NASAs Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution probe, or MAVEN, is - TopicsExpress



          

NASAs Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution probe, or MAVEN, is slated to arrive at the Red Planet around 9:50 p.m. EDT Sunday (Sept. 21; 0150 GMT Monday, Sept. 22). The spacecrafts handlers are reporting no problems during the home stretch of its 10-month space journey. So far, so good with the performance of the spacecraft and payloads on the cruise to Mars, MAVEN project manager David Mitchell, of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. As of Wednesday (Sept. 17), MAVEN was about 746,000 miles (1.2 million kilometers) from Mars, Mitchell said. From the spacecrafts perspective, its destination planet looks about as large as a baseball would from a distance of 52 feet (15.8 meters). Mars is really growing right now as we approach, just four days away, Mitchell said during a press briefing Wednesday. If all goes according to plan, MAVEN will fire its engines for about 33 minutes on Sunday night, slowing down enough to be captured by Mars gravity into a highly elliptical, 35-hour orbit. Over the next six weeks, the mission team will check out MAVENs instruments and maneuver the probe into its final, 4.5-hour orbit, which will bring MAVEN as close as 93 miles (150 km) to Mars and as far away as 3,850 miles (6,200 km).The main goal of the $670 million MAVEN mission — which launched from Floridas Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Nov. 18, 2013 — is to help scientists better understand how and why Mars shifted from a relatively warm and wet world billions of years ago to the cold, arid planet we know today. The MAVEN mission is about understanding the history of the climate on Mars, said principal investigator Bruce Jakosky, of the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics at the University of Colorado, Boulder. The water of early Mars could either have retreated into the planets crust or escaped into space, Jakosky explained. MAVEN is carrying three instrument suites that will measure and characterize gas escape from the upper atmosphere, allowing mission scientists to extrapolate this process back in time.What were going to be doing is studying the top of the atmosphere as a way of understanding the extent to which stripping of gas out of the atmosphere to space may have been the driving mechanism behind climate change, Jakosky said. We should be able to get enough measurements to tell us what happened to the water, what happened to the carbon dioxide. MAVENs prime science mission is scheduled to last one year, but the probe is carrying enough fuel to last for many years on orbit. Mars will welcome another robotic visitor just days after MAVEN gets there. Indias first Red Planet effort, the Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM), is scheduled to arrive on Wednesday (Sept. 24). The $70 million MOM is primarily a technology demonstration, though it will also hunt for methane — a gas that here on Earth is primarily produced by living organisms — in the Red Planets atmosphere.space/27185-nasa-mars-maven-spacecraft-arrival.html
Posted on: Thu, 18 Sep 2014 12:11:02 +0000

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