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Mars Pathfinder

Mars Pathfinder[1] is an American robotic spacecraft that landed a base station with a roving probe on Mars in 1997. It consisted of a lander, renamed the Carl Sagan Memorial Station, and a lightweight, 10.6 kg (23 lb) wheeled robotic Mars rover named Sojourner,[4] the first rover to operate outside the Earth–Moon system.

Mars Pathfinder
Pathfinder and Sojourner at JPL in October 1996, being 'folded' into its launch position.[1]
Mission typeLander · Rover
OperatorNASA · Jet Propulsion Laboratory
COSPAR ID1996-068A
SATCAT no.24667
Websitemars.nasa.gov/MPF/
Mission duration85 days
Launch to last contact: 9 months, 23 days
Spacecraft properties
Launch mass890 kg (includes propellant)[2]
PowerPathfinder: 35 W
Sojourner: 13 W
Start of mission
Launch dateDecember 4, 1996 (1996-12-04) 06:58:07 UTC
RocketDelta II 7925 (#D240)
Launch siteCape Canaveral SLC-17
ContractorNone[3]
End of mission
Last contactSeptember 27, 1997 (1997-09-27) 10:23 UTC
Mars lander
Landing dateJuly 4, 1997; 26 years ago (1997-07-04) 16:56:55 UTC
MSD 43905 04:41 AMT
Landing siteAres Vallis, Chryse Planitia, Mars
19°7′48″N 33°13′12″W / 19.13000°N 33.22000°W / 19.13000; -33.22000 (Sojourner rover (Mars Pathfinder))
Transponders
BandX-Band with high-gain antenna
Bandwidth6 kb/s to 70 m Deep Space Network, 250 b/s to surface command[2]

Official insignia of the Mars Pathfinder mission.  

Launched on December 4, 1996, by NASA aboard a Delta II booster a month after the Mars Global Surveyor, it landed on July 4, 1997, on Mars's Ares Vallis, in a region called Chryse Planitia in the Oxia Palus quadrangle. The lander then opened, exposing the rover which conducted many experiments on the Martian surface. The mission carried a series of scientific instruments to analyze the Martian atmosphere, climate, and geology and the composition of its rocks and soil. It was the second project from NASA's Discovery Program, which promotes the use of low-cost spacecraft and frequent launches under the motto "cheaper, faster and better" promoted by then-administrator Daniel Goldin. The mission was directed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), a division of the California Institute of Technology, responsible for NASA's Mars Exploration Program. The project manager was JPL's Tony Spear.

This mission was the first of a series of missions to Mars that included rovers, and was the first successful lander since the two Vikings landed on Mars in 1976. Although the Soviet Union successfully sent rovers to the Moon as part of the Lunokhod program in the 1970s, its attempts to use rovers in its Mars program failed.

In addition to scientific objectives, the Mars Pathfinder mission was also a "proof-of-concept" for various technologies, such as airbag-mediated touchdown and automated obstacle avoidance, both later exploited by the Mars Exploration Rover mission. The Mars Pathfinder was also remarkable for its extremely low cost relative to other robotic space missions to Mars. Originally, the mission was conceived as the first of the Mars Environmental Survey (MESUR) program.[5]

Mission objectives edit

  • To prove that the development of "faster, better and cheaper" spacecraft was possible (with three years for development and a cost under $150 million for the lander, and $25 million for the rover[6]).
  • To show that it was possible to send a load of scientific instruments to another planet with a simple system and at one-fifteenth the cost of a Viking mission. (For comparison, the Viking missions cost $935 million in 1974[7] or $3.5 billion in 1997 dollars.)
  • To demonstrate NASA's commitment to low-cost planetary exploration by finishing the mission with a total expenditure of $280 million, including the launch vehicle and mission operations.

Science experiments edit

 
Sojourner rover on Mars on sol 22

The Mars Pathfinder conducted different investigations on the Martian soil using three scientific instruments. The lander contained a stereoscopic camera with spatial filters on an expandable pole called Imager for Mars Pathfinder (IMP),[8][9] and the Atmospheric Structure Instrument/Meteorology Package (ASI/MET)[10] which acted as a Mars meteorological station, collecting data about pressure, temperature, and winds. The MET structure included three windsocks mounted at three heights on a pole, the topmost at about one meter (3.3 ft) and generally registered winds from the West.[11]

The Sojourner rover had an Alpha Proton X-ray Spectrometer (APXS),[12] which was used to analyze the components of the rocks and soil. The rover also had two black-and-white cameras and a color one. These instruments could investigate the geology of the Martian surface from just a few millimeters to many hundreds of meters, the geochemistry and evolutionary history of the rocks and surface, the magnetic and mechanical properties of the land, as well as the magnetic properties of the dust, atmosphere and the rotational and orbital dynamics of the planet.

 
Wheel size comparison: Sojourner, Mars Exploration Rover, Mars Science Laboratory

The rover was equipped with three CCD cameras, all manufactured by Eastman Kodak Company and controlled by the rover's CPU. The two front-facing monochrome cameras served navigation purposes and were coupled with five laser stripe projectors for stereoscopic hazard detection. These front cameras had a resolution of 484 vertical by 768 horizontal pixels, and an optical resolution capable of discerning details as small as 0.6 cm (0.24 in) across a range of 0.65 m (26 in). Images from these cameras could be compressed using the block truncation coding (BTC) algorithm.

The third camera, situated at the rear near the APXS, was used for color imaging. It shared the resolution of the front cameras but was rotated 90 degrees to capture images of both the APXS target area and the rover's tracks. This rear camera featured a 4x4 pixel block with specific color sensitivities: 12 pixels for green, two for red, and two for infrared. All cameras employed lenses made of zinc selenide, which blocks light wavelengths below 500 nm; as a result, the blue/infrared pixels effectively detected only infrared light. Each camera had auto-exposure and bad-pixel handling functions. Image parameters, such as exposure time and compression settings, were included in the transmitted image headers. If BTC compression was to be used on the rear camera, the color information would need to be discarded.[13]

Pathfinder lander edit

Imager for Mars Pathfinder (IMP), (includes magnetometer and anemometer)[14][15] edit

 
Mars Pathfinder IMP camera closeup
 
Diagram of Mars Pathfinder IMP camera

The IMP had a set of filters designed to record surface and atmospheric phenomena. There were two cameras, or eyes, allowing for stereoscopic imagery, with the set of filters being slightly different between them. [16][17][18]

IMP filter characteristics[15][17][18]
Eye and Filter Center Wavelength (nm) Bandwidth (nm) Category
L0 443 26 Stereo, Geology
L5 671 20 Stereo, Geology
L6 802 21 Geology
L7 858 34 Geology
L8 898 41 Geology
L9 931 27 Stereo, Ranging, Geology
L10 1003 29 Geology
L11 968 31 Stereo, Ranging, Geology
R0 443 26 Stereo, Geology
R5 671 20 Stereo, Geology
R6 752 19 Geology
R8 600 21 Geology
R9 531 30 Stereo, Ranging, Geology
R10 480 27 Geology
R11 967 30 Stereo, Ranging, Geology
L1 450 5 Solar
L2 883 6 Solar
L3 925 5 Solar
L4 935 5 Solar
R1 670 5 Solar
R2 946 44 Solar
R3 936 5 Solar
R4 989 5 Solar

Atmospheric and meteorological sensors (ASI/MET) edit

 
Mars Pathfinder lander scheme. ASI/MET pole is visible extending towards the top.

