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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

Check out Boyle's biography or send a message to Cosmic Log via cosmiclog@msnbc.com.



Mars gets its close-up

Posted: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 5:42 PM by Alan Boyle

This month, Mars has been more than ready for its close-up - and fortunately, the Hubble Space Telescope was ready as well, snapping pictures of the Red Planet during its orbital approach. If the skies are clear, you can have your own close encounter with Mars tonight - the closest encounter possible until the year 2016.

Tonight marks the very night when Mars stops coming closer and starts moving away from us in its roughly 26-month orbital cycle - at 6:47 p.m. ET, according to this handy list of the planet's oppositions and close approaches.

This year, Mars comes as close as 54.8 million miles - not as close as the historic pass-by of 2003 (34.6 million miles), but still a night-brightener. It shouldn't be hard to pick out the butterscotch-colored, steadily glowing jewel in the sky, but if you need help, just consult Space.com's sky chart.


NASA / ESA / STScI / Cornell / SSI
CLICK FOR VIDEO: The Hubble Space Telescope
took this picture on Dec. 17. In the southern
hemisphere, the dark triangular shape to the right is
Syrtis Major. The dark horizontal lane to the left is
Sinus Meridiani. NASA's Opportunity rover landed at
the western end of this region in 2004. Click on the
picture to watch a video clip narrated by Alan Boyle.

The Hubble telescope has been capturing Mars up close for more than a decade, since before NASA's first Mars rover ever bounced down to the surface. Today, two rovers are surveying the planet from ground level, three orbiters are mapping the globe from above, and another lander is on the way. So is it really worth Hubble's precious time to be taking pictures from afar?

"It's often surprising to people that, despite the fact that we have this armada of orbiters, landers and rovers on Mars, we can still do useful and unique scientific observations of Mars from Earth," said Cornell astronomer Jim Bell, who is a member of the Hubble observation team as well as the lead scientist for the panoramic color cameras on NASA's Mars Exploration Rovers.

Because of its far-seeing perspective, Hubble still provides the best all-at-once global views of the planet. Although the orbiters can produce much higher-resolution mosaics, they're just too close to see the whole planet at once.

"They're only seeing a bit at a time - strips of data taken at the same time of day," Bell told me today. "You don't get an overall perspective."

The Hubble views show how all the parts of a planet work together: dust storms and icy clouds, the permanent ice caps and the ebb and flow of seasonal frost. The latest pictures document thin, bluish clouds of water ice that are appearing just as springtime is coming to northern latitudes. That's a view that Hubble really hasn't seen up close before, Bell said.

"This data set really fills in what had been a missing gap in coverage during Mars' year," he said.

Scientists are particularly interested in how water moves around between Mars' surface ice and the atmosphere due to the planet's seasonal changes. "There's an enormous amount of water-ice cloudiness in the wintertime," Bell said. "How that super-cloudy season changes from the wintertime through the spring and the summer is still a subject of scientific debate."

NASA's Phoenix Mars lander, currently zooming toward a May landing in Mars' northern polar region, could help answer questions about the planet's water cycle - which naturally lead to the even bigger questions about past or present life.

Thanks to his double role, Bell gets to work with the big picture as part of the Hubble team, plus the up-close-and-personal views taken by the panoramic cameras, or Pancams, aboard the Spirit and Opportunity rovers. The Pancams are the instruments that have been capturing the stunning color views cataloged on NASA's Web site for the rover missions, as well as in Bell's coffee-table book, "Postcards From Mars." For the latest Pancam views, you can also check out the imaging team's Web site at Cornell University.

The rovers' primary mission was slated to last just 90 days - but almost four years later, they're still going strong, and so are the cameras.

"We haven't detected any degradation," Bell said. "Nothing seems to be wearing out."

Even though the rovers have been surprisingly resilient, Bell and his colleagues on the rover science team are handling them with exceeding care. Right now their top priority is to check out a safe haven for Spirit.

Just as spring is coming to Mars' northern hemisphere, winter is coming to the southern hemisphere, where Spirit is located. The solar-powered rovers almost didn't make it through a huge dust storm earlier this year, so the team wants to make sure that Spirit is in a good sun-facing position for the coming winter.

"We've been focusing on taking pictures of the region where we will have to park the rover very soon," Bell said. "The rover could spend most of 2008 at this one location."

Meanwhile, Opportunity is carefully making its way down the slopes of Victoria Crater, taking lots of pictures as it goes. "We're being very methodical at each location," Bell said. "We've been using the photography to try to relate the specific areas where the rover is to the layers that we see elsewhere in the crater."

Will the rovers still be taking pictures when Mars has its next close approach to Earth, in early 2010? Four years ago, no one would have predicted that, but Bell has given up trying to guess how long the rovers and their cameras will last. "There's nothing that we can use as a predictor to say, 'Oh, man, the end is coming,'" he said.

To keep tabs on Mars exploration until the bitter end, check in with our special report, "Return to the Red Planet." And for great views of Mars as well as Hubble's glories, take a tour of our space gallery.

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Comments

Coverages are excellent and this topic (space)never ceases to amaze me.  Please keep up the excellent work and keep it coming.
I don't like Mars. It is too red. In my class we all like Pluto because of the dog.

joe from
mrs hays 5th grade class
Antioch california

ps: Post script I want to be an astronaut OK?  
Space is cool. :)
I like Space.
Greetings from Hanover, New Hampshire. I like space very much, so empty.....
okay, check it... if we amend the constitution to allow for arnold schwarzenegger to be elected president, then the United States officially annexes Mars (assuming terraforming is the preferred remedy for overpopulation), then maybe--just maybe--arnold will be the de jure leader of a blue-skied Mars.  just something to think about
It's fascinating to see another work outside of the world we live in. Although Mars doesn't have the same appeal as Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, Pluto, or galaxies far away...the fact that our closest neighbor in the solar system could be an extra home for us is a bit interesting.
Mars was beautiful and bright last night.  It was shining and a red tint that you could see in the early evening sky.
fluhead,
LOL, but then Taco Bell will have won the franchise wars, we'll all have to use the three seashells, and the Scraps will have taken over San Angeles!
I know NASA takes a lot of flack but it's amazing how long the rovers have lasted!  Kudos to the guys who designed and built the Energizer Bunny of Martian Probes!
What a fascinating place!
I still remember in the 1950's when a cloud formation formed that looked a lot of the letter "W".  There was a great deal of discission and movies were made as to the signfiance of the letter "W".  
Greetings, earthlings. I'm from Mars... stop by for a drink sometime.
i loved this article.
All these photos are great! Can't hardly wait for the first steps on Mars, like the ones on the moon! Actually I communicated with a place on the Web that is so sure it is not that far off that they are selling trips to Mars.
   I think it is all very exciting! We have to live the history between now and then first, but trips to Mars cold become commonplace later in the history books!
just loved this article
space is cool
hey whats all the talk about mars. Whats so special about it amyway. Not like it does anything for us anyway!!! I say foget about it and move on woth our lives..

I thought Mars was an amazing sight.  I came across this article in the Tribune, published in Columbia, Mo.  and thought it was interesting.

Chance of asteroid hitting Mars is slim, scientists say

Published Friday, January 11, 2008
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - The possibility of a collision between Mars and an approaching asteroid has been effectively ruled out, according to scientists watching the space rock. ...

[Alan adds: We have this story at http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/22592439/]



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