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Mars NASA Space Science

Mars Rover Ready for Risky Descent into Crater 156

Riding with Robots writes "After months of scoping out the terrain, the robotic geologist Opportunity is ready to drive down into Victoria Crater on the Meridiani Plains of Mars. Mission managers acknowledge the hardy rover may never come back out, but say they think the potential for discovery is worth it. 'The rover has operated more than 12 times longer than its originally intended 90 days. The scientific allure is the chance to examine and investigate the compositions and textures of exposed materials in the crater's depths for clues about ancient, wet environments. As the rover travels farther down the slope, it will be able to examine increasingly older rocks in the exposed walls of the crater. '"
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Mars Rover Ready for Risky Descent into Crater

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  • by ILuvRamen ( 1026668 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:30PM (#19683265)
    I think it will survive it. Obviously that sucker was built Tonka tough lol. It's funny though cuz every time it's about to do just about anything, the scientists say "well this might be the last thing it ever does" just because it's way past the 90 days. It's kinda like how people every year say "yep, those AS400's are on their way out any day now" and then there I was, still sitting in front of an ugly green screen for one of my classes (I changed degree fields after that) I think the rover will be there long enough to bump into an astronaut's foot lol. Unless of course it gets attacked my martian crater monkeys. Those things are vicious.
    • by Original Replica ( 908688 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:48PM (#19683439) Journal
      One way to get new toys is to break the old ones. If you had driven those greenscreen monitiors down a crater, they would have been replaced with some new shiny CGA monitors. I don't htink NASA is setting out to break "the little rover that could" but they are getting more and more adventerous with it, doing things that may have previously been ruled out for safety concerns. "The last thing it ever does" is better than saying "Hey everybody, Watch this!"
    • Re:It will make it! (Score:4, Informative)

      by MaineCoon ( 12585 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:58PM (#19683565) Homepage
      On the other hand, Victoria crater is pretty big (about a kilometer across), and could take many months to explore. The next closest crater is 25km away. In 3 years, Opportunity has travelled less than 11 km.
      • Re:It will make it! (Score:4, Interesting)

        by TrevorB ( 57780 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @08:55PM (#19684125) Homepage
        I'm actually surprised they're that concerned about getting out again. Literally, there's nowhere else to go. We already have 2 years of survey data from the non-cratered surface.

        This mission will end in Victoria crater, regardless of how long the rover lasts. The only reason to leave is to test the engineering capabilities of an aging rover to climb back out again.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by timmarhy ( 659436 )
          so if aliens landed on earth and drove 11km you'd think they had seen everything earth has to offer?
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by ichigo 2.0 ( 900288 )
            No, but there isn't much else in the immediate vicinity. With the speeds the rover is moving, it will take literally years to get anywhere interesting.
            • so whats your point, your confirming it's usefulness
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by RockWolf ( 806901 )
            It's similar to landing in the middle of the Sahara Desert with no way to get out: you know there's something interesting far away, but the only way to examine it is to plan another mission, rather than just drive there. After everything in the crater has been examined, if there's no other scientific targets within range, the only objectives remaining are engineering ones, which are also important, certainly more interesting than just turning off the "little rover that could".

            ~wolf

    • by Derling Whirvish ( 636322 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @09:28PM (#19684351) Journal
      The talus slopes that it has to traverse to get back out are covered with the little hematite 'blueberries.' Its wheels will just slip and slide. It's like driving on ball bearings. You can check in but you can't check out.
  • by ducomputergeek ( 595742 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:31PM (#19683273)
    The MERS mission has been an incrediable sucessess that one doesn't hear much about, unless you read slashdot. A 90 day mission that has lasted 3 years and shows no signs of stopping as funding has been approved to at least september and so long as they are showing results, I doubt that is going to change. Most of the costs is in launching and building the damn things. From that stand point, looks like they've gotten their money worth out of them.
    • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) <qg@biodome.org> on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:51PM (#19683471) Homepage Journal
      You gotta love the creative genius of designing a mission that lasts 20 years and claiming that it will only last 90 days...