The ASI/MET recorded temperature, pressure and wind data, during entry and descent, and once on the surface.[16] It also housed electronics for sensor operation and data recording.[16]

Sojourner rover edit

  1. Imaging system (three cameras: front B&W stereo,[13] 1 rear color)
  2. Laser striper hazard detection system[19]
  3. Alpha Proton X-ray Spectrometer (APXS)
  4. Wheel Abrasion Experiment
  5. Materials Adherence Experiment
  6. Accelerometers

Landing site edit

The landing site was an ancient flood plain in Mars's northern hemisphere called "Ares Vallis" ("the valley of Ares", the ancient Greek equivalent of the ancient Roman deity Mars) and is among the rockiest parts of Mars. Scientists chose it because they found it to be a relatively safe surface to land on and one that contained a wide variety of rocks deposited during a catastrophic flood. After the landing, at 19°08′N 33°13′W / 19.13°N 33.22°W / 19.13; -33.22,[20] succeeded, the lander received the name The Carl Sagan Memorial Station in honor of the astronomer.[21] (See also List of extraterrestrial memorials)

 
Mars Pathfinder panorama of landing site taken by IMP

Entry, descent and landing edit

 
Landing sequence
 
Mars Pathfinder during final assembly showing the aeroshell, cruise ring and solid rocket motor

Mars Pathfinder entered the Martian atmosphere and landed using an innovative system involving an entry capsule, a supersonic parachute, followed by solid rockets and large airbags to cushion the impact.

Mars Pathfinder directly entered Mars atmosphere in a retrograde direction from a hyperbolic trajectory at 6.1 km/s (14,000 mph) using an atmospheric entry aeroshell (capsule) that was derived from the original Viking Mars lander design. The aeroshell consisted of a back shell and a specially designed ablative heatshield to slow to 370 m/s (830 mph) where a supersonic disk-gap-band parachute was inflated to slow its descent through the thin Martian atmosphere to 68 m/s (150 mph). The lander's on-board computer used redundant on-board accelerometers to determine the timing of the parachute inflation. Twenty seconds later the heatshield was pyrotechnically released. Another twenty seconds later the lander was separated and lowered from the backshell on a 20 m (66 ft) bridle. When the lander reached 1.6 km (5,200 ft) above the surface, a radar was used by the on-board computer to determine altitude and descent velocity. This information was used by the computer to determine the precise timing of the landing events that followed.[22]

 
The Pathfinder air bags are tested in June 1995

Once the lander was 355 m (1,165 ft) above the ground, airbags were inflated in less than a second using three gas generators.[23] The airbags were made of four inter-connected multi-layer vectran bags that surrounded the tetrahedron lander. They were designed and tested to accommodate grazing angle impacts as high as 28 m/s (63 mph). However, as the airbags were designed for no more than about 15 m/s (34 mph) vertical impacts, three solid retrorockets were mounted above the lander in the backshell.[24] These were fired at 98 m (322 ft) above the ground. The lander's on-board computer estimated the best time to fire the rockets and cut the bridle so that the lander velocity would be reduced to about zero between 15 and 25 m (49 and 82 ft) above the ground. After 2.3 seconds, while the rockets were still firing, the lander cut the bridle loose about 21.5 m (71 ft) above the ground and fell to the ground. The rockets flew up and away with the backshell and parachute (they have since been sighted by orbital images). The lander impacted at 14 m/s (31 mph) and limited the impact to only 18 G of deceleration. The first bounce was 15.7 m (52 ft) high and continued bouncing for at least 15 additional bounces (accelerometer data recording did not continue through all of the bounces).[25]

The entire entry, descent and landing process was completed in four minutes.

Once the lander stopped rolling, the airbags deflated and retracted toward the lander using four winches mounted on the lander "petals". Designed to right itself from any initial orientation, the lander happened to roll right side up onto its base petal. Eighty-seven minutes after landing, the petals were deployed with Sojourner rover and the solar panels attached on the inside.[26]

The lander arrived at night at 2:56:55 Mars local solar time (16:56:55 UTC) on July 4, 1997. The lander had to wait until sunrise to send its first digital signals and images to Earth. The landing site was located at 19.30° north latitude and 33.52° west longitude in Ares Vallis, only 19 km (12 mi) southwest of the center of the 200 km (120 mi) wide landing site ellipse. During Sol 1, the first Martian solar day the lander spent on the planet, the lander took pictures and made some meteorological measurements. Once the data was received, the engineers realized that one of the airbags had not fully deflated and could be a problem for the forthcoming traverse of Sojourner's descent ramp. To solve the problem, they sent commands to the lander to raise one of its petals and perform additional retraction to flatten the airbag. The procedure was a success and on Sol 2, Sojourner was released, stood up and backed down one of two ramps.[26]

Rover operations edit

Sojourner deployment edit

The Sojourner rover departed from the lander on Sol 2, after its landing on July 4, 1997. As the next sols progressed it approached some rocks, which the scientists named "Barnacle Bill", "Yogi", and "Scooby-Doo", after famous cartoon characters. The rover made measurements of the elements found in those rocks and in the martian soil, while the lander took pictures of the Sojourner and the surrounding terrain, in addition to making climate observations.

The Sojourner is a six-wheeled, 65 cm (26 in) long vehicle, 48 cm (19 in) wide, 30 cm (12 in) tall and weighing 10.5 kg (23 lb).[27] Its maximum speed reached 1 cm/s (0.39 in/s). Sojourner travelled approximately 100 m (330 ft) in total, never more than 12 m (39 ft) from the Pathfinder station. During its 83 sols of operation, it sent 550 photographs to Earth and analyzed the chemical properties of 16 locations near the lander. (See also Space exploration rovers)

Sojourner's rock analysis edit

 
Sojourner next to the rock Barnacle Bill

The first analysis on a rock started on Sol 3 with Barnacle Bill. The Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer (APXS) was used to determine its composition, the spectrometer taking ten hours to make a full scan of the sample. It found all the elements except hydrogen, which constitutes just 0.1 percent of the rock's or soil's mass.

The APXS works by irradiating rocks and soil samples with alpha particles (helium nuclei, which consist of two protons and two neutrons). The results indicated that "Barnacle Bill" is much like Earth's andesites, confirming past volcanic activity. The discovery of andesites shows that some Martian rocks have been remelted and reprocessed. On Earth, andesite forms when magma sits in pockets of rock while some of the iron and magnesium settle out. Consequently, the final rock contains less iron and magnesiums and more silica. Volcanic rocks are usually classified by comparing the relative amount of alkalis (Na2O and K2O) with the amount of silica (SiO2). Andesite is different from the rocks found in meteorites that have come from Mars.[28][29][30]

Analysis of the Yogi rock again using the APXS showed that it was a basaltic rock, more primitive than Barnacle Bill. Yogi's shape and texture show that it was probably deposited there by a flood.

