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Spirit's First Mars Images

An anonymous reader writes "First panoramic and overhead polar views of Mars, a quarter billion miles away are available. Some spectacular examples and accompanying commentaries are at NASA's Astrobiology Magazine, and JPL."

20 of 406 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Awe Inspiring by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What took my breath away was a quote:

    O'Keefe: I'm told in a golf analogy, that landing on Mars is a hole-in-one, from Paris to Tokyo.

    Good work all round!

    --
    This is where the serious fun begins.
  2. Which desktop are they using in this image? by katz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Which desktop (windows, kde, gnome, mac) is shown in this image?

    The leftmost titlebar button resembles MacOS9, but the rightmost buttons don't.
    (The image appears washed-out because it's a photo of a canvas.)

    1. Re:Which desktop are they using in this image? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      No, X Windows is not Windows because X Windows does not exist. Perhaps you're thinking of X or the X Window System?

  3. To all the NASA drivers: by twoslice · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Squyres said of the Gusev landing site. "It is a place that is almost, when you look at it, it looks like it was tailor made for our vehicle. Our vehicle was built to drive, our vehicle was built to explore.... We see rocks, we see enough rocks that we can do great science with them but not so many that they're going to get in our way. So we're going to be able to really motor around this place. So I'm looking forward to some good driving in the weeks and months ahead."

    That is exactly what the driver of the last mission to Mars said when he hung up the rover on a rock and got it stuck.

    I would hate to be the person who got the rover stuck on a rock with all those rocket scientists looking at me really steamed...

    --

    From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
  4. how come by relrelrel · · Score: 1, Interesting

    you can see the curvature of the planet so easily? it's as if mars is only a couple dozen miles in width.

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    --- any post that takes longer than 20 seconds to write, isn't worth writing
    1. Re:how come by Txiasaeia · · Score: 2, Interesting

      More specifically, the effects of a lens that is under 50mm that is not being shot parallel to the ground.

      --
      Condemnant quod non intellegunt.
  5. Re:Colour calibration? by VertigoAce · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Those are black and white images. The bluish color results from taking a picture of the big screen at JPL as these images were shown (or doing screen grabs of NASA TV). The first color images should be sometime Sunday night.

    I was watching these (on NASA TV) as they came in and it was just amazing. Everyone at JPL was really quiet as they knew the data was about to come in. As earth had already set, this data (~12 minutes) was being relayed by Mars Odyssey. The first couple images were really dark and small. You got the impression most people had no idea what they were, but none the less everyone was cheering that they were getting data and pictures back. They got at least one picture that was taken during landing that they weren't expecting. Then the big detailed pictures of the landing site started coming in and everyone was just in awe. Pretty quickly they combined images into mosaics and panoramic shots. I can't wait until they get their good cameras up and running. The commentator was saying the resolution will be hight enough that the pictures will still look good when blown up to the size of a movie screen.

  6. This is a-w-e-s-o-m-e!! by Lispy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was following the Nasa TV broadcast from Germany, meaning I had to get up at 5am. My girlfriend called me nuts. But I don't regret a single second. The six minutes landing phase was more stunning than any movie could ever be. I smoked chains when the signal disappeared. But now that I see the images I must say "Good work, Nasa!"

    I am eagerly looking forward to the landing of Opportunity and the rover mission. Still, I'm keeping my fingers crossed for ESAs Beagle2. Chances are we can pick up a signal these days using Mars Express Orbiter!

    The landing sequence for the MERs seemed quite complex and I was wondering if they were overdoing it! But I am deeply impressed now. Ever since I was a little boy I was dreaming about a real Rover on Mars and now I get two (hopefully). This is better than xmas! Thank you, Nasa! You rock! ;-))))

    Lispy

  7. Re:Hey! by tsa · · Score: 1, Interesting

    You can laugh about it but that's not really fair. I think the Beagle2 was just unlucky. Congrats to NASA for this achievement of course, but I don't think it feels good to be a Beagle2 team member just now. O well, wait till they find Beagle2 and it sends back images of living martians from the bottom of the chasm it fell in!

    --

    -- Cheers!

  8. Too Bad... by BTWR · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Speaking of Cornell, my professor at Cornell was the Rover's principal scientist Steve Squyres (great guy and perhaps the best professor I ever had there, by the way...). He said that at one point they had considered using radiactive power cells. That woulda made the rovers last like 6 years, not up to 6 months. The Viking Landers lived from like 1976 until like 1982. Imagine how far the rover coulda crawled in 6 years! I mean, someone do the math... it woulda been amazing. Oh well, glas-half-full-and-all, 6 months is infinately better than shattering in the atmosphere/rocks...

