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NASA JPL/NSTA Web Seminar: Robotic Exploration of the Red Planet

LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING @ YOUR DESKTOP. NASA JPL/NSTA Web Seminar: Robotic Exploration of the Red Planet. Wednesday, May 14, 2008. Robotic Exploration of the Red Planet. Greg Mehall Arizona State University School of Earth and Space Exploration Mars Space Flight Facility

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NASA JPL/NSTA Web Seminar: Robotic Exploration of the Red Planet

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  1. LIVE INTERACTIVE LEARNING @ YOUR DESKTOP NASA JPL/NSTA Web Seminar: Robotic Exploration of the Red Planet Wednesday, May 14, 2008

  2. Robotic Exploration of theRed Planet Greg Mehall Arizona State University School of Earth and Space Exploration Mars Space Flight Facility Instrument System Engineer & Mission Manager Image Credit: NASA/STSci/AURA

  3. Why Study Mars? • Search for life • Mars has water, atmosphere, sunlight - could it have life? • Comparison to Earth • Mars may have undergone a large change in its climate • Could we learn something about climate change on Earth? • Curiosity and exploration • Mars has the same land area as the Earth • It is a complex place - not just a point of light in the night sky Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  4. How Do We Approach This Problem? • What do we think all life needs? • Water • Look for environments where water may have existed • Landforms • Minerals • How do we do this? • Orbiters • Rovers • Returned samples • Human exploration • New ways of looking Image Credit: NASA/JPL/ASU

  5. Life NASA Mars Science Strategy W A T E R “Follow the Water” Climate Geology When Where Form Amount Prepare for Human Exploration Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  6. NASA Mars Exploration ProgramPast Decade Image Credit: NASA/JPL Currently Operating Missions

  7. 2001 Mars Odyssey Orbiter

  8. 2001 Mars Odyssey Spacecraft Launched April 2001 (Delta II) Started Science Mapping February 2002 400 km Polar Mapping Orbit (2 hour period) High Gain Antenna (HGA) High Energy Neutron Detector (HEND) Gamma Ray Spectrometer (GRS) Sensor Head Solar Panels Martian Radiation Environment Experiment (MARIE) Neutron Spectrometer Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) Dry Mass = 376 kg (829 lbs) Image Credits: NASA/JPL

  9. 2001 Mars Odyssey Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Lockheed Martin

  10. 2001 Mars Odyssey Image Credits: NASA/KSC/Lockheed Martin/Boeing

  11. Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) • Infrared and Visible Imaging System • 10 band IR (100m/pixel) • 5 band VIS (18m/pixel) • Mineralogical Mapping • Thermophysical Properties • Atmospheric Monitoring • Geomorphology • Developed by Arizona State University and Raytheon Santa Barbara Remote Sensing http://themis.asu.edu Day/Night IR Mosaic Aram Chaos Image Credits: NASA/JPL/ASU/Raytheon SBRS

  12. Gamma Ray Spectrometer Instrument Suite • Gamma Ray Sensor • University of Arizona • Elemental Abundance Mapping • High Energy Neutron Detector (HEND) • Russian Space Research Institute (IKI) • Hydrogen Mapping • Neutron Spectrometer • Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) • Hydrogen Mapping Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Univ. of Arizona/LANL/IKI

  13. Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter

  14. Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) Launched August 2005 (Atlas V) Started Mapping in November 2006 255-320 km Polar Mapping Orbit (2 hour period) Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Lockheed Martin

  15. Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Subsystems Dry mass = 1,031 kg (2,273 lbs) (3 meter diameter) up to 6 Mbits/sec SHARAD Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Lockheed Martin

  16. Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Lockheed Martin

  17. MRO HiRISE Camera • High Resolution Camera • 30 cm/pixel (@300km) • 0.5 m telescope • 14 focal planes (VIS/NIR) • 6 km swath, 20k pixels (red) • 1.2 km swath (blue/green & NIR) • Developed by University of Arizona and Ball Aerospace Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Univ. of Arizona/Ball Aerospace

