SETI public: Fw: Spotlight: An Exploration Extravaganza

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Thu May 22 2003 - 16:11:21 PDT

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Sent: Monday, May 19, 2003 7:43 PM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: Spotlight: An Exploration Extravaganza

    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/solar_system/features/2004roundup.cfm

    Spotlight: An Exploration Extravaganza
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    May 19, 2003

    Mission controllers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.
    are ramping up for an era of unprecedented space exploration. The Lab is
    poised to launch and direct a fleet of space probes that will, among many
    other things, crash into the heart of a distant comet, snatch particles of
    the solar wind, rove across Mars to search for evidence of liquid water, and
    descend through the atmosphere of Saturn's moon Titan to explore what
    reminds many scientists of an early Earth.

    "The world will have a front-row seat to one of the most exciting periods of
    solar system exploration in history," says Dr. Charles Elachi, JPL
    director. "Never before have so many exciting and challenging missions to
    study so many different parts of the solar system and beyond converged
    within such a short time frame. It's an exciting time for NASA, JPL, the
    nation and the world."

    This summer's launch of two identical rovers to Mars within days of each
    other will have everyone seeing double on the red planet. In January of
    2004, the two Mars Exploration Rovers will attempt to land on opposite sides
    of the planet and explore diverse, though equally intriguing sites for
    evidence of past and present liquid water - an ingredient thought vital to
    any life processes.

    Among the advancing JPL fleet is the Space Infrared Telescope Facility,
    slated to launch at the end of this summer. This new space observatory will
    pierce the thick dust that blankets much of the universe and then provide
    spectacular views of some of the earliest galaxies and stars in cosmic
    history. The telescope's super-sensitive infrared vision will also look
    around nearby stars for swirling debris discs that may represent planetary
    systems in the making.

    The veteran Galileo mission will come to a grand finale this fall when
    engineers deliberately plunge the spacecraft into Jupiter's vaporizing
    atmosphere in September. They're doing this to avoid any possibility of
    future contamination of Jupiter's scientifically interesting moon Europa.

    In January of 2004, the Stardust space probe will encounter comet Wild 2 and
    snatch comet dust from this celestial wanderer for return to Earth in 2006.
    Scientists hope to learn more about the early history of our solar system
    from this cometary sample return.

    Then in July of 2004, after a seven-year journey across the solar system,
    the Cassini spacecraft will be the first space probe to orbit the ringed
    planet Saturn. Just six months later, Cassini's Huygens probe will descend
    through the rich atmosphere of Saturn's biggest moon, Titan, a world with
    possible oceans of liquid methane and some conditions similar to primordial
    Earth.

    The Genesis spacecraft is currently soaring beyond Earth's orbit, collecting
    particles of the solar wind. Such pristine samples from our Sun should help
    scientists understand more about its chemistry and how the material it
    ejects may affect us here on Earth. These solar samples will return to Earth
    in September 2004 with a dramatic mid-air scoop of the spacecraft's sample
    return capsule by helicopters over the Utah Test and Training Range. This is
    NASA's first sample return mission since the Apollo Moon landings wrapped in
    the early seventies.

    Don't miss the extraterrestrial fireworks show on July 4, 2005, when the
    Deep Impact spacecraft will send a small probe to literally crash into the
    heart of Comet Tempel 1. The main spacecraft will observe this cosmic
    collision from a distance, then analyze the ejected material.

    In their series of encounters, JPL's robotic space probes may lead us to a
    string of scientific discoveries, some of which may forever change our views
    of the universe and our place in it.


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