      If they had said the rovers would last 20 years upfront, they never would have gotten funding for it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by cyriustek ( 851451 )
        It sounds to me as if the engineers at NASA took Scotty's advice to heart when he was shocked that Geordi told the truth about how long it would take to make a repair. (TNG: Relics)

        Under Promise and Underperform.

        The flip side of this is that we have to wonder if there is a downside to the NASA engineers under promising? Is it possible that if they gave a more realistic estimate, better plans for research could have been developed?

        Regardless, I say good job NASA!
      • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @09:19PM (#19684287) Homepage
        Well, if you wanted to build a rover that'd last for a long time in a desert-like environment then I don't think you'd have problems finding a contractor to do that. It's not like regular cars die from travelling through desert areas, and top it off with high quality seals and whatever it should last until it breaks down internally (or the wheels are broken, IIRC one of the Mars rovers is limping.

        It's when you say "build us that rover, but after three months it'll have to run on no power" that things get ugly. The solar panels were supposed to get clogged up with dust, and someone really did think it'd go on for many years instead of months they were damn silent about it. It's like thinking you're building a laptop with a battery, only to find out you've got line power. That would throw your estimated operating time off by several orders of magnitude too.

        While the idea they said three months to get the funding is entertaining, there's really nothing to suggest that was actually the case. They're scientists doing an experiment, thought they had a limiting factor which was wrong. Now we know that if we go to Mars, we can build solar panels that won't clog and will be a pretty much permanent power source which changes everything. Maybe someone hoped, dreamed or wished for it but I doubt many if any knew and said "hey, let's go wih three months anyway".
        • by jafiwam ( 310805 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @10:19PM (#19684715) Homepage Journal
          On that note, wasn't the difference in the battery life that they did not expect the panels to get cleaned off by the winds like they are getting cleaned?

          Perhaps a trip into a crater is not the best way to stay in the cleansing winds....
        • With this massive increase in the length of time robots can survive on solar power on Mars (without meeting to clean each other)... what could they have built or done?

          Could they have gathered the materials to make a 3rd rover ? :)
        • Well, if you wanted to build a rover that'd last for a long time in a desert-like environment then I don't think you'd have problems finding a contractor to do that. It's not like regular cars die from travelling through desert areas,

          Not quite. 'Regular cars' need special air filters, and need them cleaned regularly even then. The US Army has lots of trouble keeping their trucks and tanks going in Iraq.
          Sand is abrasive, and the smaller particles get everywhere. The problem is compounded by the temperature s
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by ghmh ( 73679 )

        You gotta love the creative genius of designing a mission that lasts 20 years and claiming that it will only last 90 days...

        If they had said the rovers would last 20 years upfront, they never would have gotten funding for it.

        Actually, it's only lasted this long because the little green men come out and fix it when noone's looking.
    • Having already got more that their money's worth, why the concern with its survivability? Surely the purpose of sending this explorer is to gather info. It has already gathered 10x the info that was planned for. Being conservative and tooling around on the flats is not as likely to give as much information as exploring the crater.... even if this is a one-way trip.
      • by SEWilco ( 27983 )

        Having already got more that their money's worth, why the concern with its survivability?
        So it doesn't break just before cresting the hill above the Martian city.
  • John Callas Vid (Score:5, Informative)

    by TrevorB ( 57780 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:32PM (#19683285) Homepage
    http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/video/movie s/opportunity/VictoriaDigitalStory.mov [nasa.gov]

    JPL produced Video of Project Manager John Callas discussing the entry.
  • by wizardforce ( 1005805 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:36PM (#19683319) Journal
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_crater [wikipedia.org] if there is water ice underneath MArs' surface or even temporarily exposed ice, this is the spot. what ever created the crater whether a deorbited moon, asteroid or comet likely left water behind after the impact. so even if the rover doesnt come out again it will be well wortth the sacrifice.
  • by Joebert ( 946227 )
    I've had fun jumping old cars over hills at 70MPH trying to get the axels to bust off after the car's served it's purpose, but I've got nothing on this, I'm jealous.
    • by SEWilco ( 27983 )
      But they have something in common with you. Now they have also yelled "Hey, guys, watch this!"
  • Mission managers acknowledge the hardy rover may never come back out, but say they think the potential for discovery is worth it. 'The rover has operated more than 12 times longer than its originally intended 90 days...

