PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -- Like a couple of
camera-packing tourists, two robotic rovers are schlepping enough photographic
gear to Mars to keep the folks back home in pictures for years.
NASA hopes the first of its twin rovers, Spirit, will
begin taking pictures within hours of its landing Saturday. Its sibling,
Opportunity, should do the same after its arrival at the Red Planet three weeks
later.
During each of the 90-day missions, the unmanned
shutterbugs could snap tens of thousands of photographs. The images, from the
microscopic to the panoramic, should reveal the planet with unprecedented
clarity.
Each six-wheeled robot, about the size of a golf
cart, carries a suite of nine cameras, including a stereo pair with the
equivalent of 20/20 vision.
"These cameras will show what Mars would look like to
your own eyes," said Steve Squyres, chief scientist on the $820 million double
mission.
Success is not guaranteed: Nearly two-thirds of the
36 missions sent to the surface of Mars have ended in failure. The latest,
apparently, is the British Beagle 2 lander, which has not been heard from since
it was to have set down on Mars last week.
NASA, which last lost a Mars lander of its own in
1999, stepped up oversight of how it designs, builds, launches and operates its
spacecraft to boost the chances of success this time.
The agency is relying on rockets, parachutes and air
bags to cushion the landing of the rovers. Once the rovers begin taking pictures
and transmitting them, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory intends to post most of
the images on the Web as soon as they are received on Earth.
"We'll be sitting there at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory scratching our heads like everyone else," said Jim Bell, lead
scientist for the panoramic camera each rover carries.
Scientists plan to focus on rocks strewn across the
Martian landscape that could reveal clues about whether the planet was ever
hospitable to life.
They also plan to photograph the sun as it rises and
sets on Mars, as well as the Earth, which appears in the sky above the Red
Planet as a morning star. A rover also may catch an eclipse of the sun by
Phobos, one of Mars' two moons.
"It will be the first eclipse observed from the
surface of another planet," Bell said.
The clearest, most detailed pictures of Mars should
come from the color panoramic camera, or pancam, a pair of stereo cameras atop a
mast rising from each rover. The pancam's resolution will be three times greater
than that of any other camera ever sent to the surface of Mars.
"These are pictures that would look good on an IMAX
screen,"Squyres said.
The mast can swivel its cameras 360 degrees around
and 90 degrees up and down.
Scientists plan to use those sweeping images to
pinpoint which rocks to send the rovers to investigate.
Each rover also holds two pairs of
hazard-identification cameras that should help the vehicles negotiate the
planet's rocky surface. The vehicles will use computer software to gauge the
size of any obstacles and generate maps to get to where they want to
go.
Each rover also carries a microscopic camera that
should produce tight close-ups of the rocks and soil. Scientists liken the
instrument to a field geologist's hand lens.
NASA got its first close-up pictures of Mars in 1965,
when the Mariner 4 spacecraft zoomed past the planet and snapped 21 photos.
Since then, numerous probes that flew past, orbited or landed on Mars have taken
tens of thousands more pictures.
Mars Global Surveyor, a satellite that has orbited
Mars since 1997, is the undisputed king, packing mission archives with more than
134,000 pictures and counting.
Three other NASA missions have also collected
thousands of pictures from the surface of Mars, beginning with the twin Viking
landers that set down on the planet in 1976.
In 1997, the Pathfinder spacecraft transmitted to
Earth more than 16,000 pictures, including 500 taken by the little Sojourner
rover it carried to Mars. Spirit and Opportunity could take three times as many
pictures as Pathfinder.
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