    1. Re:Too Bad... by cheesybagel · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Because of the Greens. Such radioactive batteries use very radioactive short half-life elements like strontium-90.

      Remember all the noise the Greens made when Cassini was launched?

    2. Re:Too Bad... by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They can aslso use Pu-238.

      But I think they should be using RTGs on the rovers, simply for the long life.

      Viking 1 lasted from July 1976 to November 15 1982

      "The Viking 1 Lander was named the Thomas Mutch Memorial Station in January 1982 in honor of the leader of the Viking imaging team. It operated until 13 November 1982 when a faulty command sent by ground control resulted in loss of contact."
      http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/database/Mas terCatalog? sc=1975-075C

      Viking 2 lasted from August 9 1976 to April 11 1980

      " The Viking 2 Lander operated on the surface for 1281 Mars days and was turned off on April 11, 1980 when its batteries failed."
      http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/database/Mast erCatalog? sc=1975-083C

  9. Re:boy am I glad! by wjsteele · · Score: 3, Interesting


    First of all. $800M (for two rovers) is really inexpensive.

    Secondly, the science we gain is very important... and people like you, who can't see it, should go join those poor sobs who can't seem to feed themselves, let alone contribute to the rest of society.

    I would much rather pay for science (that helps everybody) than to waste my money trying to feed some poor slob who has no concept of how to even feed themselves - much less contribute.

    Lastly, each one of us here on this planet were born with exactly the same thing... NOTHING. We make our own world. If there is a problem with the one we currently have, then it is up to ourselves to change it. And before you say anything else, I know... I was born to a very poor household with a drug taking single parent. Once I realized how bad it was, I got out, started working two jobs and paid my own way through a local state college. I've worked my ass off to get to where I am at right now and I am very proud of that fact. I instill every bit of that in my daughter so that she also understands what it takes. You can't just sit by and have pitty on your own situation... you must do something about it.

    Science allows us to expand our knowledge and understanding of the universe around us. Which makes our world a better place to live in. Social programs that "HELP" those in need only serve to support the status quo, they don't help it grow or make it any better. I'm not saying we don't need social programs... but rather we should only have social programs for those who can not care for themselves... like children, accident victims, sick and elderly.

    Bill

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    It's my Sig and you can't have it. Mine! All Mine!
  10. News Coverage by FrostedWheat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is it just me or does the media have an obsession with pretending there was a race between the US and Europe to land on Mars? The BBC certainly has!

    "US beats Europe to Mars" was the text they had onscreen at one point. Very annoying. I expected more from them. I really gotta stop doing that ....

  11. HIGH RESOLUTION Panoramic by aardwolf204 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    High-Res Panoramic

    As mentioned before, there are a lot more images if you look here

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  12. Re:Congratulations to the team by dradler · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Perhaps a few read Slashdot, from time to time.

    Mark Adler
    Spirit Mission Manager

  13. Re:Would require a "space race" by dcmeserve · · Score: 2, Interesting
    We won't be sending anyone to Mars until China has almost caught up to us technologically and has committed their full resources to sending a communist to mars.

    By that time, they may already be ahead of us procedurally -- by that, I mean in their approach/attitude. On their very first manned mission, they've left behind a habitable module in orbit. Later missions will have the goal of docking with it (and perhaps adding to it?). i.e. they're already working on a space station, or at least the technology for it.

    This signifies the kind of long-term, methodical approach that the US program has really lacked. Yeah, we had our moon shot, but we didn't do it in anywhere near a sustainable way. And the Shuttle has been a long trek down the wrong path. By the time China has caught up technologically, and also in terms of manned-spaceflight experience, they may well have a continuously-occupied outpost on the moon.

    It'll be a bit difficult for the US to catch up to *that*. But we'll be able to take heart in the fact that no one can beat us at putting up military satellites.

    --
    "Orthodoxy is unconsciousness" - Orwell
  14. Re:This is 2004.... by repetty · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "No color????? Cripes. How much did the damned thing cost and NO COLOR?"

    Funny. You have MTV expectations.

  15. Re:Congratulations to the team by IM6100 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I just thought I'd add here that if you go to Mark Adler's web page, it mentions near the bottom that he's the coauthor of Info-Zip, Gzip, and zlib.

    Thank you.

    --
    A Good Intro to NetBS
  16. Some stereo 3D views I made. by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 3, Interesting



    Enjoy.

    I tried submitting this as a story, but it was rejected.

    Hooray.

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    Bowie J. Poag