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Curiosity rover on track for August 5/6 landing

Descent from the top of Mars’ atmosphere to the surface will employ bold techniques enabling use of a smaller target area and heavier landed payload than were possible for any previous Mars mission.
By NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. Published: August 1, 2012
MSL-spacecraft
This is an artist's concept of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft during its cruise phase between launch and final approach to Mars. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Eight days before reaching Mars, NASA's Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) spacecraft performed a flight-path adjustment scheduled more than nine months ago.

The trajectory correction maneuver completed early July 29 may be the last one the mission needs before landing day, though two further opportunities remain on its schedule in case they are needed.

The spacecraft is on course for delivering the mission's car-sized rover, Curiosity, to a landing target beside a martian mountain at about 1:31 a.m. EDT August 6. After landing, the rover will spend a two-year prime mission studying whether the area has ever offered environmental conditions favorable for life.

The spacecraft used two brief thruster firings totaling about six seconds to adjust its trajectory at about 1 a.m. EDT July 29. This maneuver had been on the mission's schedule since before launch November 26, 2011. It altered the flight path less than any of the spacecraft's three previous trajectory correction maneuvers on the way from Earth to Mars.

The MSL spacecraft had been on a course in recent weeks that would have hit a point at the top of the martian atmosphere about 13 miles (21 kilometers) east of the target entry point. On landing day, it can steer enough during its flight through the upper atmosphere to correct for missing the target entry point by a few miles and still land on the intended patch of Mars real estate. The mission's engineers and managers rated the projected 13-mile miss big enough to warrant a correction maneuver.

"The purpose of this maneuver is to move the point at which Curiosity enters the atmosphere by about 13 miles (21 kilometers)," said Tomas Martin-Mur of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. "The first look at telemetry and tracking data afterwards indicates the maneuver succeeded as planned."

The thruster firings altered the spacecraft's velocity by about 1/40 mph (one centimeter per second). Curiosity will enter Mars' atmosphere at a speed of about 13,200 mph (21,200 km/h).

Opportunities for two further course corrections are scheduled in the final 48 hours before landing, if needed.

"I will not be surprised if this was our last trajectory correction maneuver," Martin-Mur said of the event. "We will be monitoring the trajectory using the antennas of the Deep Space Network to be sure Curiosity is staying on the right path for a successful entry, descent, and landing."

Descent from the top of Mars' atmosphere to the surface will employ bold techniques enabling use of a smaller target area and heavier landed payload than were possible for any previous Mars mission. These innovations, if successful, will place a well-equipped mobile laboratory into a locale especially well-suited for its mission of discovery. The same innovations advance NASA toward capabilities needed for human missions to Mars.

As of July 30, the Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft carrying the rover Curiosity had traveled about 343 million miles (555 million kilometers) of its 352-million-mile (567 million kilometers) flight to Mars.

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5 stars
LARS LINDSTROM from SWEDEN said:
Today is august 7th, and i read in the morning paper about the successful landing of the Curiosity mission!!! I´ve been biting my fingernails down to elbow taste since launch, because I so much hope for the project to succeed! Now I can sleep easily again, waiting for the science results to pour in - and I look forward to coming issues of Astronomy magazine, brimming with details and images, put together with the usual expertice by its excellent staff!
I would like to send send my heartiest congratulations to NASA and its hard-working scientists and technicians! What a fantastic job you have done! I think the whole society of amateur astronomers join me in the cheers!!!
5 stars
GABRIEL DENIS said:
I have been followly this mission ever since the launch because I participated in sending several names to Mars, including my own and my granddaughters, among others through Nasa.
5 stars
SAM NAUMAN from TEXAS said:
I so much hope that all goes well with curiosity's landing. It seems so complicated and complicated things sometimes do not work as intended but let's stay positive and keep our fingers crossed. Mankind has come a long way from the caves and the hunter gatherer life style.
5 stars
STEPHEN TERHAAR from MINNESOTA said:
Go Curiosity! As a science teacher, I wish this had been timed so that our school year was in session, but, oh well. Good luck to the entire NASA and JPL team!
3 stars
DEAN DENNEY from CALIFORNIA said:
good hope everything goes as planned
1 star
JACK OBERHOLZER SR from SOUTH AFRICA said:
What a score it would be to land human beings on Mars and safely return them. Looking forward toit!
5 stars
DAVID RYAN from ARIZONA said:
Best wishes NASA and JPL
PAUL DEXTER from ILLINOIS said:
I'd love to see a picture of Mars from Curiosity, but that's not happening. From it's current distance, Mars would look like Earth, half way between here and the moon. I hope luck, God, and the gods are on it's side.
PAUL COGLIANO from MASSACHUSETTS said:
What coverage will NASA/JPL provide for viewing the decent & landing.
Also, if there is realtime coverage, will this continue during the mission?
5 stars
JEROME VENCALEK from NEBRASKA said:
I watched Curiosity launch, I am really looking forward to a successful landing!!!! Good landing to all persons involved!!!!
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