-pound) lander, 198-kilogram (436-pound) backshell and parachute, 90-kilogram (198-pound) heat shield and 183-kilogram (403-pound) cruise stage, plus 52 kilograms (115 pounds) of propellant
    Power: Solar panel and lithium-ion battery system providing 140 watts on Mars surface
    Science instruments: Panoramic cameras, miniature thermal emission spectrometer, MÃssbauer spectrometer, alpha particle X-ray spectrometer, microscopic imager, rock abrasion tool, magnet arrays

    Rover A Mission

    Launch vehicle: Delta II 7925
    Launch period: June 8-24, 2003
    Earth-Mars distance at launch: 105 million kilometers (65 million miles)
    Mars landing: Jan. 4, 2004, at about 2 p.m. local Mars time (8:11 p.m. Jan. 3 PST)
    Landing site: Gusev Crater, possible former lake in giant impact crater
    Earth-Mars distance on landing day: 170.2 million kilometers (105.7 million miles)
    One-way speed-of-light time Mars-to-Earth on landing day: 9.46 minutes
    Total distance traveled Earth to Mars (approximate): 500 million kilometers (311 million miles)
    Near-surface atmospheric temperature at landing site: -100 C (-148 F) to 0 C (32 F)
    Primary mission: 90 Mars days, or "sols" (equivalent to 92 Earth days)

    Rover B Mission

    Launch vehicle: Delta II 7925H (larger solid-fuel boosters than 7925)
    Launch period: June 25-July 15, 2003
    Earth-Mars distance at launch: 89 million kilometers (55 million miles)
    Mars landing: Jan. 25, 2004, at about 1:15 p.m. local Mars time (8:56 p.m. Jan. 24 PST)
    Landing site: Meridiani Planum, where mineral deposits suggest wet past
    Landing time: Approximately 1:15 p.m. local Mars time (8:56 p.m. PST)
    Earth-Mars distance on landing day: 198.7 million kilometers (123.5 million miles)
    One-way speed-of-light time Mars-to-Earth on landing day: 11 minutes
    Total distance traveled Earth to Mars (approximate): 491 million kilometers (305 million miles)
    Near-surface atmospheric temperature at landing site: -100 C (-148 F) to 0 C (32 F)
    Primary mission: 90 Mars days, or "sols" (equivalent to 92 Earth days)

    Program

    Cost: Approximately $800 million total, consisting approximately of $625 million spacecraft development and science instruments; $100 million launch; $75 million mission operations and science processing

  3. Two probes from NASA, one from ESA. by Zayin · · Score: 4, Informative

    ESA launched their Mars probe on June 2nd. So, in about half a year there will be three different probes landing on Mars if everything goes as planned.

    --
    "I'd rather have a full bottle in front of me than a full frontal lobotomy"
    1. Re:Two probes from NASA, one from ESA. by flyingdisc · · Score: 5, Informative
      There are actually 4 missions. Nozomi which is launched by the Japanese, and will reach martian orbit at a similar time to the mars express.

      The amusing thing about nozomi (meaning hope) is that it was launched in 1998 - but used too much fuel and was unable to reach mars in that window - it's been bouncing off various planets including a swing by earth again to realign it with the current mars window. So there will be a japanese martian orbiter as well - just 4 years late.

  4. Re:More rovers!?! by flyingdisc · · Score: 4, Informative
    I felt sorry for that one a few years back. Kind of like leaving a puppy when you move.

    Part of the intention of having 2 rovers is that they can assist each other. This should make it more difficult to get a rover irreversibly stuck by a rock (as happened last time). If this happens the other rover can now be manoeuvred to nudge the stuck one free of any obstcle.

    NASA is under a lot of pressure for a successful Mars mission after the recent failures on the red planet and having 2 rovers minimises the risks.