Mars Rovers On Final Approach
leapis writes "In the wake of the possible loss of the Beagle 2 Mars probe, let us not forget that the Mars Rovers are
scheduled for arrival in orbit this weekend. As noted in this article at Space.com, the fourth and final course correction has been made, and Spirit, the first of two spacecraft, will touch down around 22:34 on 3 Jan 2004. More information and a countdown to the landing can be found here."
The article says the rover's trajectory has been updated. Is it because they were afraid it would land in a crater like beagle2?
I do hope at least one probe lands right. It is one of the advantages of having NASA, ESA and other space agencies competing, when did it happen before this that we had so many probes heading on the same planet?
Does anyone know the different purposes they have?
My Stack Overflow user
Mars Scorecard:
.5/1 (so far, maybe the Beagle will bark)
USA: 8/14 (so far, not counting MER-A and MER-B)
USSR/Russia: 4/16 (two of the four returned very little data)
Japan: 0/1
Europe
Source: http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/log/