Another rock, named Moe, was found to have certain marks on its surface, demonstrating erosion caused by the wind. Most rocks analyzed showed a high content of silicon. In another region known as Rock Garden, Sojourner encountered crescent moon-shaped dunes, which are similar to crescentic dunes on Earth.

By the time that final results of the mission were described in a series of articles in the journal Science (December 5, 1997), it was believed that the rock Yogi contained a coating of dust, but was similar to the rock Barnacle Bill. Calculations suggest that the two rocks contain mostly the minerals orthopyroxene (magnesium-iron silicate), feldspars (aluminum silicates of potassium, sodium, and calcium), and quartz (silicon dioxide), with smaller amounts of magnetite, ilmenite, iron sulfide, and calcium phosphate.[28][29][30]

 
Annotated panorama of rocks near the Sojourner rover (December 5, 1997)

On-board computer edit

The embedded computer on board the Sojourner rover was based around the 2 MHz[31] Intel 80C85 CPU with 512 KB of RAM and 176 KB of flash memory solid-state storage, running a cyclic executive.[32]

The computer of the Pathfinder lander was a Radiation Hardened IBM Risc 6000 Single Chip (Rad6000 SC) CPU with 128 MB of RAM and 6 MB of EEPROM[33][34] and its operating system was VxWorks.[35]

The mission was jeopardised by a concurrent software bug in the lander,[36] which had been found in preflight testing but was deemed a glitch and therefore given a low priority as it only occurred in certain unanticipated heavy-load conditions, and the focus was on verifying the entry and landing code. The problem, which was reproduced and corrected from Earth using a laboratory duplicate thanks to the logging and debugging functionality enabled in the flight software, was due to computer resets caused by priority inversion. No scientific or engineering data was lost after a computer reset, but all the following operations were interrupted until the next day.[37][38] Four resets occurred (on July 5, 10, 11 and 14) during the mission,[39] before patching the software on July 21 to enable priority inheritance.[40]

Results from Pathfinder edit

 
Close-up of Mars sky at sunset, by Mars Pathfinder (1997)

The lander sent more than 2.3 billion bits (287.5 megabytes) of information including 16,500 pictures and made 8.5 million measurements of the atmospheric pressure, temperature and wind speed.[41]

By taking multiple images of the sky at different distances from the Sun, scientists were able to determine that the size of the particles in the pink haze was about one micrometre in radius. The color of some soils was similar to that of an iron oxyhydroxide phase which would support the theory of a warmer and wetter climate in the past.[42] Pathfinder carried a series of magnets to examine the magnetic component of the dust. Eventually, all but one of the magnets developed a coating of dust. Since the weakest magnet did not attract any soil, it was concluded that the airborne dust did not contain pure magnetite or just one type of maghemite. The dust probably was an aggregate possibly cemented with ferric oxide (Fe2O3).[43] Using much more sophisticated instruments, Mars Spirit rover found that magnetite could explain the magnetic nature of the dust and soil on Mars. Magnetite was found in the soil and the most magnetic part of the soil was dark. Magnetite is very dark.[44]

Using Doppler tracking and two-way ranging, scientists added earlier measurements from the Viking landers to determine that the non-hydrostatic component of the polar moment of inertia is due to the Tharsis bulge and that the interior is not melted. The central metallic core is between 1,300 and 2,000 km (810 and 1,240 mi) in radius.[28]

End of mission edit

 
Mars Pathfinder seen from space by the MRO HiRISE

Although the mission was planned to last from a week to a month, the rover operated successfully for almost three months. Communication failed after October 7,[45] with a final data transmission received from Pathfinder at 10:23 UTC on September 27, 1997. Mission managers tried to restore full communications during the following five months, but the mission was terminated on March 10, 1998. During the extended operation a high-resolution stereo panorama of the surrounding terrain was being made, and the Sojourner rover was to visit a distant ridge, but the panorama was only about one-third completed and the ridge visit had not begun when communication failed.[45]

The on-board battery—designed to operate for one month—may have failed after repeated charging and discharging. The battery was used to heat the probe's electronics to slightly above the expected nighttime temperatures on Mars. With the failure of the battery, colder-than-normal temperatures may have caused vital parts to break, leading to loss of communications.[45][46] The mission had exceeded its goals in the first month.

Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spotted the Pathfinder lander in January 2007 (see photo).[47][48]

Naming the rover edit

 
Sojourner takes its Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer measurement of the Yogi Rock

The name Sojourner was chosen for the Mars Pathfinder rover when 12-year old Valerie Ambroise, of Bridgeport, Connecticut, won a year-long, worldwide competition in which students up to 18 years old were invited to select a heroine and submit an essay about her historical accomplishments. The students were asked to address in their essays how a planetary rover named for their heroine would translate these accomplishments to the Martian environment.

Initiated in March 1994 by The Planetary Society of Pasadena, California, in cooperation with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), the contest got under way with an announcement in the January 1995 issue of the National Science Teachers Association's magazine Science and Children, circulated to 20,000 teachers and schools across the nation.[49]

Ambroise's winning essay, which suggested naming the rover for the 19th century women's rights activist Sojourner Truth, was selected from among 3,500 essays. First runner-up was Deepti Rohatgi, 18, of Rockville, Maryland, who suggested scientist Marie Curie. Second runner-up was Adam Sheedy, 15, of Round Rock, Texas, who submitted the name of the late astronaut Judith Resnik, who perished in the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger explosion. Other popular suggestions included explorer and guide Sacajewea and aviator Amelia Earhart.[50]

Honors edit

In popular culture edit

  • The opening title sequence of the television series Star Trek: Enterprise features footage of Sojourner on the Martian surface, intermixed with various other images representative of humankind's evolution of air and space flight.
  • In the 2000 film Red Planet, astronauts stranded on Mars make a makeshift radio from parts of Pathfinder, and use it to communicate with their spaceship.
  • In the 2011 novel The Martian by Andy Weir, and its 2015 film adaptation, the protagonist, Mark Watney, who is stranded alone on Mars, travels to the long-dead Pathfinder site (noting the "Twin Peaks" as a landmark in the novel), and returns it to his base in an attempt to communicate with Earth.[52]

Sojourner's location in context edit

 
Interactive image map of the global topography of Mars, overlaid with the position of Martian rovers and landers. Coloring of the base map indicates relative elevations of Martian surface.
  Clickable image: Clicking on the labels will open a new article.
Legend:   Active (white lined, ※)  Inactive  Planned (dash lined, ⁂)

