If You Want the President To Call, It Helps to Send Him Color
Pictures... From Mars.
The people operating
NASA's Spirit received a congratulatory call from the President,
following their reception of the first color photos from the Mars
Spirit Rover. .
President George W. Bush called the Mars Rover Team (Tuesday) to
congratulate them for reconfirming the American spirit of
exploration, said Dr. Charles Elachi, director of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., where the mission is
managed. Later in the day, the Spirit team awakened the rover with
the Mormon Tabernacle Choir's rendition of "Hail to the Chief."
Color images in a mosaic released today are the
highest-resolution pictures ever sent from Mars, more than three
times as detailed as images from Mars Pathfinder in 1997. Spirit's
panoramic camera took 12 contiguous frames that the camera team
combined into the mosaic.
"This is the day we've been waiting for," said Dr. Jim Bell of
Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., leader of the panoramic camera
team.
The scene rises from near the edge of Spirit's lander platform
to the sky. Scientists are examining every detail to learn about
the landing area within Gusev Crater. In one section of particular
interest, retraction of the spacecraft's deflated airbags has
disturbed the surface.
"There are places where rocks were dragged through the soil and
the soil was stripped off and folded into bizarre textures," Bell
said. Other areas show tails of debris to one side of rocks,
possibly shaped by martian winds. "There's a wonderful mix of both
smooth and angular rocks near the landing site, and this is
something we'll be trying to puzzle out in the next few weeks," he
said.
Scientists and the public may soon have even more to look at.
The panoramic camera mosaic released today shows about one-eighth
of a full-circle panorama of the landing region. The camera team
plans to have the camera finish taking a full panorama this week.
The pictures will share priority with other data during
communication sessions either directly from the rover to Earth or
relayed via NASA's Mars Global Surveyor and Mars Odyssey
orbiters.
Engineers are conducting test movements of Spirit's high-gain,
direct-to-Earth antenna today to learn more about spikes in the
amount of electricity drawn by one of the antenna's motors when the
antenna was first used Jan. 4, said JPL's Jennifer Trosper, Spirit
mission manager. Meanwhile, the spacecraft will continue using the
orbiter relays and its low-gain, direct-to-Earth antenna.
The flight team is also finding ways to prevent overheating of
electronics inside Spirit. "Our robot geologist was dressed a
little warm for the weather on Mars," Trosper said. The atmosphere
and surface at the landing site this week are not as cold as
anticipated. However, the rover's temperatures are expected to drop
when it rolls off its lander platform and gets its wheels onto the
ground.
Roll-off is now planned no sooner than Jan. 12. One of the next
steps in preparing for that event will be to further retract a
deflated airbag protruding from under the lander, said JPL's
Jessica Collisson, flight director. The team tried out the planned
retraction steps on a test rover at JPL. "We're hoping we'll have
similar results to what we had in the test bed and we can get that
airbag out of the way," Collisson said.
Seeing real panoramic camera pictures from Mars, instead of just
from tests of the camera inside laboratories or spacecraft assembly
areas, put the camera into new perspective for Bell. "Until now,
it's been like having an animal in a cage, but now this beast is
out, taking incredible pictures in the native habitat it was
designed to work in," he said. He praised "the talented and heroic
teamwork of people at Cornell and around the country who helped
develop this camera -- its optics, filters, electronics."
Spirit's twin Mars Exploration Rover, Opportunity, will reach
its landing site on the opposite side of Mars on Jan. 25 (EST and
Universal Time; Jan. 24 PST). The rovers' task is to explore for
clues in rocks and soil about whether the past environments in
their landing areas were ever watery and suitable to sustain
life.