NASA's Multipurpose Mars Mission Successfully Launched

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08.12.05

Dolores Beasley 
Headquarters, Washington 
(Phone: 202/358-1753) 

George H. Diller 
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
(Phone: 321/867-2468) 

Guy Webster
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
(Phone: 818/354-6278)

RELEASE: 81-05

NASA'S MULTIPURPOSE MARS MISSION SUCCESSFULLY LAUNCHED

A seven-month flight to Mars began this morning for NASA's Mars 
Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO). It will inspect the red planet in fine 
detail and assist future landers. 

An Atlas V launch vehicle, 19 stories tall with the two-ton spacecraft 
on top, roared away from Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air 
Force Station at 7:43 a.m. EDT. Its powerful first stage consumed 
about 200 tons of fuel and oxygen in just over four minutes, then 
dropped away to let the upper stage finish the job of putting the 
spacecraft on a path toward Mars. This was the first launch of an 
interplanetary mission on an Atlas V. 

"We have a healthy spacecraft on its way to Mars and a lot of happy 
people who made this possible," said James Graf, project manager for 
MRO at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, Calif. 

MRO established radio contact with controllers 61 minutes after launch 
and within four minutes of separation from the upper stage. Initial 
contact came through an antenna at the Japan Aerospace Exploration 
Agency's Uchinoura Space Center in southern Japan. 

Health and status information about the orbiter's subsystems were 
received through Uchinoura and the Goldstone, Calif., antenna station 
of NASA's Deep Space Network. By 14 minutes after separation, the 
craft's solar panels finished unfolding, enabling the MRO to start 
recharging batteries and operate as a fully functional spacecraft. 

The orbiter carries six scientific instruments for examining the 
surface, atmosphere and subsurface of Mars in unprecedented detail 
from low orbit. For example, its high-resolution camera will reveal 
features as small as a dishwasher. NASA expects to get several times 
more data about Mars from MRO than from all previous Martian missions 
combined. 

Researchers will use the instruments to learn more about the history 
and distribution of Mars' water. That information will improve 
understanding of planetary climate change and will help guide the 
quest to answer whether Mars ever supported life. The orbiter will 
also evaluate potential landing sites for future missions. MRO will 
use its high-data-rate communications system to relay information 
between Mars surface missions and Earth. 

Mars is 72 million miles from Earth today, but the spacecraft will 
travel more than four times that distance on its outbound-arc 
trajectory to intercept the red planet on March 10, 2006. The cruise 
period will be busy with checkups, calibrations and trajectory 
adjustments. 

On arrival day, the spacecraft will fire its engines and slow itself 
enough for Martian gravity to capture it into a very elongated orbit. 
The spacecraft will spend half a year gradually shrinking and shaping 
its orbit by "aerobraking," a technique using the friction of 
carefully calculated dips into the upper atmosphere to slow the 
vehicle. The mission's main science phase is scheduled to begin in 
November 2006. 

The launch was originally scheduled for August 10, but was delayed 
first due to a gyroscope issue on a different Atlas V, and the next 
day because of a software glitch. 

The mission is managed by JPL, a division of the California Institute 
of Technology, Pasadena, for the NASA Science Mission Directorate. 
Lockheed Martin Space Systems, Denver, prime contractor for the 
project, built both the spacecraft and the launch vehicle. 

NASA's Launch Services Program at the Kennedy Space Center is 
responsible for government engineering oversight of the Atlas V, 
spacecraft/launch vehicle integration and launch day countdown 
management. 

For more information about MRO on the Web, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/mro 

For information about NASA and other agency programs on the Web, 
visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/

	
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