    Looks like Boeing engineers (http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/06/ 27/1723251/ [slashdot.org] sidenote, can someone point out the syntax to do this properly?) could learn a lot from NASA.

  • I wonder how many probes like this we could've launched with the gigantic money wasted^H^H^H^H^H^H, er, I mean spent on the space shuttles and all the launch support. With some mass production techniques, maybe 1,000? More?
    • by QuantumG ( 50515 )
      How many of these probes could we have launched if we spent money making a cheap launch system instead of ICBMs?

      Or.. how many Mars rovers could we make if we spent the national health care budget on making them?

      As cool as the Mars rovers are, they had enough trouble getting money for a 90 day project, let alone a freakin' armada. To the people who control the bucks, this is just boring geek stuff. At least the shuttle gives them some national heroes to say they support.

      • How many of these probes could we have launched if we spent money making a cheap launch system instead of ICBMs?

        You're talking about shifting one from one part of government to a totally different part of government. I'm talking about using money in the SAME BUDGET for different stuff. If you want to use a military analogy, it's do we get more bang for the buck from cruise missiles or more aircraft carriers?

        As cool as the Mars rovers are, they had enough trouble getting money for a 90 day project, le

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by QuantumG ( 50515 )
          Ok, I didn't make myself clear.

          If NASA was to spend 90% of its budget on unmanned space exploration and 10% on manned space exploration, there would be no astronauts. They wouldn't have enough money for them. Without astronauts, they wouldn't attract as big a budget, because that's what gets the bucks. You're talking as if NASA's budget is mandated somewhere and can never fluxuate. It's not. They have to justify every dollar and Mars rovers just don't cut it.

          • They wouldn't have enough money for them. Without astronauts, they wouldn't attract as big a budget, because that's what gets the bucks.

            Hmm. I agree and disagree. On the one hand, certainly astronauts help sell NASA to the public, which probably helps keep NASA in the budgetary eye. On the other hand, one of the reasons NASA is so f***ed up is because they are mandated to spend money on various projects in various politician's districts, which is what they truly care about (mmm, love that pork).

            So I would say that as long as the sweet, sweet money was being spread around, the politicians would be happy. And if we truly had 1,000 probes constantly sending back neat-o images and data, I bet the sheer volume of discovery would actually exceed the romance of humans in space.

            But I admit the point is arguable.

            • by QuantumG ( 50515 )
              Kinda makes you wonder what's going to happen to NASA's budget when there are 2 or more US companies that are putting ordinary (initially rich) people into orbit. Will the public's enthusiasm for space go up? Will that mean more money for NASA or less?

            • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

              by flyingsquid ( 813711 )
              I bet the sheer volume of discovery would actually exceed the romance of humans in space.

              When is the last time the manned space actually really made you feel inspired? For me, it was the Hubble repair mission. Which says a lot: the last time NASA's manned program made me feel excited was when people were repairing a robot.

              And the fact that we're discussing the Mars rovers instead of astronauts says volumes. The only time the manned program generates any press these days is when a shuttle blows up, the spac

          • by Schemat1c ( 464768 ) on Friday June 29, 2007 @04:07AM (#19686645) Homepage

            Without astronauts, they wouldn't attract as big a budget, because that's what gets the bucks.
            Looks like someone's been watching 'The Right Stuff'. Come on, who can name a single astronaut since they ended Apollo? The space race is long gone as well as the glamor, no one cares about astronauts anymore.

            I think people have been more impressed with the Hubble pictures more than anything else from NASA these days. I agree that if they would have blanketed the solar system with probes there would have been a lot more to show in the way of pictures and data and would have gained much more public interest.
            • by QuantumG ( 50515 )
              You're on crack if you think "the people" (and by that I mean - the congressmen) give two shits about pictures of space.

