[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  I hope these exciting-sounding missions are successful!


  http://www.spacedaily.com/news/mars-mro-05h.html

  MARSDAILY - http://www.marsdaily.com

  NASA's Next Leap In Mars Exploration Ready For Launch

  Cape Canaveral FL (SPX) Aug 10, 2005


  NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is ready for a morning launch on
  Thursday, Aug. 11. The spacecraft will arrive at Mars in March 2006 for a
  mission to understand the planet's water riddles and to advance the
  exploration of the mysterious red planet.

  The mission's first launch opportunity window is 4:50 to 6:35 a.m. PDT,
  Thursday. If the launch is postponed, additional launch windows open daily
  at different times each morning through August.

  For trips from Earth to Mars, the planets move into good position for only
  a short period every 26 months. The best launch position is when Earth is
  about to overtake Mars in their concentric racing lanes around the Sun.

  "The teams preparing this orbiter and its launch vehicle have done
  excellent work and kept to schedule. We have a big spacecraft loaded with
  advanced instruments for inspecting Mars in greater detail than any
  previous orbiter, and we have the first Atlas V launch vehicle to carry an
  interplanetary mission. A very potent and exciting combination," said
  NASA's Mars Exploration Program Director Doug McCuistion.

  The mission will lift off from Launch Complex 41, Cape Canaveral Air Force
  Station, Fla. It is the first government launch of Lockheed Martin's Atlas
  V launch vehicle. "We're ready to fly, counting down through final
  procedures," said Chuck Dovale, director for expendable-launch-vehicle
  launches at NASA Kennedy Space Center, Fla.

  When the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter arrives in March, it begins a
  half-year "aerobraking" process. The spacecraft will gradually adjust the
  shape of its orbit by using friction from carefully calculated dips into
  the top of the Martian atmosphere. The mission's primary science phase
  starts in November 2006.

  "Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter will give us several times more data about
  Mars than all previous missions combined," said James Graf, project
  manager for the mission at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena
  Calif.

  Researchers will use the data to study the history and distribution of
  Martian water. Learning more about what has happened to the water will
  focus searches for possible past or present Martian life. Observations by
  the orbiter will also support future Mars missions by examining potential
  landing sites and providing a communications relay between the Martian
  surface and Earth.

  The craft can transmit about 10 times as much data per minute as any
  previous Mars spacecraft. This will serve both to convey detailed
  observations of the Martian surface, subsurface and atmosphere by the
  instruments on the orbiter and enable data relay from other landers on the
  Martian surface to Earth.

  NASA plans to launch the Phoenix Mars Scout in 2007 to land on the far
  northern Martian surface. NASA is also developing an advanced rover, the
  Mars Science Laboratory, for launch in 2009.

  The mission is managed by JPL, a division of the California Institute of
  Technology, Pasadena, Calif., for the NASA Science Mission Directorate.
  Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, built the spacecraft and is the
  prime contractor for the project.

  NASA's Launch Services Program at the Kennedy Space Center is responsible
  for government engineering oversight of the Atlas V, spacecraft/launch
  vehicle integration and launch day countdown management.



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