See also edit

Notes edit

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  8. ^ Smith, P. H.; Tomasko, M. G.; Britt, D.; Crowe, D. G.; Reid, R.; Keller, H. U.; Thomas, N.; Gliem, F.; Rueffer, P.; Sullivan, R.; Greeley, R.; Knudsen, J. M.; Madsen, M. B.; Gunnlaugsson, H. P.; Hviid, S. F.; Goetz, W.; Soderblom, L. A.; Gaddis, L.; Kirk, R. (1997). "The imager for Mars Pathfinder experiment". Journal of Geophysical Research. 102 (E2): 4003–4026. Bibcode:1997JGR...102.4003S. doi:10.1029/96JE03568.
  9. ^ Smith P. H.; Bell J. F.; Bridges N. T. (1997). "Results from the Mars Pathfinder camera". Science. 278 (5344): 1758–1765. Bibcode:1997Sci...278.1758S. doi:10.1126/science.278.5344.1758. PMID 9388170.
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  21. ^ "Mars lander renamed for Sagan". NASA. from the original on December 11, 2018. Retrieved September 5, 2017.
  22. ^ "Mars Pathfinder - Entry Descent and Landing". mars.nasa.gov. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  23. ^ "Mars Pathfinder Lander Description". pdsimage.wr. USGS. Retrieved March 31, 2021.
  24. ^ "Rocket Assisted Descent – The RAD Rocket Motors". mars.nasa.gov. Retrieved February 16, 2021.
  25. ^ Spencer, David A.; Blanchard, Robert C.; Braun, Robert D.; Kallemeyn, Pieter H.; Thurman, Sam W. (March 1998). "Mars Pathfinder Entry, Descent, and Landing Reconstruction". Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets. 36 (3): 357–366. doi:10.2514/2.3478. ISSN 0022-4650.
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  48. ^ "Mars Pathfinder Landing Site and Surroundings". NASA. from the original on May 20, 2015. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  49. ^ "NASA Names First Rover to Explore the Surface of Mars". NASA. from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved November 29, 2010.
  50. ^ "Pathfinder Rover Gets Its Name". NASA. from the original on May 27, 2015. Retrieved June 10, 2015.
  51. ^ (PDF). Planetary Geology Division Newsletter. 16 (1): 1. 1997. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 8, 2011.
  52. ^ Weir, Andy (2014). The Martian. New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8041-3902-1.

References edit

  • This article draws heavily on the corresponding article in the Spanish-language Wikipedia, which was accessed in the version of March 28, 2005.
  • Mars Pathfinder Litograph Set, NASA. (1997)
  • Poster: Mars Pathfinder –Roving the Red Planet, NASA. (1998)
  • Deep Space Chronicle: A Chronology of Deep Space and Planetary Probes 1958–2000, Asif A. Siddiqi. Monographs in Aerospace History, #24. June 2002, NASA History Office.
  • "Return to Mars", article by William R. Newcott. National Geographic, pp. 2–29. Vol. 194, 2nd edition – August 1998.
  • "La misión Pathfinder –rebautizada Carl Sagan Memorial Station, en memoria del célebre astrónomo-, paso a paso todo Marte", de J. Roberto Mallo. Conozca Más, págs. 90–96. Edición número 106 – agosto de 1997.
  • "Un espía que anda por Marte", de Julio Guerrieri. Descubrir, págs. 80–83. Edición número 73 – agosto de 1997.
  • "Mars Pathfinder: el inicio de la conquista de Marte" EL Universo, Enciclopedia de la Astronomía y el Espacio, Editorial Planeta-De Agostini, págs. 58–60. Tomo 5. (1997)
  • Sojourner: An Insider's View of the Mars Pathfinder Mission, by Andrew Mishkin, Senior Systems Engineer, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. ISBN 0-425-19199-0
  • Experiences with operations and autonomy of the Mars Pathfinder microrover, A. H. Mishkin, J. C. Morrison, T. T. Nguyen, H. W. Stone, B. K. Cooper and B. H. Wilcox. In Proceedings of the IEEE Aerospace Conference, Snowmass, CO 1998.

