I disagree Jr_esq.   Although tons of the "efforts" on Mars have but yielded 
scant results, certain moments of high value were had by all the machines we've 
sent there.  Science is advancing even yet still with what Opportunity is 
doing.  

As for finding evidence of past life, yeah, there's a ton of enthusiasts who 
scan the photos and "find" stuff, but the scientists are almost derisive almost 
always about almost all such speculations.  They're mostly still "just 
geologists" snorting the red powder, ya know?  

But they're finding some nice shit.  "Recent" water signs on the surface 
suggests underground reservoirs yet remain to be sampled, and if life EVER was 
on Mars, there's a very HIGH PERCENTAGE CHANCE that microbiological life is 
doing well underground with all kinds of extremophiles.  Some Earth species 
could live on Mars right now.  So there's a chance that in, say, 20 years, the 
issue could be resolved.  And if there's life on Mars, whoo hooo watch the 
fireworks in all the venues.  

And my above opinions should be held in high regard, because I discovered the 
first Man On Mars, donchaknow.

Here he is, bow tie and everything:

 Mars Exploration Rover Mission: Multimedia: All Raw Images: Opportunity: 
Panoramic Camera: Sol 045 
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all/1/p/045/1P132185547EFF05AAP2561R1M1.HTML
 
 
 
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all/1/p/045/1P132185547EFF05AAP2561R1M1.HTML
 
 
 Mars Exploration Rover Mission: Multimedia: All Ra... 
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all/1/p/045/1P132185547EFF05AAP2561R1M1.HTML
 Right Panoramic Camera Non-linearized Full frame EDR acquired on Sol 45 of 
Opportunity's mission to Meridiani Planum at approximately 13:35:11 Mars local 
sol...
 
 
 
 View on mars.jpl.nasa.gov 
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mer/gallery/all/1/p/045/1P132185547EFF05AAP2561R1M1.HTML
 
 Preview by Yahoo 
 
 
  




---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <jr_esq@...> wrote :

 For the humans who are monitoring these rovers, it would be advantageous to 
keep the rovers running for their own job security, at the very least, and to 
make scientific discoveries for NASA. 

 Also, the longer these rovers are operational, the more the so-called Martian 
enthusiasts would find "evidence" for life and past civilization on the planet.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <anartaxius@...> wrote :

 Doing much better than its sibling which died a few years ago. The online 
maintenance required the team to empty all the flash memory recently because of 
an accumulation of errors (causing the rover to default to a safety mode) and 
the fix was to reformat it so Opportunity can now continue on its journey. It 
operation for over ten years at an average temperature of about -40 to -50 
degrees Celsius is quite amazing. The daily air and ground temperatures vary 
from a bit above 0 degrees Celsius to about -100 degrees Celsius, so these 
machines need to be extraordinarily robust to survive such extremes. 

 

 Meanwhile its newer cousin Curiosity is finally at a critical left turn, that 
after two years of driving to avoid sand dunes, it can start to approach the 
base of Mt. Sharp (14,000 ft) over ground that has more secure footing. The 
path was changed several times to avoid sharp rocky ground that caused wheel 
damage in that effort to skirt the dune fields. The terrain from here on will 
get much more complicated, eventually approaching 300 foot high buttes and 
mesas as well as the mountain itself.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <jr_esq@...> wrote :

 After a reboot of its computer, which can be considered the rest and 
recuperation needed for machines.
 

 This rover is obviously well built given the fact that it's still operational 
for over 10 years, without any physical maintenance from NASA employees.
 

 
http://www.universetoday.com/114595/repaired-opportunity-rover-readies-for-marathon-valley-as-it-transmits-martian-images/
 
http://www.universetoday.com/114595/repaired-opportunity-rover-readies-for-marathon-valley-as-it-transmits-martian-images/









  

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