Curiosity sends back flood of new views from Mars

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - NASA's latest adventure to Mars has given the world more than just glimpses of a new alien landscape.
It opened a window into the trip itself, from video footage of the landing to a photo of the rover hanging by a parachute to a shot of discarded spacecraft hardware strewn across the surface. And the best views - of Mars and the journey there - are yet to come.
"Spectacular," mission deputy project scientist Joy Crisp said of the footage. "We've not had that before."
Since parking itself inside an ancient crater Sunday night, the Curiosity rover has delighted scientists with views of its new surroundings, including the 3-mile-high mountain it will drive to. It beamed back the first color picture Tuesday revealing a tan-hued, pebbly landscape and the crater rim off in the distance.
Locale aside, Curiosity is giving scientists an unprecedented sense of what it took to reach its Martian destination. The roving laboratory sent back nearly 300 thumbnails that NASA processed into a low-quality video showing the last 2 1/2 minutes of its white-knuckle dive through the thin Martian atmosphere.
In the video, the protective heat shield pops off and tumbles away. The footage gets jumpy as Curiosity rides on a parachute. In the last scene, dust billows up just before landing.
NASA twice tried to record a Mars landing. In 1999, the Mars Polar Lander carried similar gear, but it slammed into the south pole after prematurely shutting off its engines. Another effort was aborted in 2008 during the Phoenix lander's mission to the northern plains when mission managers decided not to turn it on for fear it would interfere with the landing.
"It's too emotional for me," said Ken Edgett of the Malin Space Science Systems, which operates the video camera. "It's been a long journey and it's really awesome."
The full high-resolution video will be downloaded when time allows and should give the first peek of a landing on another planet.
Curiosity's journey to Mars spanned eight months and 352 million miles. The rover gently touched down Sunday night after executing an elaborate and untested landing routine. The size of a compact car, it was too heavy to land using air bags. Instead, it relied on a heat shield, parachute, rockets and cables to lower it to the ground.
During its seven-minute plunge through the atmosphere, Curiosity shed the spacecraft parts. On Tuesday, scientists got their first view of the castoffs. The eagle-eyed Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter had circled over the landing site and spotted Curiosity and the scattered parts.
"It's like a crime scene photo," said Sarah Milkovich, a NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientist.
The parachute appeared to be inflated, and the rocket stage that unspooled the cables crashed 2,100 feet from the landing site.
Earlier this week, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter caught Curiosity sailing through the Martian skies under a parachute. It was only the second time a spacecraft has been photographed on a parachute; the first was Phoenix during its descent to the surface.
The nuclear-powered, six-wheel Curiosity will spend the next two years chiseling into rocks and scooping up soil at Gale Crater to determine whether the environment ever had the right conditions for microbes to thrive. It will spend a chunk of its time driving to Mount Sharp where images from space reveal signs of past water on the lower flanks.
It'll be several weeks before it takes its first drive and flexes its robotic arm. Since landing, engineers have been busy performing health checkups on its systems and instruments. Early Wednesday, a flood of black-and-white pictures of the Martian horizon and rover's deck poured in, which NASA will use to stitch together a panorama. Over the next several days, Curiosity was poised to send back even better pictures, including a 360-degree color view.
The rover was "still in great shape," mission manager Michael Watkins said.
It opened a window into the trip itself, from video footage of the landing to a photo of the rover hanging by a parachute to a shot of discarded spacecraft hardware strewn across the surface. And the best views - of Mars and the journey there - are yet to come.
"Spectacular," mission deputy project scientist Joy Crisp said of the footage. "We've not had that before."
Since parking itself inside an ancient crater Sunday night, the Curiosity rover has delighted scientists with views of its new surroundings, including the 3-mile-high mountain it will drive to. It beamed back the first color picture Tuesday revealing a tan-hued, pebbly landscape and the crater rim off in the distance.
Locale aside, Curiosity is giving scientists an unprecedented sense of what it took to reach its Martian destination. The roving laboratory sent back nearly 300 thumbnails that NASA processed into a low-quality video showing the last 2 1/2 minutes of its white-knuckle dive through the thin Martian atmosphere.
In the video, the protective heat shield pops off and tumbles away. The footage gets jumpy as Curiosity rides on a parachute. In the last scene, dust billows up just before landing.
NASA twice tried to record a Mars landing. In 1999, the Mars Polar Lander carried similar gear, but it slammed into the south pole after prematurely shutting off its engines. Another effort was aborted in 2008 during the Phoenix lander's mission to the northern plains when mission managers decided not to turn it on for fear it would interfere with the landing.
