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Mars NASA Space

NASA Announces Next Mars Mission 152

Grant Henninger writes "Today, NASA announced their final selection for the Mars Scout 2013 mission: Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN. MAVEN will provide the first direct measurements ever taken to address key scientific questions about Mars's evolution by measuring characteristics of its atmospheric gases, upper atmosphere, solar wind, and ionosphere. The mission, estimated to cost $485M, is scheduled for launch in late 2013."
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NASA Announces Next Mars Mission

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:11PM (#25020255)

    Hoyven MAVEN!

    • The follow-up mission, "Mars Astronomical Research Viewpoint INstallation", will establish a remote-controlled astronomical observatory on Mars. Through the thin Martian atmosphere they hope to be able to get a better view of Venus, with no pesky obstructions.

  • Wow (Score:5, Funny)

    by Konster ( 252488 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:12PM (#25020267)

    Wow, what a boring science mission.

    I say we attack them instead and keep the planet for ourselves.

    • NASA's Mars Exploration Program seeks to characterize and understand Mars as a dynamic system, including its present and past environment, climate cycles, geology and biological potential

      That means, How difficult is it to land troops?
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by moniker127 ( 1290002 )
        I was thinking more along the lines of "How difficult is it to build condos"
        • by BPPG ( 1181851 )

          Condos? Frig that, I just want a place to get away from it all.

          • I wonder, if we do colonize space one day, if there will be suburban and "get away" places there as well. I'm all for bonding with [deep space] nature, but it would be rather disappointing to go all the way to Mars then find soccer mom vehicles once you venture a little outside the city. Floating minivans? No, thank you.

    • by Whiteox ( 919863 )

      Wow, what a boring science mission.

      At least they don't need a camera. No more fuzzy b/w images for us to worry about.

  • Obligatory (Score:5, Funny)

    by eclectro ( 227083 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:22PM (#25020359)

    Yes, but are they looking for oil?

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Jor ( 58607 )

      They are looking for water, which - when the oil runs out - is going to be a lot more interesting.

      Note: the vast majority of all fresh water processing is fueled by fossile fuel today (think sea water processing), so when the oil runs out, there is going to be a serious shortage in drinking water.

      I't wont even be the first war about water, but it may be the last one. Ever.

      • by Urkki ( 668283 )

        When that happens, there are a few choices.

        One, move to far enough north. Then you'll freeze during winter 'cos you don't have oil for heating, but at least you won't go thirsty, and the cold winter will thin out the riff-raff yearly (especially after the global warming triggers the next ice age).

        Two, move to south. At least you don't freeze to death without energy, but you'll have to fight for clean drinking water.

        Three, pop a few plasmids, grow wings, and then migrate with the birds.

      • Note: the vast majority of all fresh water processing is fueled by fossile fuel today (think sea water processing)

        It gets better - as oil and natural gas run out, the "easy" oil is being used up first. That leaves the stuff that's really deep, really viscous, or problematic in other ways when it comes to extraction. What's the primary material used to aid in this difficult extraction process? That's right, water.

        A good (horrific) example is the oil sands extraction industry in Alberta [amazon.com], which is merrily destroying the Athabasca River watershed through massive water takings and pollution.

        As oil runs out, we run out of en

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        Wow! In may day we worried about The Bomb (though the science behind nuclear winter turned out to be crap). You kids these days are *really* reaching to make up shit to be afraid of.

        Setting aside that we could easily provide that power with solar energy (the only reason we don't is price), or nuclear energy (at a completely reasonable price), and setting aside the fact we don't actuall *use* oil to make electricity, you *should* be asking yourself "what's the primary way in which water is used?"

        Give up?

  • measurement (Score:5, Funny)

    by freakdiablo ( 1358693 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:26PM (#25020393)
    Can we keep the same units of measurement this time? (That was a Mars mission right?)
    • by rk ( 6314 ) *
      Yes, NINE years ago. Can we now, as an alleged scientific and technical community, move on?
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by neumayr ( 819083 )
        Nope. SI units are a lot older than nine years, and confusing units on a mars mission deserves getting laughed at for at least a decade.
    • Maybe they can keep a standard collor spectrum for the Mars photo's while they're at it.
    • You mean, like... not using Afrikan Elephants?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:33PM (#25020447)

    In other news NASA has just issued a press release stating that the proposed $485M mission is already over budget.

    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      NASA is going to get even less funding for mentioning evolution in their latest project on principle. More money for other on ground areas I suppose.

