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Mars Curiosity Rover... to land 10:31 pm 8/5/2012

Yesterday's update on the NASA website:

Curiosity Closes in on its New 'Home'

Sat, 04 Aug 2012 07:20:24 PM EDT


With Mars looming ever larger in front of it, NASA's Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft and its Curiosity rover are in the final stages of preparing for entry, descent and landing on the Red Planet at 10:31 p.m. PDT Aug. 5 (1:31 a.m. EDT Aug. 6). Curiosity remains in good health with all systems operating as expected. Today, the flight team uplinked and confirmed commands to make minor corrections to the spacecraft's navigation reference point parameters. This afternoon, as part of the onboard sequence of autonomous activities leading to the landing, catalyst bed heaters are being turned on to prepare the eight Mars Lander Engines that are part of MSL's descent propulsion system. As of 2:25 p.m. PDT (5:25 p.m. EDT), MSL was approximately 261,000 miles (420,039 kilometers) from Mars, closing in at a little more than 8,000 mph (about 3,600 meters per second).

Not landing till 1:31 EDT on 8/6/2012... :brickwall:

I guess I'll find out about it when I wake up Monday morning. :beer:
 
I'll have to get up at the right time to watch any "results" online/TV. Is the time when the lander actually touches down on Mars or when we'll have signal(s) from it given the time-delay between Earth and Mars. (Something like 20-30 minutes right now, isn't it?)
 
Just a few more hours. Even though we've sent rovers before, this is still really exciting. :)

Not landing till 1:31 EDT on 8/6/2012... :brickwall:

I guess I'll find out about it when I wake up Monday morning. :beer:

fergusonBomb.png
 
Ha, I'm on vacation and it's the middle of the afternoon here. Great time to watch a Mars landing.
 
Curiosity has landed!

The guys in Mission Control are going nuts. :D

ETA: And were' getting images...
 
I don't freaking believe it! Well done to the engineers who made that amazingly complicated landing sequence work!

:techman::techman:
 
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