WHAT WE DO


JOINRENEWJOIN

Get Your 2009 Year in Space Calendar!
 

Projects: Space Information

The Planetary Report

Volume XXII, Number 4, July/August 2002

July / August 2002
Credit: JPL / NASA


On the Cover

As the Sun dramatically drops from sight in California's Mojave Desert, Goldstone's 70-meter antenna stands poised and ready for work. Part of NASA's Deep Space Network -- used to communicate with planetary spacecraft -- Goldstone is one of the world's two primary facilities set up for planetary radar astronomy. Scientists are using radar to peer into the dark regions of our solar system, discovering and tracking potentially hazardous near-Earth asteroids.

From The Editor

The news services have given considerable time lately to space science discoveries: an asteroid passes close by Earth; vast quantities of water lie just beneath the Martian surface; a planetary system similar to ours orbits a nearby star. In this issue, you’ll read about how such discoveries advance our understanding of the worlds around us.

The press realizes that space exploration can still excite the public. The public still marvels at amazing discoveries. But other concerns on the rapidly changing radar of this planet can drive such enthusiasms to the bottom of priority lists, as we've seen reflected in opinion polls. The world has changed from the supercharged days of the early space age, when we were ready to undertake any challenge any time, especially, to paraphrase President John F. Kennedy, if it was hard.

All space exploration is hard. For us in The Planetary Society, this change in society as a whole presents a formidable challenge. It's up to us to make sure that the exploration of the solar system and search for extraterrestrial life receives the priority it deserves.

In the coming months, we will call upon you to join again in supporting planetary exploration, through political action and other means. As always, together we can make it happen.

— Charlene M. Anderson

Features

The Mars Odyssey Continues
In May, the Mars Odyssey mission team announced that the spacecraft's Gamma Ray Spectrometer (GRS) had detected large amounts of hydrogen -- inferred as water-ice -- around Mars' south pole. The Society's director of projects, Bruce Betts, has been following Mars Odyssey since it entered Mars orbit last fall. Here, Bruce continues his coverage, examining the GRS results and updating us on the mission's progress.

Extra! Extra! Read All About It: Extrasolar Planets on the Rise!
Back in 1982, The Planetary Society began supporting searches for extrasolar planets -- we were among the first to grasp the potential significance of finding worlds like ours circling other stars. Projects we initiated -- one led by George Gatewood at the Allegheny Observatory in Pittsburgh and another by Bruce Campbell at the University of Victoria in British Columbia -- advanced the field but made no confirmed discoveries. Since then, more than 60 Jupiter-size extrasolar worlds have been discovered. Now, we are sponsoring a new program at the Kitt Peak National Observatory. Project leader Steve Howell reports on its progress.

Taking the Measure of Microworlds
Asteroids are small, dark, distant, and, in general, hard to see. Even using the most powerful optical telescopes, we observe them only as points of light or streaks against a star field. Scientists have, however, developed the means to render exact orbits and give shape to points of light: radar astronomy. Science writer Robert Burnham reports on the discoveries of this little-known but highly productive technology.

DEPARTMENTS

Members’ Dialogue
World Watch
Society News
Questions and Answers

The Planetary Report is available only to Members of The Planetary Society. If you'd like to read these and other exciting features, JOIN THE PLANETARY SOCIETY TODAY!

MEMBERS: Download this and other back issues of The Planetary Report in PDF format from the For Members section of the website.