External links edit

    mars, pathfinder, american, robotic, spacecraft, that, landed, base, station, with, roving, probe, mars, 1997, consisted, lander, renamed, carl, sagan, memorial, station, lightweight, wheeled, robotic, mars, rover, named, sojourner, first, rover, operate, outs. Mars Pathfinder 1 is an American robotic spacecraft that landed a base station with a roving probe on Mars in 1997 It consisted of a lander renamed the Carl Sagan Memorial Station and a lightweight 10 6 kg 23 lb wheeled robotic Mars rover named Sojourner 4 the first rover to operate outside the Earth Moon system Mars PathfinderPathfinder and Sojourner at JPL in October 1996 being folded into its launch position 1 Mission typeLander RoverOperatorNASA Jet Propulsion LaboratoryCOSPAR ID1996 068ASATCAT no 24667Websitemars wbr nasa wbr gov wbr MPF wbr Mission duration85 daysLaunch to last contact 9 months 23 daysSpacecraft propertiesLaunch mass890 kg includes propellant 2 PowerPathfinder 35 WSojourner 13 WStart of missionLaunch dateDecember 4 1996 1996 12 04 06 58 07 UTCRocketDelta II 7925 D240 Launch siteCape Canaveral SLC 17ContractorNone 3 End of missionLast contactSeptember 27 1997 1997 09 27 10 23 UTCMars landerLanding dateJuly 4 1997 26 years ago 1997 07 04 16 56 55 UTC MSD 43905 04 41 AMTLanding siteAres Vallis Chryse Planitia Mars19 7 48 N 33 13 12 W 19 13000 N 33 22000 W 19 13000 33 22000 Sojourner rover Mars Pathfinder TranspondersBandX Band with high gain antennaBandwidth6 kb s to 70 m Deep Space Network 250 b s to surface command 2 Official insignia of the Mars Pathfinder mission Discovery program NEAR ShoemakerLunar Prospector Launched on December 4 1996 by NASA aboard a Delta II booster a month after the Mars Global Surveyor it landed on July 4 1997 on Mars s Ares Vallis in a region called Chryse Planitia in the Oxia Palus quadrangle The lander then opened exposing the rover which conducted many experiments on the Martian surface The mission carried a series of scientific instruments to analyze the Martian atmosphere climate and geology and the composition of its rocks and soil It was the second project from NASA s Discovery Program which promotes the use of low cost spacecraft and frequent launches under the motto cheaper faster and better promoted by then administrator Daniel Goldin The mission was directed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL a division of the California Institute of Technology responsible for NASA s Mars Exploration Program The project manager was JPL s Tony Spear This mission was the first of a series of missions to Mars that included rovers and was the first successful lander since the two Vikings landed on Mars in 1976 Although the Soviet Union successfully sent rovers to the Moon as part of the Lunokhod program in the 1970s its attempts to use rovers in its Mars program failed In addition to scientific objectives the Mars Pathfinder mission was also a proof of concept for various technologies such as airbag mediated touchdown and automated obstacle avoidance both later exploited by the Mars Exploration Rover mission The Mars Pathfinder was also remarkable for its extremely low cost relative to other robotic space missions to Mars Originally the mission was conceived as the first of the Mars Environmental Survey MESUR program 5 Contents 1 Mission objectives 2 Science experiments 2 1 Pathfinder lander 2 1 1 Imager for Mars Pathfinder IMP includes magnetometer and anemometer 14 15 2 1 2 Atmospheric and meteorological sensors ASI MET 2 2 Sojourner rover 3 Landing site 4 Entry descent and landing 5 Rover operations 5 1 Sojourner deployment 5 2 Sojourner s rock analysis 5 3 On board computer 6 Results from Pathfinder 7 End of mission 8 Naming the rover 9 Honors 10 In popular culture 11 Sojourner s location in context 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 15 External linksMission objectives editTo prove that the development of faster better and cheaper spacecraft was possible with three years for development and a cost under 150 million for the lander and 25 million for the rover 6 To show that it was possible to send a load of scientific instruments to another planet with a simple system and at one fifteenth the cost of a Viking mission For comparison the Viking missions cost 935 million in 1974 7 or 3 5 billion in 1997 dollars To demonstrate NASA s commitment to low cost planetary exploration by finishing the mission with a total expenditure of 280 million including the launch vehicle and mission operations Science experiments edit nbsp Sojourner rover on Mars on sol 22 The Mars Pathfinder conducted different investigations on the Martian soil using three scientific instruments The lander contained a stereoscopic camera with spatial filters on an expandable pole called Imager for Mars Pathfinder IMP 8 9 and the Atmospheric Structure Instrument Meteorology Package ASI MET 10 which acted as a Mars meteorological station collecting data about pressure temperature and winds The MET structure included three windsocks mounted at three heights on a pole the topmost at about one meter 3 3 ft and generally registered winds from the West 11 The Sojourner rover had an Alpha Proton X ray Spectrometer APXS 12 which was used to analyze the components of the rocks and soil The rover also had two black and white cameras and a color one These instruments could investigate the geology of the Martian surface from just a few millimeters to many hundreds of meters the geochemistry and evolutionary history of the rocks and surface the magnetic and mechanical properties of the land as well as the magnetic properties of the dust atmosphere and the rotational and orbital dynamics of the planet nbsp Wheel size comparison Sojourner Mars Exploration Rover Mars Science Laboratory The rover was equipped with three CCD cameras all manufactured by Eastman Kodak Company and controlled by the rover s CPU The two front facing monochrome cameras served navigation purposes and were coupled with five laser stripe projectors for stereoscopic hazard detection These front cameras had a resolution of 484 vertical by 768 horizontal pixels and an optical resolution capable of discerning details as small as 0 6 cm 0 24 in across a range of 0 65 m 26 in Images from these cameras could be compressed using the block truncation coding BTC algorithm The third camera situated at the rear near the APXS was used for color imaging It shared the resolution of the front cameras but was rotated 90 degrees to capture images of both the APXS target area and the rover s tracks This rear camera featured a 4x4 pixel block with specific color sensitivities 12 pixels for green two for red and two for infrared All cameras employed lenses made of zinc selenide which blocks light wavelengths below 500 nm as a result the blue infrared pixels effectively detected only infrared light Each camera had auto exposure and bad pixel handling functions Image parameters such as exposure time and compression settings were included in the transmitted image headers If BTC compression was to be used on the rear camera the color information would need to be discarded 13 Pathfinder lander edit Imager for Mars Pathfinder IMP includes magnetometer and anemometer 14 15 edit nbsp Mars Pathfinder IMP camera closeup nbsp Diagram of Mars Pathfinder IMP camera The IMP had a set of filters designed to record surface and atmospheric phenomena There were two cameras or eyes allowing for stereoscopic imagery with the set of filters being slightly different between them 16 17 18 IMP filter characteristics 15 17 18 Eye and Filter Center Wavelength nm Bandwidth nm Category L0 443 26 Stereo Geology L5 671 20 Stereo Geology L6 802 21 Geology L7 858 34 Geology L8 898 41 Geology L9 931 27 Stereo Ranging Geology L10 1003 29 Geology L11 968 31 Stereo Ranging Geology R0 443 26 Stereo Geology R5 671 20 Stereo Geology R6 752 19 Geology R8 600 21 Geology R9 531 30 Stereo Ranging Geology R10 480 27 Geology R11 967 30 Stereo Ranging Geology L1 450 5 Solar L2 883 6 Solar L3 925 5 Solar L4 935 5 Solar R1 670 5 Solar R2 946 44 Solar R3 936 5 Solar R4 989 5 Solar Atmospheric and meteorological sensors ASI MET edit nbsp Mars Pathfinder lander scheme ASI MET pole is visible extending towards the top The ASI MET recorded temperature pressure and wind data during entry and descent and once on the surface 16 It also housed electronics for