      Just curious, does NASA provide all documents online relating to development of space ships and/or an area for discussion of such projects? It would be pretty interesting to read how much work and creativity goes on in NASA workers' lives.

    • by Atriqus ( 826899 )
      ...and underfunded.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I actually cannot believe how inexpensive NASA's missions are. It costs just $485M to go to Mars, and how many billions or trillions of dollars to invade Iraq? Seriously, NASA's missions recently have been a bargain.
      • by neumayr ( 819083 )
        OTOH, the estimated costs of "liberating" Iraq was a lot less than its real cost, too.
      • by Zoxed ( 676559 )

        > I actually cannot believe how inexpensive NASA's missions are. It costs just $485M to go to Mars, and how many billions or trillions of dollars to invade Iraq?

        This is true: but look at the Return on Investment:
        - Mars Mission: a few grainy photos and some scientific knowledge - value to gvnt supporters: minimal
        - Invade Iraq: a guaranteed flow of a zillion hogsheads of oil - value to gvnt supporters: ...

    • NASA issued a press release stating that in Kansas, the mission would be known as MAVID: Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Intelligent Design.

    • Wouldn't we be better off going over budget on bombing some helpless foreign orphans like usual?

  • what units? (Score:1, Redundant)

    by cashman73 ( 855518 )
    Will they be using the metric or imperial system for the measurements this time? Better make sure they get this right,... ;-)
  • by houbou ( 1097327 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:36PM (#25020463) Journal

    I mean, I may not know much about space exploration, although I find the topic fun and interesting, but as they are planning this mission, which in effect is the studying of Mars atmosphere and weather, why not kill 2 birds with 1 stone and study Mars' crust or at least, something more like a few hundred feet into the ground itself?

    Whatever equipment they send, have a missile or something that can impact or dig into the soil, be launched from space directly onto Mars soil. The resulting hole that would be from could receive the visit from a drone, who could take samples and make various analyses. After all, the surface soil samples they've been doing, it's all nice and dandy, but the real story, I believe should be what's underneath it all.

    That way, they get data from the air and they get a sample of what Mars is made of down below. We may end up finding more resources available to help with towards a real man space exploration, as there may be resources awaiting to be utilized.

    Depending on cost, etc.., they may even be able to have key locations targetted for drilling and just have a drone in each location dropped.

    Gives a better perspective, might see some variations in what is found, depending on location..

    • by Konster ( 252488 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:40PM (#25020499)

      The Brits did something like that a few years ago...impromptu mission to study Mars surface via high energy impact. Beagle 2 was the name of the impact device.

      • by Trogre ( 513942 )

        Even better! All we need to do then is scope out Beagle 2's crash site and analyse the soil around it which should still be considered 'freshly' dug up. No need to fire any missiles.

        (thinks)

        It probably burned up the atmosphere, didn't it?

        • Atmosphere? Mars?
          I'm not sure it has enough to burn something up...

          • <quote><p>Atmosphere? Mars?
            I'm not sure it has enough to burn something up...</p></quote>

            OK then, not burn up, 'heat up to the point of melting.' Yes Mars has an atmosphere. Maybe not an oxygen-rich one, but an atmosphere nonetheless.
            • It's a very THIN atmosphere, so thin that the landers use airbags to land on instead of parachutes. That somewhat suggests that they don't burn up, they just go right through the atmosphere and hit the ground.

    • The basic process by which the mission is designed starts by defining the scientific scope, i.e. primary, secondary, etc. mission objectives. Based on those, you see which instruments and support devices you need to achieve each mission, and optimize the design to get the most of your objectives done within cost and reducing complexity. The reduction of complexity is important, because a project with a less than double the cost and double the "stuff" is not necessarily better because it probably has a hig

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      something more like a few hundred feet into the ground itself? Whatever equipment they send, have a missile or something that can impact or dig into the soil, be launched from space directly onto Mars soil. The resulting hole that would be from could receive the visit from a drone

      For one, explosives are usually weighty, and thus expensive to send (let alone risky to prepare). Second, meteors already dig holes so that we don't have to. That's why Opportunity explored about a half-dozen craters of various siz

    • by rk ( 6314 ) *

      Actually an impact analyzer has been proposed [asu.edu]. In addition to doing some pretty nifty stratigraphic science, you gotta admit, kinetic strikes from orbit is freakin' cool. :-)

      Full disclosure: Phil Christensen is my boss.

    • 'A few hundred feet' is highly optimistic, I suspect. And if you get to that depth with a missile, there's not much chance of soil from that depth getting to the surface (and even less that the original depth of the debris can be identified). Percussive science has its uses, but this isn't it.
      To get soil samples from deeper than a few meters, you need a drilling rig that's larger than can be launched by current rockets.

