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Space TopicsMars Global SurveyorMars Global Surveyor operated at Mars for more than nine years before falling silent on November 5, 2006. Charged with mapping the planet's surface and atmosphere, Mars Global Surveyor's instruments began the systematic collection of data in March 1999 and completed its objectives on January 31, 2001, producing a topographic map of the entire planet to a resolution of 300 meters. The magnetometer instrument detected for the first time a crustal magnetic field at Mars. Unlike Earth, Mars has no measurable global magnetic field. The Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) onboard has returned more than 212,000 images showing wondrous things, including layered rock deposits that are evidence of ancient large bodies of water; dramatic changes in the south polar cap; gullies that may be evidence for geologically recent liquid water flow on Mars; and the landing sites of Spirit, Opportunity, both Viking landers, and Mars Pathfinder. MOC revealed the 'Face on Mars' made famous by a haunting Viking image to be a not-so-unusual mound formation with a series of images it took from many angles. In May 2005, MOC snapped a picture of Mars Odyssey and Mars Express, the two other orbiters at Mars, to make MGS the first mission to take a picture of other spacecraft orbiting Mars. Its extreme longevity enabled it to catch Mars geology in action, capturing images of newly formed deposits in gullies, and a total of 20 new impact craters splattering Mars during the nine-year mission. Mars Global Surveyor Facts Launch date: November 7, 1996 Mars arrival: September 11, 1997 Mapping operations began: February 22, 1999 Mapping operations completed: January 31, 2001 Extended mission: Began February 1, 2001 Loss of contact: November 5, 2006 Recent Headlines
13 Apr 07 Human and Spacecraft Errors Together Doomed Mars Global Surveyor
06 Dec 06 Mars Global Surveyor Discovers Current Liquid Water Activity on Mars
21 Nov 06 Mars Global Surveyor Update: Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Fails to Spot Missing Spacecraft
15 Nov 06 Mars Global Surveyor Falls Silent: All Other NASA Spacecraft at Mars to Assist Recovery Efforts
28 Jun 05 Mars Express: SPICAM Team Discovers Aurora
19 May 05 Martian Orbiter Takes Pictures of Neighboring Crafts Passing By
06 May 05 Mars Global Surveyor Spots Viking 2 and, Probably, Mars Polar Lander
27 Sep 04 Mars Orbiter Camera's Eagle Eye in the Sky Spots Spirit Rover Tracks at Gusev Crater
24 Aug 04 Beagle 2: Internal Investigation Suggests Mars Lander "Most Likely" Crashed
24 May 04 Beagle 2: Commission of Inquiry Board Cites Poor Management for Loss |
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