sensor operation and data recording 16 Sojourner rover edit Main article Sojourner rover Imaging system three cameras front B amp W stereo 13 1 rear color Laser striper hazard detection system 19 Alpha Proton X ray Spectrometer APXS Wheel Abrasion Experiment Materials Adherence Experiment AccelerometersLanding site editThe landing site was an ancient flood plain in Mars s northern hemisphere called Ares Vallis the valley of Ares the ancient Greek equivalent of the ancient Roman deity Mars and is among the rockiest parts of Mars Scientists chose it because they found it to be a relatively safe surface to land on and one that contained a wide variety of rocks deposited during a catastrophic flood After the landing at 19 08 N 33 13 W 19 13 N 33 22 W 19 13 33 22 20 succeeded the lander received the name The Carl Sagan Memorial Station in honor of the astronomer 21 See also List of extraterrestrial memorials nbsp Mars Pathfinder panorama of landing site taken by IMPEntry descent and landing edit nbsp Landing sequence nbsp Mars Pathfinder during final assembly showing the aeroshell cruise ring and solid rocket motor Mars Pathfinder entered the Martian atmosphere and landed using an innovative system involving an entry capsule a supersonic parachute followed by solid rockets and large airbags to cushion the impact Mars Pathfinder directly entered Mars atmosphere in a retrograde direction from a hyperbolic trajectory at 6 1 km s 14 000 mph using an atmospheric entry aeroshell capsule that was derived from the original Viking Mars lander design The aeroshell consisted of a back shell and a specially designed ablative heatshield to slow to 370 m s 830 mph where a supersonic disk gap band parachute was inflated to slow its descent through the thin Martian atmosphere to 68 m s 150 mph The lander s on board computer used redundant on board accelerometers to determine the timing of the parachute inflation Twenty seconds later the heatshield was pyrotechnically released Another twenty seconds later the lander was separated and lowered from the backshell on a 20 m 66 ft bridle When the lander reached 1 6 km 5 200 ft above the surface a radar was used by the on board computer to determine altitude and descent velocity This information was used by the computer to determine the precise timing of the landing events that followed 22 nbsp The Pathfinder air bags are tested in June 1995 Once the lander was 355 m 1 165 ft above the ground airbags were inflated in less than a second using three gas generators 23 The airbags were made of four inter connected multi layer vectran bags that surrounded the tetrahedron lander They were designed and tested to accommodate grazing angle impacts as high as 28 m s 63 mph However as the airbags were designed for no more than about 15 m s 34 mph vertical impacts three solid retrorockets were mounted above the lander in the backshell 24 These were fired at 98 m 322 ft above the ground The lander s on board computer estimated the best time to fire the rockets and cut the bridle so that the lander velocity would be reduced to about zero between 15 and 25 m 49 and 82 ft above the ground After 2 3 seconds while the rockets were still firing the lander cut the bridle loose about 21 5 m 71 ft above the ground and fell to the ground The rockets flew up and away with the backshell and parachute they have since been sighted by orbital images The lander impacted at 14 m s 31 mph and limited the impact to only 18 G of deceleration The first bounce was 15 7 m 52 ft high and continued bouncing for at least 15 additional bounces accelerometer data recording did not continue through all of the bounces 25 The entire entry descent and landing process was completed in four minutes Once the lander stopped rolling the airbags deflated and retracted toward the lander using four winches mounted on the lander petals Designed to right itself from any initial orientation the lander happened to roll right side up onto its base petal Eighty seven minutes after landing the petals were deployed with Sojourner rover and the solar panels attached on the inside 26 The lander arrived at night at 2 56 55 Mars local solar time 16 56 55 UTC on July 4 1997 The lander had to wait until sunrise to send its first digital signals and images to Earth The landing site was located at 19 30 north latitude and 33 52 west longitude in Ares Vallis only 19 km 12 mi southwest of the center of the 200 km 120 mi wide landing site ellipse During Sol 1 the first Martian solar day the lander spent on the planet the lander took pictures and made some meteorological measurements Once the data was received the engineers realized that one of the airbags had not fully deflated and could be a problem for the forthcoming traverse of Sojourner s descent ramp To solve the problem they sent commands to the lander to raise one of its petals and perform additional retraction to flatten the airbag The procedure was a success and on Sol 2 Sojourner was released stood up and backed down one of two ramps 26 Rover operations editFurther information Sojourner rover Sojourner deployment edit The Sojourner rover departed from the lander on Sol 2 after its landing on July 4 1997 As the next sols progressed it approached some rocks which the scientists named Barnacle Bill Yogi and Scooby Doo after famous cartoon characters The rover made measurements of the elements found in those rocks and in the martian soil while the lander took pictures of the Sojourner and the surrounding terrain in addition to making climate observations The Sojourner is a six wheeled 65 cm 26 in long vehicle 48 cm 19 in wide 30 cm 12 in tall and weighing 10 5 kg 23 lb 27 Its maximum speed reached 1 cm s 0 39 in s Sojourner travelled approximately 100 m 330 ft in total never more than 12 m 39 ft from the Pathfinder station During its 83 sols of operation it sent 550 photographs to Earth and analyzed the chemical properties of 16 locations near the lander See also Space exploration rovers Sojourner s rock analysis edit nbsp Sojourner next to the rock Barnacle Bill The first analysis on a rock started on Sol 3 with Barnacle Bill The Alpha Particle X ray Spectrometer APXS was used to determine its composition the spectrometer taking ten hours to make a full scan of the sample It found all the elements except hydrogen which constitutes just 0 1 percent of the rock s or soil s mass The APXS works by irradiating rocks and soil samples with alpha particles helium nuclei which consist of two protons and two neutrons The results indicated that Barnacle Bill is much like Earth s andesites confirming past volcanic activity The discovery of andesites shows that some Martian rocks have been remelted and reprocessed On Earth andesite forms when magma sits in pockets of rock while some of the iron and magnesium settle out Consequently the final rock contains less iron and magnesiums and more silica Volcanic rocks are usually classified by comparing the relative amount of alkalis Na2O and K2O with the amount of silica SiO2 Andesite is different from the rocks found in meteorites that have come from Mars 28 29 30 Analysis of the Yogi rock again using the APXS showed that it was a basaltic rock more primitive than Barnacle Bill Yogi s shape and texture show that it was probably deposited there by a flood Another rock named Moe was found to have certain marks on its surface demonstrating erosion caused by the wind Most rocks analyzed showed a high content of silicon In another region known as Rock Garden Sojourner encountered crescent moon shaped dunes which are similar to crescentic dunes on Earth By the time that final results of the mission were described in a series of articles in the journal Science December 5 1997 it was believed that the rock Yogi contained a coating of dust but was similar to the rock Barnacle Bill Calculations suggest that the two rocks contain mostly the minerals orthopyroxene magnesium iron silicate feldspars aluminum silicates of potassium sodium and calcium and quartz silicon dioxide with smaller amounts of magnetite ilmenite iron sulfide and calcium phosphate 28 29 30 nbsp Annotated panorama of rocks near the Sojourner rover December 5 1997 On board computer edit See also Comparison of embedded computer systems on board the Mars rovers The embedded computer on board the Sojourner rover was based around the 2 MHz 31 Intel 80C85 CPU with 512 