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Sunday, March 12, 2006

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Mars orbiter reaches Red Planet
3/12/2006
 

          Nasa's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) has survived a critical phase in its mission by parking itself in an elliptical orbit around the Red Planet, reports BBC.
News of its success followed a tense period of radio silence while the spacecraft passed behind Mars.
Over the next six months, the probe will steadily reduce the size of its orbit until it reaches an optimal position to start scientific studies.
MRO will examine the Martian surface and atmosphere in unprecedented detail.
At 2124 GMT (1334 PST), as the spacecraft approached the south-side of the planet, its engines fired, slowing its speed and allowing it to be captured by Mars' gravity.
About 20 minutes later, MRO switched from solar to battery power as it passed behind the planet and entered into a period of radio silence.
'Picture perfect'
The re-establishment of contact half an hour later was met with jubilation from the mission team at the US space agency's (Nasa) Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in Pasadena, California.
"I am very relieved," MRO project manager Jim Graf said. "It was picture perfect."
Mr Graf earlier described Mars as "unpredictable" - with two of the last four orbiters Nasa sent to the planet not surviving the final approach.
The probe has joined three other satellites around the Red Planet: Nasa's Mars Global Surveyor and Mars Odyssey, and the European Space Agency's Mars Express.
MRO is now in a 35-hour elliptical trajectory around Mars, where at its furthest point it will swing out to about 44,000km (27,000 miles) above the planet's surface.
The next phase for the mission will be to slowly shrink the spacecraft's path around the world until it achieves a tight, circular, two-hour orbit.
This process will take six months, and employs a technique known as aerobraking, whereby the spacecraft slows itself down by using the friction created each time it brushes past the Martian atmosphere.
The orbiter will have to perform this technique more than 500 times and each manoeuvre is perilous, as Professor Colin Pillinger, who led the UK's failed Beagle 2 mission to Mars in 2003, observed:
"If it goes in [the planet's atmosphere] too far it heats up and crashes and burns. If it hits the atmosphere at the wrong speed, it bounces off and goes off into deep space."

 

 
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