      • That's a pity. Deep core samples from a Martian surface probe would be very cool. Think of the info you could get about the history of the planet's atmosphere and the lessons we could apply to our own.
    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Tuesday September 16, 2008 @07:58AM (#25023503) Homepage

      Well, an impact doesn't get you very far. Even the best bunker-buster bombs do only 20 feet of reinforced concrete, not sure how far they'd get in Mars soil but probably not that much further if it's mountains and they're not designed to expel things to the surface. Oh yeah and it'd weigh 4-5000 pounds. As you'd have to wait for a drone to get nearby (we're not that accurate and the drones not that fast) you'll probably get as much out of studying "new" meteor craters, if you only have a brush to take away any residue collected on the surface.

      What would be interesting is a drilling operation, but getting a drilling rig that could reach any real depths down there wouldn't exactly be an add-on task. One thing is the drill itself but in general a drilling rig requires some sort of cooling fluid and large amounts of power, both are very rare on Mars. The Rovers actually consume very little power, I don't remember the figure but it's not much. Just making a solar panel farm to power any sort of drilling would probably be an entire mission all by itself.

      However, just like oil companies we wouldn't want to drill where there's nothing interesting, so the real answer is probably reflection seismology [wikipedia.org]. Drop a bunch of cheap redundant geophones, make the impact, record all the seismic data through some local wireless grid and send it to a C&C central that'll broadcast it back to earth. It shouldn't be that hard to make a "Mars Glider" instead of lander that'll drop the sensors and the impact can be pretty much anything. If it takes out some of the geophones that's acceptable too.

    • Another way to do this would be to build a small roover that you can drive around and find a place where something else has already made a huge hole in the ground for then drive into that hole. This is slightly cheaper because you don't launch a giant rock from Earth.

      Oh, wait. Didn't some one already do this?

  • by linzeal ( 197905 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @10:39PM (#25020487) Journal
    Have us engineering students, engineers and insane rocket enthusiasts/investors design a mission to mars using live animals to test as many technologies as possible before you even think of sending a human mission. We US engineers are either bored building endless varieties of consumer crap or worrying what are we will be asked to build in a war with Russia and Iran. I vote C, a moused mission to mars. Think of the merchandising!
    • by Foobar of Borg ( 690622 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @11:27PM (#25020843)

      Think of the merchandising!

      MAVEN - the toilet paper!
      MAVEN - the action figure!
      MAVEN - the breakfast cereal!
      MAVEN - the flame thrower! (the kids love this one)

    • by FleaPlus ( 6935 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @11:39PM (#25020935) Journal

      Have us engineering students, engineers and insane rocket enthusiasts/investors design a mission to mars using live animals to test as many technologies as possible before you even think of sending a human mission. We US engineers are either bored building endless varieties of consumer crap or worrying what are we will be asked to build in a war with Russia and Iran. I vote C, a moused mission to mars. Think of the merchandising!

      Actually, the Mars Gravity Biosatellite [marsgravity.org], a collaboration between MIT and Georgia Tech, is working on something analogous to what you describe. They aren't planning on actually sending it to Mars though, just Earth orbit:

      The Mars Gravity Biosatellite will carry a small population of mice to low Earth orbit aboard a spinning spacecraft creating "artificial gravity" equivalent to that on the Martian surface. The five-week mission will conduct the first in-depth study of how mammals adapt to a reduced-gravity environment. Groundbreaking data from this mission and its successors will be essential in determining future possibilities for human space exploration.

    • We US engineers are either bored building endless varieties of consumer crap or worrying what are we will be asked to build in a war with Russia and Iran.

      Except those of us who actually have decent jobs working on rockets. Yes, my children think I'm awesome.

  • by blind biker ( 1066130 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @11:04PM (#25020669) Journal

    ...that a good 10% of scientific work goes into inventing catchy acronyms :o) My boss is particularly good at this. And he has to, in order to secure the maximum amount of funding for our research. The catchier the better.

    • by flewp ( 458359 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @11:39PM (#25020939)
      CATCHIER:

      Catchy Acronyms That Can Help Increase Economic Resources.

      Yeah, I'm bored, and have spent too much time playing !acro on IRC.
    • ...that a good 10% of scientific work goes into inventing catchy acronyms :o) My boss is particularly good at this. And he has to, in order to secure the maximum amount of funding for our research. The catchier the better.