KB of RAM and 176 KB of flash memory solid state storage running a cyclic executive 32 The computer of the Pathfinder lander was a Radiation Hardened IBM Risc 6000 Single Chip Rad6000 SC CPU with 128 MB of RAM and 6 MB of EEPROM 33 34 and its operating system was VxWorks 35 The mission was jeopardised by a concurrent software bug in the lander 36 which had been found in preflight testing but was deemed a glitch and therefore given a low priority as it only occurred in certain unanticipated heavy load conditions and the focus was on verifying the entry and landing code The problem which was reproduced and corrected from Earth using a laboratory duplicate thanks to the logging and debugging functionality enabled in the flight software was due to computer resets caused by priority inversion No scientific or engineering data was lost after a computer reset but all the following operations were interrupted until the next day 37 38 Four resets occurred on July 5 10 11 and 14 during the mission 39 before patching the software on July 21 to enable priority inheritance 40 Results from Pathfinder edit nbsp Close up of Mars sky at sunset by Mars Pathfinder 1997 The lander sent more than 2 3 billion bits 287 5 megabytes of information including 16 500 pictures and made 8 5 million measurements of the atmospheric pressure temperature and wind speed 41 By taking multiple images of the sky at different distances from the Sun scientists were able to determine that the size of the particles in the pink haze was about one micrometre in radius The color of some soils was similar to that of an iron oxyhydroxide phase which would support the theory of a warmer and wetter climate in the past 42 Pathfinder carried a series of magnets to examine the magnetic component of the dust Eventually all but one of the magnets developed a coating of dust Since the weakest magnet did not attract any soil it was concluded that the airborne dust did not contain pure magnetite or just one type of maghemite The dust probably was an aggregate possibly cemented with ferric oxide Fe2O3 43 Using much more sophisticated instruments Mars Spirit rover found that magnetite could explain the magnetic nature of the dust and soil on Mars Magnetite was found in the soil and the most magnetic part of the soil was dark Magnetite is very dark 44 Using Doppler tracking and two way ranging scientists added earlier measurements from the Viking landers to determine that the non hydrostatic component of the polar moment of inertia is due to the Tharsis bulge and that the interior is not melted The central metallic core is between 1 300 and 2 000 km 810 and 1 240 mi in radius 28 End of mission edit nbsp Mars Pathfinder seen from space by the MRO HiRISE Although the mission was planned to last from a week to a month the rover operated successfully for almost three months Communication failed after October 7 45 with a final data transmission received from Pathfinder at 10 23 UTC on September 27 1997 Mission managers tried to restore full communications during the following five months but the mission was terminated on March 10 1998 During the extended operation a high resolution stereo panorama of the surrounding terrain was being made and the Sojourner rover was to visit a distant ridge but the panorama was only about one third completed and the ridge visit had not begun when communication failed 45 The on board battery designed to operate for one month may have failed after repeated charging and discharging The battery was used to heat the probe s electronics to slightly above the expected nighttime temperatures on Mars With the failure of the battery colder than normal temperatures may have caused vital parts to break leading to loss of communications 45 46 The mission had exceeded its goals in the first month Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spotted the Pathfinder lander in January 2007 see photo 47 48 Naming the rover edit nbsp Sojourner takes its Alpha Particle X ray Spectrometer measurement of the Yogi Rock The name Sojourner was chosen for the Mars Pathfinder rover when 12 year old Valerie Ambroise of Bridgeport Connecticut won a year long worldwide competition in which students up to 18 years old were invited to select a heroine and submit an essay about her historical accomplishments The students were asked to address in their essays how a planetary rover named for their heroine would translate these accomplishments to the Martian environment Initiated in March 1994 by The Planetary Society of Pasadena California in cooperation with NASA s Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL the contest got under way with an announcement in the January 1995 issue of the National Science Teachers Association s magazine Science and Children circulated to 20 000 teachers and schools across the nation 49 Ambroise s winning essay which suggested naming the rover for the 19th century women s rights activist Sojourner Truth was selected from among 3 500 essays First runner up was Deepti Rohatgi 18 of Rockville Maryland who suggested scientist Marie Curie Second runner up was Adam Sheedy 15 of Round Rock Texas who submitted the name of the late astronaut Judith Resnik who perished in the 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger explosion Other popular suggestions included explorer and guide Sacajewea and aviator Amelia Earhart 50 Honors editIn 1997 the Sojourner Team was awarded a JPL Award for Technical Excellence On October 21 1997 at the Geological Society of America s annual meeting in Salt Lake City Utah Sojourner was awarded honorary membership in the Planetary Geology Division of the society 51 In 2003 Sojourner was inducted into the Robot Hall of FameIn popular culture editThe opening title sequence of the television series Star Trek Enterprise features footage of Sojourner on the Martian surface intermixed with various other images representative of humankind s evolution of air and space flight In the 2000 film Red Planet astronauts stranded on Mars make a makeshift radio from parts of Pathfinder and use it to communicate with their spaceship In the 2011 novel The Martian by Andy Weir and its 2015 film adaptation the protagonist Mark Watney who is stranded alone on Mars travels to the long dead Pathfinder site noting the Twin Peaks as a landmark in the novel and returns it to his base in an attempt to communicate with Earth 52 Sojourner s location in context edit nbsp Interactive image map of the global topography of Mars overlaid with the position of Martian rovers and landers Coloring of the base map indicates relative elevations of Martian surface nbsp Clickable image Clicking on the labels will open a new article Legend Active white lined Inactive Planned dash lined view discuss nbsp Beagle 2 nbsp Curiosity nbsp Deep Space 2 nbsp Rosalind Franklin nbsp InSight nbsp Mars 2 nbsp Mars 3 nbsp Mars 6 nbsp Mars Polar Lander nbsp Opportunity nbsp Perseverance nbsp Phoenix nbsp Schiaparelli EDM nbsp Sojourner nbsp Spirit nbsp Zhurong nbsp Viking 1 nbsp Viking 2See also edit nbsp Solar System portal nbsp Spaceflight portal Exploration of Mars Overview of the exploration of Mars Life on Mars Scientific assessments on the microbial habitability of Mars List of missions to Mars Mars Exploration Rover NASA mission to explore Mars via two rovers Mars Science Laboratory Robotic mission that deployed the Curiosity rover to Mars in 2012 Mars 2020 Astrobiology Mars rover mission by NASA Comparison of embedded computer systems on board the Mars roversNotes edit a b Nelson Jon Mars Pathfinder Sojourner Rover NASA Archived from the original on February 19 2014 Retrieved February 2 2014 a b Mars Pathfinder Fact Sheet NASA JPL March 19 2005 Archived from the original on September 19 2014 Retrieved February 21 2014 Conway Erik 2015 The Discovery Program Mars Pathfinder Jet Propulsion Laboratory Archived from the original on January 17 2015 Retrieved June 10 2015 Mars Pathfinder NASA Archived from the original on November 12 2011 Retrieved June 10 2015 Sawyer Kathy November 13 1993 One Way or Another Space Agency Will Hitch a Ride to Mars Washington Post Retrieved March 6 2023 Mars Pathfinder Rover National Aeronautics and Space Administration Retrieved September 30 2020 Ezell Edward Clinton Ezell Linda Neuman 1984 Viking Lander Building A Complex Spacecraft Reorganizations and Additional Cutbacks