Anxiety over rover's Hollywood-style Mars landing

Anxiety over rover's Hollywood-style Mars landing

Seven minutes of terror.
It sounds like a Hollywood thriller, but the phrase describes the anxiety NASAis expecting as its car-sized robotic rover tries a tricky landing on Mars lateSunday.
Skimming the top of the Martian atmosphere at 13,000 mph (21,000 kph), theCuriosity rover needs to brake to a stop — in seven minutes.
The rover is headed for a two-year mission to study whether Mars ever had theelements needed for microbial life. Because of its heft, the 2,000-pound(900-kilogram) robot can't land the way previous spacecraft did. They relied onair bags to cushion a bouncy touchdown. This time NASA is testing a brand newlanding that involves gingerly setting down the rover similar to the wayheavy-lift helicopters lower huge loads at the end of a cable. How hard is it?"The degree of difficulty is above a 10," says Adam Steltzner, anengineer at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the mission.
And American University space policy analyst Howard McCurdy says: "Itwould be a major technological step forward if it works. It's a biggamble."
A communication time delay between Mars and Earth means Curiosity will have tonail the landing by itself, following the half million lines of computer codethat engineers uploaded to direct its every move.
After an 8 1/2-month, 352-million-mile (566-million kilometer) journey, here'sa step-by-step look at how Curiosity will land:
—Ten minutes before entering the Martian atmosphere, Curiosity separates fromthe capsule that carried it to Mars.
—Turning its protective heat shield forward, it streaks through the atmosphereat 13,200 mph (21,240 kph), slowing itself with a series of S-curves.
—Seven miles from the ground at 900 mph (482 million Celsius), Curiosityunfurls its enormous parachute.
— Next it sheds its heat shield and turns on radar to scope out the landingsite. Now it's 5 miles (8 kilometers) from touchdown and closing in at 280 mph(450 kph).
—A video camera aboard Curiosity starts to record the descent.
—A mile from landing, the parachute is jettisoned.
—Curiosity is still attached to a rocket-powered backpack, and those rocketsare used to slow it to less than 2 mph (3.2 kph).
—Twelve seconds before landing, nylon cables release and lower Curiosity. Onceit senses six wheels on the ground, it cuts the cords. The hoveringrocket-powered backpack flies out of the way and crashes some distance away.

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