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The Planetary Report

Volume XXII, Number 6, November/December 2002

November / December 2002
Credit: MOLA Science Team (published here for the first time)


On the Cover

This image, produced from Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) data, reveals abundant evidence for the past flow of liquid water on Mars. Shown here is the Chryse outflow region, located 315 to 330 degrees east and 0 to 20 degrees north. Thanks to MOLA, scientists now know the topography of Mars better than they do the topography of many regions on Earth.

From The Editor

In this issue, we feature two old warhorses of exploration: Galileo launched in 1989 and reached the Jovian system in 1995; Mars Global Surveyor launched in 1996 and entered Mars orbit in 1997. Long after their primary missions ended, both spacecraft are still returning data, testifying to the imagination, ambition, and skill of the human explorers who stand behind them.

Both spacecraft teams confidently overcame mechanical failures threatening their missions. On Galileo, the main antenna refused to open, rendering it useless. Communications had to be routed through a smaller antenna, but thanks to mission engineers, the spacecraft returned stillspectacular amounts of data.

On Mars Global Suveyor, a small damper failed, causing a solar panel mount to crack during deployment and forcing a delay in the spacecraft’s reaching its mapping orbit. Still, the avalanche of data from the mission buried many old assumptions about Mars, and we now see the Red Planet as a much more vital and dynamic world.

Achieving grand ambitions, overcoming failure, transforming knowledge -- these missions have taught us what is possible when we are demonstrably confident, clever, and smart. Planetary exploration is a beacon to humankind of all that we can become.

— Charlene M. Anderson

Features

Shedding Light on the Red Planet: Science Findings From the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter
Planetary Society Board member Maria Zuber also serves as an investigator on the science team for the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter, affectionately known as MOLA, which flew on Mars Global Surveyor. We've frequently featured brightly colored MOLA images in these pages, but until now, we’d yet to devote an entire article to the results of this hugely successful experiment. Here, Maria, with David Smith and James Abshire, reports on MOLA's key discoveries.

Oceans, Ice Shells, and Life on Europa
Now that the Galileo spacecraft has all but clinched the debate over whether Jupiter's moon Europa possesses an underground ocean, argument swirls around whether the overlying ice crust is thick or thin. This may seem like an arcane question, but the answer may further our quest to understand the place of life in our solar system. Crustal thickness determines what sort of energy might be available to any possible Europan life-forms. And it would dictate what sort of robots we build to explore the Europan ocean. By Paul Schenk

Breaking New Ground: Red Rover Goes to Mars
Our Red Rover Goes to Mars contest has shifted into high gear! At the World Space Congress, held this year in Houston, Texas, The Planetary Society and the LEGO Company announced that our education experiment will fly with NASA’s Mars Exploration Rovers, set to launch in 2003. The contest to select Student Astronauts, who will actually participate in mission operations, is now under way. If you are a bright young student between the ages of 13 and 17, or you know someone who is, you've got to read this article.

DEPARTMENTS

Members’ Dialogue
World Watch
Questions and Answers
Society News

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