"It's too emotional for me," said Ken Edgett of the Malin Space Science Systems, which operates the video camera. "It's been a long journey and it's really awesome."
The full high-resolution video will be downloaded when time allows and should give the first peek of a landing on another planet.
Curiosity's journey to Mars spanned eight months and 352 million miles. The rover gently touched down Sunday night after executing an elaborate and untested landing routine. The size of a compact car, it was too heavy to land using air bags. Instead, it relied on a heat shield, parachute, rockets and cables to lower it to the ground.
During its seven-minute plunge through the atmosphere, Curiosity shed the spacecraft parts. On Tuesday, scientists got their first view of the castoffs. The eagle-eyed Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter had circled over the landing site and spotted Curiosity and the scattered parts.
"It's like a crime scene photo," said Sarah Milkovich, a NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientist.
The parachute appeared to be inflated, and the rocket stage that unspooled the cables crashed 2,100 feet from the landing site.
Earlier this week, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter caught Curiosity sailing through the Martian skies under a parachute. It was only the second time a spacecraft has been photographed on a parachute; the first was Phoenix during its descent to the surface.
The nuclear-powered, six-wheel Curiosity will spend the next two years chiseling into rocks and scooping up soil at Gale Crater to determine whether the environment ever had the right conditions for microbes to thrive. It will spend a chunk of its time driving to Mount Sharp where images from space reveal signs of past water on the lower flanks.
It'll be several weeks before it takes its first drive and flexes its robotic arm. Since landing, engineers have been busy performing health checkups on its systems and instruments. Early Wednesday, a flood of black-and-white pictures of the Martian horizon and rover's deck poured in, which NASA will use to stitch together a panorama. Over the next several days, Curiosity was poised to send back even better pictures, including a 360-degree color view.
The rover was "still in great shape," mission manager Michael Watkins said.
We won't be able to reuse some of the parts from this mission. This means gas prices will go up in 24 hours.
my buddy's sister-in-law brought in $18732 a week ago. she is making cash on the computer and moved in a $474300 house. All she did was get lucky and put in action the clues written on this site
http://LazyCash49.com
omg think I see a starbucks cup out there
This is exactly what moe greene saw.
Time for the country to spend money on something important. I say we rapidly increase spending so that we can eventually send MEN to Mars. Cut off all federal funding for abortuaries, and then we can finance the missions.
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The Martian peoples are in waiting just beyond those hills. Some have peace doves in boxes ready to fly while others are dug in for a pitched battle. Word has it they have stones, bones and a catapult or two. They're still in the 'Marsinium Age'. The Rover has intercepted three messages so far. And they all sound the same. 'Ack, Ack, Ack'!Â
We spent how much? To see what?
 @Klondiko NASA's annual budget is $17.7 billion. To put this into perspective, our defense budget is ~$1.2 trillion/yr. NASA didn't just put this rover on Mars to take pictures of things. It has many scientific instruments on board to study and analyze Martian soil and rocks. It is truly a modern marvel of human achievement, and a huge step forward for the future of human exploration beyond the Moon.
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The Earth may be our cradle and our home, but the universe is our future. Space exploration is important. That NASA accomplished this on what is basically a shoestring budget is nothing short of incredible. To downplay this achievement is pure ignorance.
 @Klondiko Sorry, our defense budget is actually around $800 billion. But with all we spend on the wars it might as well be my original estimate.
Just Amazing ! This picture looks like somewhere in Navada Desert !Â
 @scychan Don't let Teh Mut hear that. She'll accuse you of being a troll. I mentioned the same thing and got a blast from some real wingers out there.
It sorta looks like Utah. Are we sure this is real? I'm expecting to see a Mormon walk through the picture at any minute. Or Sasquatch.
 @GeorgeG. lol. Some people around here shorten it to S'Quatch! lol. :)
There's rumor that the vehicle is equipped with lasers to defend itself against Martians.Â
 @GeorgeG. Lasers don't work very well. What they really need is an Illudium PEW-36 explosive space modulator.
 @Vexorg You earth people make me so angry!
Quaid.... Quaid... Start the reactor... Free Mars...
Excellent! Very exciting what we can learn of Mars' history and how it may relate to the future of planet Earth.Â
To clarify, if Mars sustained life at one time, then slowly became the desert it is now, its important to know how it developed to its present state.Â
The same fate could happen to Earth or could be that because Mars does not have crustal tectonic plates (which is why Olympus Mons is such a monster), life might have been stunted at a certain stage and never morphed beyond bacteria. Who knows, but it will be interesting to get answers.