  18. HiRISE Imagery Avalanche on North Polar Scarp Mawrth Vallis - Proposed MSL Landing Site Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Univ. of Arizona

  19. Other MRO Science Instruments • Compact Reconnaissance Imaging • Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) • Visible and Near IR spectrometer • ~18 m/pixel & ~10 km swath (@300 km) • Johns Hopkins University APL • Context Imager (CTX) • Visible imager: 1 band • 6 m/pixel & 32 km swath (@400 km) • Malin Space Science Systems • Mars Color Imager (MARCI) • Visible/NIR imager: 7 band • 1-4 km/pixel & 140° swath (@400 km) • Malin Space Science Systems • Mars Climate Sounder (MCS) • Visible and IR Sounder: 9 bands • 5 km/pixel & 105 km FOV (@300 km) • Jet Propulsion Laboratory Image Credits: NASA/JPL/JHU-APL/MSSS

  20. Mars Exploration Rovers (MER) Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  21. Mars Exploration Rovers • Spirit (MER-A) • Launched: June 10, 2003 • Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925 • Arrival at Mars: January 3, 2004 • Landing Site: Gusev Crater • Primary mission: 90 sols • Current Sol: 1552 • Opportunity (MER-B) • Launch: July 7, 2003 • Launch Vehicle: Delta II 7925-Heavy • Arrival at Mars: January 24, 2004 • Landing Site: Meridiani Planum • Primary mission: 90 sols • Current Sol: 1532 Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  22. MER Landing Sites Image Credit: NASA/JPL/GSFC

  23. Quiz Which of the spacecraft below consisted of only a lander?(use your stamp tool) Viking Pathfinder MER

  24. MER Delta II 7925-9.5 Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Boeing

  25. MER-A on the Pad Image Credits: NASA/KSC

  26. MER-A & Fairing Encapsulation Image Credits: NASA/KSC

  27. MER-A Launch (June 10, 2003) Image Credit: NASA/KSC

  28. MER-A Launch Image Credits: ASU

  29. MER-BDelta II 7925Heavy Image Credit: NASA/KSC

  30. MER-B Launch(July 7, 2003) Image Credit: NASA/KSC

  31. Quiz How long did it take MERto get to Mars?(make your selection using the stamp tool)

  32. MER Cruise Stage and Aeroshell Image Credit: NASA/KSC

  33. MER Parachute and Airbags Image Credits: NASA/JPL/ARC

  34. Stowed MER Lander Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  35. MER on Lander Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  36. Rover Solar Panels Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  37. “Rocker-Bogie” Mobility System Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  38. Fully Deployed Rover Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  39. Driving Tests at KSC Image Credit: NASA/JPL

  40. Rover Science Payload Pancam (pair) Mass = 175 lbs Low Gain Antenna (LGA) Navcam (pair) UHF Antenna High Gain Antenna (HGA) Pancam Mast Assembly (PMA) Solar Arrays Instrument Deployment Device (IDD) Rover Warm Electronics Box (WEB) IDD Instruments (APXS, MB, MI, RAT) Miniature Thermal Emission Spectrometer (Mini-TES) Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  41. Rover Trenching and IDD Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  42. Microscopic Image of Soil Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  43. Rock Abrasion Tool (RAT) Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  44. Spirit Traverse: Sol 1506 (7.5 km) Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Cornell/MSSS/OSU

  45. Spirit Landing Site Panorama Columbia Hills Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  46. Columbia Hills West Spur Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  47. Sol 329 Dusty Deck Pan Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  48. Sol 432 “Clean” Deck Pan Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  49. Dust Devils - Martian Vacuum Cleaners Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Cornell

  50. Opportunity Traverse: Sol 1487 (11.7 km) Image Credits: NASA/JPL/Cornell/MSSS/Univ. of Arizona/OSU

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