              The only time I see pictures of space on tv is when they're talking about out of body experiences.

              It pisses me off. I can only imagine how much it pisses off the astronomers.

            • by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Friday June 29, 2007 @09:07AM (#19687889) Homepage Journal
              >Come on, who can name a single astronaut since they ended Apollo?

              You really shouldn't put a challenge like this on Slashdot. Wrong audience.

              Robert Crippen and John Young - flew the first space shuttle flight, though I believe John Young also flew on both Apollo and Gemini, not sure about Crippen.

              Sally Ride - first American woman in space.

              Judy Resnick - Hometown (Akron, Ohio) woman killed on Challenger.
              Crista McAuliffe - New Hampshire schoolteacher also killed on Challenger.

              Shannon Lucid - Spent a looooong time on either Mir or ISS.

              "Pinky" Nelson - Prominent role in fixing a satellite, I believe the Solar Max.

              Then without knowing the names, we have the Hawaiian astronaut who died on Challenger, and had an Enterprise-D (fictional) shuttle (Okuzu?) named after him. There's also diaper-woman who recently made the news.

              I know it's not a very long list, but you did say, "one".
      • Actually aren't most of our space launch vehicles essentially modified ICBMs? I mean, isn't that true of most space launch vehicles? Von Braun and all that?
        • by QuantumG ( 50515 )
          It was the driving force to develop the technology, yes.

          But ever since the Atlas we've gone beyond the needs for ICBMs.
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by FleaPlus ( 6935 )
          Actually aren't most of our space launch vehicles essentially modified ICBMs? I mean, isn't that true of most space launch vehicles? Von Braun and all that?

          I think the general idea, as discussed in documents like this one [dunnspace.com], is that the primary design goal with ICBMs was maximizing the ratio between payload weight and rocket weight/size. This is great for ICBMs, where you want to cram missiles into tiny places, but not so good for space launches, where you should ideally be maximizing the payload/cost ratio.
      • by Shotgun ( 30919 )
        How many of these probes could we have launched if we spent money making a cheap launch system instead of ICBMs?

        None.

        The whole "let's put a man on the moon thing"? Yeah, that was just a cover so that a lot of engineers could have free reign to design nuclear warhead delivery systems before the Russians did. For the strategist that were actually controlling the purse strings, the "One giant leap for mankind" was really "One small step for a man, now can we get back to work before the commies kill us all."

        W
        • by QuantumG ( 50515 )
          Yah.. the russians were always ahead of the game in the ICBM race. The US was trying to catch up. That's why they had a crash program.. and all this happened before Gemini.

          The race to put a man on the moon was all about national pride.. countries that were undecided whether they should become communist or not were watching the race and if the US didn't win, they'd go with communism. Well, that's the theory anyway.

  • Oh jeez.. (Score:5, Funny)

    by necro2607 ( 771790 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:49PM (#19683457)
    "the chance to examine and investigate the compositions and textures of exposed materials in the crater's depths for clues about ancient, wet environments."

    Oh jeez... investigating and exploring the depths of ancient, wet environments?... This sounds like some kind of MILF joke gone wrong... *cringes*
  • by Ub3rT3Rr0R1St ( 920830 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:51PM (#19683473)
    If it's taken us this long to reach a hopefully significant leap in the exploration of Mars, how long do you guys think it would take for a man to be able to set foot on Mars to actually get some first person perspective on the planet itself?

    I ask, because I've seen a lot of planning going on in terms of living on Mars, but I can't help wonder, "Why all this planning and scheming, when we haven't even had concrete, indisputable evidence that Mars can sustain life, much less had someone actually get there?"
    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      by pln2bz ( 449850 ) *
      One of the inevitable problems that will eventually come up regarding life on Mars is the electrical activity there. NASA has been down-playing it because their purpose appears to be to demonstrate that there was once water covering the planet, but many of the images of Martian geology do not support that theory as much as they support the notion that electricity is terraforming the planet. People on Slashdot have made a hobby of ridiculing the Electric Universe theorists, but it is not even debated that
      • by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @11:43PM (#19685411) Homepage
        Not you again. Could you just please plug yourself into an ungrounded electrical outlet and test out your theories first hand?