Olympus Mons is impressive. What an incredible mountain. The closet thing is the Hawaiian mountains if you count from the sea floor and mt. Everest, K-2. etc.. I think it's 85,000 feet or something.Â
Yeah, the base is the size of Arizona.Â
...Hmmm.. Is that like the poem,
"Roses are Red, Violets are Blue,
I'm Schizophrenic,
And so am I."
Â
(Kidding)
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Have a great weekend - Perseids Meteor Shower to watch for and we've got clear skies - should be a good show.
 @Smokin Bear Speaking of weird, this new comment thing is strange..it says I'm replying to myself in my email..this is actually easier for me to understand.
 @Smokin Bear WOW, I did not know that, very impressive!
Whooohoooo! I love it.
I just hope the outcome of all this isn't China destroying the solar system strip mining resources off of other planets.
Stunning photos! I am overwhelmed by what we can do to achieve this!
Amazing!!! I can't help but wonder what life altering discoveries we might have already made if only we invested in Space Exploration on the same level as we invest in War.
@Petwlkr If you look at the history of the world, many if not MOST of the biggest technological breakthroughs have come through defense spending. Look back at what the Germans did, look back at what WE did. Tech advancement has always accelerated during times of war. I don't say this from a position of support for wars, but if you are honest annd fair you have to recognize that where we (not we the US, but we the world) owe much of our advancement to wars of the past.
You could say that about many different kinds of scientific research. But wouldn't you rather be safe first? I don't have any problem with our military spending. "Safety First".
 @Ron Burgandy I think the more recent wars have made us less safe in some ways. I think that the billions we spend daily on war right now should be better spent on bringing the soldiers home and making the country strong, which includes scientific research and actually applying some of it to real and tangible measures to keep us safe. I would feel a lot safer if the economy were better for one.
 @Ron Burgandy You're right; that can be said about all kinds of scientific research and nothing would make me happier than to see it all fully funded.
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As far as your assertion that Wars are waged to keep us safe I would have to strongly disagree. If you are willing to look past the propaganda and phony patriotic bumper stickers you'd see that the vast majority of wars waged in the last couple of decades have been done so for the express purpose of protecting American business interests NOT for protecting the American people.
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I thought this was really cool. When I watched the landing I wanted to cheer with them! It's nice to know we are still searching..for what I don't know, but if they find something that will be great. Sometimes I wish aliens were real..could you imagine the impact on the small minded people who think they are the center of the universe? It would change everything..I see a joke coming..
 @Yeah_and We are searching for knowledge, understanding, and the unknown.
 @stargunner Thanks, that makes me feel pretty low on the dumb ladder, but well said.
@Yeah_and i love the idea of religion being proved wrong, but i think the impact would start a crusaides style world war
 @mountainman  @Yeah_and Maybe you should update your view. At least as far as the Catholic Church goes, regarding extraterrestrial life.Â
No, I am not a Catholic.
Â
http://www.universetoday.com/14262/vatican-astronomer-says-its-ok-to-believe-in-et/
 @Sid Vishess OMG, how did you know I was raised Catholic?? LOL..I say raised because I'm horrible and don't practice, wait, practice what exactly..giving them my money? NOPE.
 @Sid Vishess  @mountainman I believe!..I just want to see them, I think. Hi Mountainman, yeah it could get ugly, but it was just a thought.
It kinda reminds me of that time I woke up on my face in a wall mart parking lot.Same fish eye view same asphalt hmmmm....
These are very cool, but I'm waiting for the color pictures.
@Kodiak Did you know the Hubbell transmits in black and white and we color them here?
 @Klondiko  @Kodiak I didn't know that either..so the colors from those beautiful nebulae are from someone's mind?
 @relatively Thank you very much! Good info. Always good to educate one's self..and they are beautiful still.
 @Yeah_and Not necessarily. Even though the Hubble transmits in monochrome, they can still get natural colors by taking multiple shots of the same object using different colored filters and then combining them to reconstruct the original colors. They often mess with this process to bring out interesting features, though. Here's where it's explained on the Hubble site:
http://hubblesite.org/gallery/behind_the_pictures/meaning_of_color/
Also, you can't see the colors in a nebula even by looking through a powerful telescope that uses natural light, because there's not enough light to trigger the color receptors in your eyes. The colors do show up on a photo taken with a long exposure, though. Here's more info about colors in astrophotography:
http://www.astropix.com/HTML/I_ASTROP/COLOR.HTM
@Klondiko No I did not know that. The Hubbell has sort of been a turd since it was launched, so I guess I cant say I'm surprised.
 @Klondiko  @Kodiak You would think they could shell out the extra $10 for the HD converter box. Friggin' Comcast...