On Mars Exploration of the Red Planet 1958 1978 Washington D C National Aeronautics and Space Administration pp 268 270 Archived from the original on April 8 2016 Retrieved June 10 2015 Smith P H Tomasko M G Britt D Crowe D G Reid R Keller H U Thomas N Gliem F Rueffer P Sullivan R Greeley R Knudsen J M Madsen M B Gunnlaugsson H P Hviid S F Goetz W Soderblom L A Gaddis L Kirk R 1997 The imager for Mars Pathfinder experiment Journal of Geophysical Research 102 E2 4003 4026 Bibcode 1997JGR 102 4003S doi 10 1029 96JE03568 Smith P H Bell J F Bridges N T 1997 Results from the Mars Pathfinder camera Science 278 5344 1758 1765 Bibcode 1997Sci 278 1758S doi 10 1126 science 278 5344 1758 PMID 9388170 Schofield J T Barnes J R Crisp D Haberle R M Larsen S Magalhaes J A Murphy J R Seiff A Wilson G 1997 The Mars Pathfinder atmospheric structure investigation meteorology ASI MET experiment Science 278 5344 1752 1758 Bibcode 1997Sci 278 1752S doi 10 1126 science 278 5344 1752 PMID 9388169 Windsocks on Mars JPL NASA Mars Pathfinder 2005 Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved June 10 2015 R Rieder H Wanke T Economou A Turkevich 1997 Determination of the chemical composition of Martian soil and rocks The alpha proton X ray spectrometer Journal of Geophysical Research 102 E2 4027 4044 Bibcode 1997JGR 102 4027R doi 10 1029 96JE03918 a b Rover Camera Instrument Description NASA Archived from the original on March 5 2016 Retrieved June 10 2015 IMP Camera Specifications mars nasa gov Retrieved March 29 2023 a b Smith P H Tomasko M G Britt D Crowe D G Reid R Keller H U Thomas N Gliem F Rueffer P Sullivan R Greeley R Knudsen J M Madsen M B Gunnlaugsson H P Hviid S F February 25 1997 The imager for Mars Pathfinder experiment Journal of Geophysical Research Planets 102 E2 4003 4025 Bibcode 1997JGR 102 4003S doi 10 1029 96JE03568 a b c Mars Pathfinder Instrument Descriptions mars nasa gov Retrieved March 29 2023 a b How does the IMP work mars nasa gov Retrieved March 29 2023 a b IMP Instrument Overview PDF atmos nmsu edu Stone H W 1996 Mars Pathfinder Microrover A Small Low Cost Low Power Spacecraft Report hdl 2014 25424 Mars Pathfinder Science Results NASA Archived from the original on September 20 2008 Retrieved June 9 2008 Mars lander renamed for Sagan NASA Archived from the original on December 11 2018 Retrieved September 5 2017 Mars Pathfinder Entry Descent and Landing mars nasa gov Retrieved February 16 2021 Mars Pathfinder Lander Description pdsimage wr USGS Retrieved March 31 2021 Rocket Assisted Descent The RAD Rocket Motors mars nasa gov Retrieved February 16 2021 Spencer David A Blanchard Robert C Braun Robert D Kallemeyn Pieter H Thurman Sam W March 1998 Mars Pathfinder Entry Descent and Landing Reconstruction Journal of Spacecraft and Rockets 36 3 357 366 doi 10 2514 2 3478 ISSN 0022 4650 a b NASA NSSDCA Spacecraft Details nssdc gsfc nasa gov Retrieved February 16 2021 Mars the search for life PDF NASA March 4 2009 Archived from the original PDF on March 27 2009 Retrieved March 28 2009 a b c Golombek M et al 1997 Overview of the Mars Pathfinder Mission and Assessment of Landing Site Predictions Science Science 278 pp 1743 1748 a b APXS Composition Results NASA Archived from the original on June 3 2016 Retrieved June 10 2015 a b Bruckner J Dreibus G Rieder R Wanke H 2001 Revised Data of the Mars Pathfinder Alpha Proton X ray spectrometer Geochemical Behavior of Major and Minor Elements Lunar and Planetary Science XXXII 1293 Bibcode 2001LPI 32 1293B Mars Pathfinder FAQs Sojourner CPU NASA Archived from the original on December 29 2014 Retrieved June 10 2015 Bajracharya Max Maimone Mark W Helmick Daniel December 2008 Autonomy for Mars rovers past present and future PDF Computer 41 12 IEEE Computer Society 44 50 doi 10 1109 MC 2008 479 ISSN 0018 9162 S2CID 9666797 Archived PDF from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved June 10 2015 QUESTION What type of computer is the Pathfinder utilizing NASA Quest Q amp A NASA 1997 Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved July 21 2015 QUESTION When it was designed why was only a single 80C85 CPU used NASA Quest Q amp A NASA 1997 Archived from the original on July 23 2015 Retrieved July 21 2015 Wind River Powers Mars Exploration Rovers Continues Legacy as Technology Provider for NASA s Space Exploration Wind River Systems June 6 2003 Archived from the original on January 6 2010 Retrieved August 28 2009 Parallel sparking Many chips make light work Douglas Heaven New Scientist magazine issue 2930 August 19 2013 p44 Online by subscription Archived October 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine Reeves Glenn E December 15 1997 What really happened on Mars Authoritative Account Microsoft com Archived from the original on June 11 2015 Retrieved June 10 2015 Jones Michael B December 16 1997 What really happened on Mars Microsoft com Archived from the original on June 12 2015 Retrieved June 10 2015 The Mars Pathfinder Mission Status Reports Second Week Office of the Flight Operations Manager Mars Pathfinder Project Archived from the original on January 4 2016 Retrieved October 24 2015 The Mars Pathfinder Mission Status Reports Third Week Office of the Flight Operations Manager Mars Pathfinder Project Archived from the original on April 10 2016 Retrieved October 24 2015 Mars Pathfinder and Sojourner NASA Archived from the original on June 23 2015 Retrieved June 10 2015 Smith P et al 1997 Results from the Mars Pathfinder Camera Science 278 1758 1765 Hviid S et al 1997 Magnetic Properties Experiments on the Mars Pathfinder Lander Preliminary Results Science 278 1768 1770 Bertelsen P et al 2004 Magnetic Properties Experiments on the Mars Exploration rover Spirit at Gusev Crater Science 305 827 829 a b c Mars Pathfinder Nearing Its End sciencemag org Archived from the original on June 21 2013 Retrieved June 10 2015 NASA facts Mars Pathfinder PDF Jet Propulsion Laboratory Archived PDF from the original on May 13 2013 Retrieved September 30 2013 McKee Maggie January 12 2007 Mars probe may have spotted lost rover New Scientist Archived from the original on April 24 2015 Retrieved September 4 2017 Mars Pathfinder Landing Site and Surroundings NASA Archived from the original on May 20 2015 Retrieved June 10 2015 NASA Names First Rover to Explore the Surface of Mars NASA Archived from the original on June 7 2011 Retrieved November 29 2010 Pathfinder Rover Gets Its Name NASA Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved June 10 2015 Division Activity at Recent Meetings PDF Planetary Geology Division Newsletter 16 1 1 1997 Archived from the original PDF on June 8 2011 Weir Andy 2014 The Martian New York Crown Publishers ISBN 978 0 8041 3902 1 References editThis article draws heavily on the corresponding article in the Spanish language Wikipedia which was accessed in the version of March 28 2005 JPL Mars Pathfinder article Mars Pathfinder Litograph Set NASA 1997 Poster Mars Pathfinder Roving the Red Planet NASA 1998 Deep Space Chronicle A Chronology of Deep Space and Planetary Probes 1958 2000 Asif A Siddiqi Monographs in Aerospace History 24 June 2002 NASA History Office Return to Mars article by William R Newcott National Geographic pp 2 29 Vol 194 2nd edition August 1998 La mision Pathfinder rebautizada Carl Sagan Memorial Station en memoria del celebre astronomo paso a paso todo Marte de J Roberto Mallo Conozca Mas pags 90 96 Edicion numero 106 agosto de 1997 Un espia que anda por Marte de Julio Guerrieri Descubrir pags 80 83 Edicion numero 73 agosto de 1997 Mars Pathfinder el inicio de la conquista de Marte EL Universo Enciclopedia de la Astronomia y el Espacio Editorial Planeta De Agostini pags 58 60 Tomo 5 1997 Sojourner An Insider s View of the Mars Pathfinder Mission by Andrew Mishkin Senior Systems Engineer NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory ISBN 0 425 19199 0 Experiences with operations and autonomy of the Mars Pathfinder microrover A H Mishkin J C Morrison T T Nguyen H W Stone B K Cooper and B H Wilcox In Proceedings of the IEEE Aerospace Conference Snowmass CO 1998 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mars Pathfinder Mars Pathfinder NASA JPL Website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mars Pathfinder amp oldid 1220705063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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