        Geeks have enough issues with social acceptance to begin with. We don't need your help.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward
        "Rather than ridiculing the EU Theorists, people should put serious effort into debunking them if they feel that they are wrong because what they are saying is very important"

        It's actually pretty hard to debunk these claims without ridiculing them, because they are so poorly informed. You want "serious debunking"? Okay, I'll try.

        Just as an example, the article about the "blueberries" doesn't make any sense, because it is founded on the mistaken impression that geologists think concretions form as isolated
      • If you send somebody up there into an environment that has not been properly characterized -- if the environment is far more electrical than we are imagining it to be -- we could subject them to massive equipment failures and they could die.

        Since the Rover, which has a lot of very sensitive electronics, doesn't show any signs of failing, I'd say that this seems unlikely.

  • Rover life... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by dex22 ( 239643 ) <plasticuser@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Thursday June 28, 2007 @07:55PM (#19683519) Homepage
    'The rover has operated more than 12 times longer than its originally intended 90 days.'

    So, it's a pre-DRM rover, then? It certainly wasn't built by HP's printer division. ;)
    • Re:Rover life... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by RasputinAXP ( 12807 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @09:01PM (#19684167) Homepage Journal
      Someone's never owned an HP Laserjet II.

      I've hit them with hammers, dropped them, kicked them, used them as doorstops, and they don't quit printing. Just keep them happy with toner and paper.

      We believe we killed one once. It was locked in the back of our campus transport vehicle, and some kids with nothing better to do stole it, torched it and left it on railroad tracks to get hit.

      When we got the smoldering wreckage back, the LJII was in the middle of what used to be the cargo cab. It was black.

      If you dropped it on a piece of paper, you'd be hard pressed to prove that it wasn't still putting toner on the page.
      • Word up -- I used to repair HP printers and refill their toner cartridges, back when that was a legally questionable activity. II and III were unbeatable, IV and V were a bit shoddier, after that it was downhill fast.

        I still see the occasional HP LJ III.
      • by sideshow ( 99249 )
        Someone's never owned an HP Laserjet II


        Or a LaserJet 4. My company just took one out of service that had printed 1.5 million pages. The only reason we even got rid of it was the printing speed.

  • by D-Cypell ( 446534 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @08:00PM (#19683581)
    You know, sometimes it is easy to get wrapped up in the details of these rover missions, but I am always pretty humbled when I think of this remote controlled do-dad, once pieced together by earth-bound scientists, sitting on some planet 50 (or so) million miles away and still responding to our every command. Just to think that thing is out there, on mars, right now.

    Reading story after story about the various space exploration projects and we can get a little desensitized to the pure 'awesomeness' of the kinds of things our space exploration agencies are doing. So a moment to just consider this achievement is warrented I think.

    How great would it be to have a go at driving that thing? :)
    • by Kadin2048 ( 468275 ) * <.ten.yxox. .ta. .nidak.todhsals.> on Thursday June 28, 2007 @08:07PM (#19683645) Homepage Journal
      I'm totally with you. Although, I think the Voyager missions are even more humbling.

      Voyager 2 weekly reports (from 1995 to 2007, not sure where the 1977 to 1995 ones are) available:
      http://voyager.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/weekly-reports / [nasa.gov]
    • by QuantumG ( 50515 )

      Just to think that thing is out there, on mars, right now.
      hmm.. "right now".. Actually, isn't it sitting out there on Mars, 4 minutes in the future? Relatively speaking, of course.

      That's even more cool.

