[meteorite-list] Mars Express Marks the Spot for Curiosity Landing

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 3 Aug 2012 10:20:03 -0700 (PDT)
Message-ID: <201208031720.q73HK3Ej011850_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMEV8TX55H_index_0.html

Mars Express marks the spot for Curiosity landing
European Space Agency
3 August 2012

Much like a treasure map branded with an "X" to mark the site of buried
bounty, NASA's rover Curiosity will be targeting its very own "X" inside
Gale Crater, to seek out the signs of past water - and maybe even life -
on the Red Planet.
 
Mars Express will play an important role in monitoring the spectacular
delivery of Curiosity to the martian surface during the "seven minutes
of terror" that describe the entry, descent and landing of the car-sized rover.

But the ESA spacecraft has already provided information that led to
refinements of the rover's landing ellipse last month.

Part of NASA's Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission, Curiosity was
initially aiming for a 20 x 25 km landing ellipse, already much smaller
than the landing target area for any previous Mars mission thanks to
MSL's techniques for improved landing precision.

By combining elevation data from the High Resolution Stereo Camera on
Mars Express, image data from the Context Camera on NASA's Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter, and colour information from Viking Orbiter
imagery, the target ellipse was adjusted to just 20 x 7 km.
 
Curiosity targets ellipse near Gale's mountain
 
This shifts the centre of the ellipse closer to the mountain inside the
154 km-wide Gale Crater.

The central mound - known informally as Mount Sharp - rises 5.5 km above
the crater floor and is the prime destination of Curiosity.

Orbiting spacecraft have already identified minerals and clays there
that suggest water may have once filled the area, and as Curiosity
slowly makes its ascent, it will analyse samples of these materials with
its onboard laboratory in search of its own treasure: the building
blocks of life.
 
Timeline: ESA tracks MSL arrival at Mars
 
The highlight of ESA's support for NASA's Curiosity landing happens at
06:29 on Monday, 6 August, when the Mars Express Lander Communication
(MELACOM) system is switched on.

Recording of the radio signals transmitted by the Mars Science
Laboratory (MSL) is planned to begin at 07:09 and end at 07:37 (all
times shown as ground event time in CEST).

ESA's ground tracking station in New Norcia, Australia, will also listen
and record signals from the NASA mission at the same time.

At 08:15, Mars Express will contact Earth via ESA's 35 m deep space
station at New Norcia, and begin transmitting the recorded information,
which should take about 11 minutes to download; signals will take nearly
14 minutes to cover the 248 million km distance to Earth.
        
The transfer will be complete by about 08:26; the data will be
transferred in real time to ESOC, and made immediately available to
NASA's MSL mission team at the Jet Propulsion Lab in California.

[Timeline Chart]
Received on Fri 03 Aug 2012 01:20:03 PM PDT


Help support this free mailing list:



StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
reddit
Yahoo MyWeb