      My old manager had a brilliant one for internal use only, and was in reference to alpha and beta drops from dev.

      Basically, boiled down to "I see dev has delivered another Steaming Heap of Innovative Technology" . I'm sure you'll never see that on an approved list of acronyms, but we like

  • by Matt_R ( 23461 ) on Monday September 15, 2008 @11:07PM (#25020693) Homepage
    There was supposed to be an earth shattering kaboom.
    • by siddesu ( 698447 )

      that is pre-LHC thinking ... nowadays it is not a kaboom. instead, you have quiet sucking sound as the micro black hole swallows the earth.

  • FTFA:

    the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter [...] camera can show Martian landscape features as small as a kitchen table

    Exactly how big is a kitchen table? Is it an official unit of measurement? While we're at it, how long is a piece of string?

    No wonder the original Polar Lander crashed...

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by plen246 ( 1195843 )

      Avid /. readers will know to immediately convert the area in kitchen tables (Kt) to Cities of Bristol (Cb) [slashdot.org].

      1 Kt = 2.026e-8 Cb

      Of course, NASA should take pains not to confuse Kt (area) and kt (speed).

    • Exactly how big is a kitchen table? Is it an official unit of measurement?

      Well, in terms of what you can see from an orbiting camera, it seems a reasonable thumb-and-squint description to the layman to describe something in the 4-8 foot range. It's not exact, but useful for describing in broad terms.

      While we're at it, how long is a piece of string?

      What, like plain old boring linear measurement of actual string? Or, multidimensional strings? ;-)

      Seriously, any piece of string is just slightly too short for

    • Exactly how big is a kitchen table? Is it an official unit of measurement? While we're at it, how long is a piece of string?

      No wonder the original Polar Lander crashed...

      It's called PR. Making things accessible and understandable to the public in the interests of generating the public support that is needed to keep these kinds of mission going. I'm quite sure they use more accurate tolerances when calculating trajectories.

  • Why the hell don't we spend that $458 million on developing something useful like...i dunno...a battery the size of a suitcase that can recharge in 1 hour and power a car for 250 mile at 70mph? Or a hydroxy generating system that can power a home generator? Or a solar panel that is cheap enough for the average home owner to install and power their entire home? These things are all just barely out of reach. $500 million could solve on of these energy problem yet it is deemed more important to study the atmo
    • by 4D6963 ( 933028 )
      Oh suuure all of this is just $500 millions away. Tssk, too bad the investment-savvy types in the energy industry wouldn't think of spending so little money into such important R&D to reap such important fruits.
    • by paniq ( 833972 )

      oh, I thought these kind of posts were extinct!

      Well, here we go again:

      This is not Command & Conquer, where technology advancements are merely a question of power and money. Additionally, all the money is not allocated to one entity. NASA has different branches, so has the government. There is a fixed amount of money allocated to space exploration, and they already faced severe cuts. $485M is pretty cheap, considering that this is Mars! This used to cost a lot more in the past.

      There are research departme

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by meringuoid ( 568297 )
      Why the hell don't we spend that $458 million on developing something useful like...i dunno...a battery the size of a suitcase that can recharge in 1 hour and power a car for 250 mile at 70mph?

      Let's be really generous here and say you have the greenest car on earth and can get 50mpg at 70mph. That's 5 gallons of fuel, or 22 litres. That's already a respectable size for a suitcase. So if the most efficient car around running on hydrocarbon fuel can only just achieve your specifications, batteries haven't a

  • ...and I'm taking an "atlas." Anyone else? Who wants to play?
  • by paniq ( 833972 )

    weird... for some reason, when I read "$485M", I thought "oi, that's cheap!"

  • ...Turn on the reactor!
    • by MRe_nl ( 306212 )

      Lori: JOETHEAPPLEGUY, are you all right?
      [nods]
      Lori: You were dreaming. JOETHEAPPLEGUY? Was it about Mars?
      [nods]
      Lori: [kisses him] Is that better?
      JOETHEAPPLEGUY: Hmm.
      Lori: My poor baby. This is getting to be an obsession

  • Orderly CreatioN, depending on who wins the Presidential race.
  • Professor Frink? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by AC-x ( 735297 ) on Tuesday September 16, 2008 @04:22AM (#25022525)

    Did they let professor Frink name this one?

    "Now I'd like to announce Nasa's new Mars spacecraft, the HOYVIN-Maven"

  • When the scientists run of things to over-hype? Build up expectation too much, then let the public, and they'll become bored.
  • "Good luck with that" and "ROFL"

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

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