      • well, it's not really 4 minutes in the future, it's more that their calander year is shorter.
        • by QuantumG ( 50515 )
          Huh? No. Light takes about 4 minutes to get to us from Mars, on average. That's what makes it 4 minutes in the future.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by timmarhy ( 659436 )
            Wrong, and i'll use a simple example to show it. If the engineers issue a command to the robot to move, it takes 4 minutes for that command to reach the machine (given that radio waves travel at the speed of light give or take a little), the machine still moves 4 minutes later, not at the exact moment we issue the command even though according to your logic the machine being 4 minutes in the future would mean it would move at the exact moment the engineers issued the command.

            our ability to OBSERVE the mac

            • sorry typo there "this however does NOT mean it's 4 minutes ahead in time."
            • by QuantumG ( 50515 )

              the machine still moves 4 minutes later, not at the exact moment we issue the command even though according to your logic the machine being 4 minutes in the future would mean it would move at the exact moment the engineers issued the command.

              I don't know who's logic you're using, but it certainly aint mine.

              our ability to OBSERVE the machine is delayed by 4 minutes, this however does mean it's 4 minutes ahead in time.

              hehe.. you say that like it is two different things. It isn't. Something that is 4 light minutes away is exactly the same as something that is 4 minutes into the future, or, I suppose 4 minutes into the past. People just have different concepts because we're not used to thinking about relativistically significant distances.

              When you observe the rovers, you're looking into the past. When you signal them, you're communicating into the futu

              • "you're communicating into the future."

                not possible, since the future does not exist. the reason being, that the moment you think or do something it moves from the present to the past at the speed of light. therefore the present only exists as a single point in time moving forward at 299 792 458 m/s and leaving everything in the past. At no point does anything spend anytime in the future tense.

          • I'd be curious to learn where you got the misconception of "4 minutes on average".

            It's nonsense, of course.

            The minimum distange between the earth and mars is on average ~78 million km (a shade more or less per orbit but no more than a percent or so different). That's your 4(point three) minutes right there. Most of the time, mars is farther away from us, yielding an average that is considerably longer than 4 minutes.

            The maximum distance (when mars is behind the sun as seen from us) is about ~378 milli

            • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

              by Fatalis ( 892735 )

              Taking the average light travel time to be larger than 10 minutes is probably not a bad guess.

              If it was a game, the latency would be around 600000. That's some bad lag.
    • How great would it be to have a go at driving that thing? :)

      I remember hearing that the scientists driving the rover had to live on martian time. Since the rovers were solar powered they could only go during the martian daytime, which doesn't always coincide with the earth daytime (I believe it's a few hours longer, but I may be wrong). The result was scientists who were sometimes wide awake and working at 4AM, but sleeping at 2PM. They had to be careful to stay indoors if they knew it was dark outside,

  • by L. VeGas ( 580015 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @08:04PM (#19683617) Homepage Journal
    Old martian crater,
    Love her or hate her,
    Waited for someone to come.
    Before it's all over,
    Rover comes over,
    And crawls right into her bum.
  • And I'm still not sure Vista is really 'out there' yet.
  • After months of scoping out the terrain my hardy rover is ready to drive down the Victoria crater and investigate the compositions and textures of exposed materials in the crater's depths for clues about ancient, wet environments

    My rover will most probably not operate more than 12 times longer than its originally intended though...
  • These have been amazing pieces of hardware. There has been a lot of buzz around opportunity, but last I heard both were still functional. What is the other one doing? That way if opportunity gets lost or malfunctions in the crater at least one will be left to roam the surface.
  • We need rovers working off of RTGs! [wikipedia.org] No more of this pansy solar panels that dictate that Spirit had to spend months in one spot facing toward the Sun just so it could generate enough power and internal heat just to stay alive! Even then they can only spend part of the time working and data broadcasts are limited when the power is low.

    The RTG powered Cassini probe is doing a bang up job orbiting Saturn, and future Martian robots should, too. Enough mamby-pamby exploration with under powered exploration u
  • Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)

    by moosesocks ( 264553 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @10:39PM (#19684867) Homepage
  • by Kingrames ( 858416 ) on Thursday June 28, 2007 @11:18PM (#19685159)
    will it check out that featureless black spot we found recently? I sure as heck would like to know what's in there.
  • Really Old Vehicle Extremely Resilient.
  • Oh well, I guess this does for Victoria's Secret...
  • hmm... my money is on the rover will fail due to not enough solar radiation. The batteries will die.

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