Watching live coverage here, from Australia, which is providing the initial signals back to the U.S.
An amazing experience and achievement!
A spectacular photo by a spacecraft orbiting Mars has captured NASA’s new rover Curiosity as it plunged toward the Martian surface under a giant parachute.
The amazing image was captured by NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, a powerful spacecraft that has circled the Red Planet since 2006. The orbiter snapped photos of the Mars rover Curiosity as the robot dangled from a supersonic parachute six minutes into its “seven minutes of terror” landing late Sunday (Aug. 5 PDT).
The MRO spacecraft used its high-resolution HiRISE camera to capture Curiosity’s descent to the floor of its Gale crater landing site. The image was taken just one minute before the Curiosity rover landed on Mars. At the time, the rover and its rocket-powered sky crane backpack were still tucked inside their backshell and were slowing down with the help of the parachute.
“HiRISE has taken over 120 pictures of Gale as part of the landing site selection and characterization process, but I really think this is the coolest one,” Sarah Milkovich, HiRISE investigation scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. told reporters in a briefing today (Aug. 6). [1st Photos of Mars by Curiosity Rover (Gallery)]
Milkovich unveiled the photo, as well as an inset, today less than a day after the Curiosity’s successful landing. The orbiter was 211 miles (340 kilometers) away from the Curiosity rover when it snapped the photo, and captured amazing details like the lines and hole on the rover’s parachute.
“If HiRISE took the image one second before or one second after, we probably would be looking at an empty Martian landscape,” Milkovich said in a statement.
It took months to prepare the MRO spacecraft to photograph the Curiosity rover’s landing, Milkovich added. Mission programmers began working on the project in March and only uploaded the computer commands to MRO a few days ago.
MRO was one of two NASA orbiters to watch Curiosity’s landing on Sunday. The European Space Agency’s Mars Express also helped track the spacecraft while NASA listened to the rover remotely using a Deep Space Network antenna in Canberra, Australia.
The $2.5 billion Mars rover Curiosity is now beginning a two-year mission to search for evidence that Mars could have ever supported microbial life. The rover launched in November 2011 and is the largest rover ever sent to another world.
NASA’s MRO spacecraft is the youngest orbiter circling Mars, despite launching in 2005. It has been circling Mars since arriving in orbit in 2006.
“Guess you could consider us the closest thing to paparazzi on Mars,” Milkovich said. “We definitely caught NASA’s newest celebrity in the act.”




YYYYYYYYYYEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!
Yeah, just watched it!!!
Hats off to them.
We are clever……sometimes.
Ha, yeah, and I won’t forget my watching live via Ustream, a milestone for me, as it was so clear and smooth re. the transmission!
they kept saying it was a great day for America. I’m glad Lori said in the end that it was a great day for the World/’Man’.
Also a milestone in RC Car tech! Just make sure they don’t let the Stig or Jeremy drive it…
It worked, great stuff…Now for that Martian McDonalds Drive-in..I hungry after all those space kilometers… M
Yeah!! I just got home from the “landing party” at the Museum of Flight in Seattle. Huge turnout, for a huge event! (they had a number of guest speakers, and the stream from NASA TV up on monitors)
Congrats to NASA, JPL, and all who worked on the project!
Wow, that would have been exciting! You could really sense the atmosphere even over here, the coverage was so good. Every day should bring new discoveries, images, or if they’re bored, Monster Truck stunts!
First image from mars now posted:
http://206.80.253.132/~chrisk/mars/mars-rover-first-image.jpg
- CK.
Hehe Chris Good one! That looks like our backyard at the end of a hot summer.
you also shud know, its John Spahn’s birthday today-the creator os UrbanMAXX Extreme, and the upcoming SkyMAXX Extreme
@J: Happy Birthday! Did you finally get that new Ferrari?
Funny how the boundaries of space are sometimes easier to navigate than the boundaries set by ourselves.
Thanks Peter, yeah talked to NASA they wanted to have the landing on my birthday so it would get media attention….No Ferrari but I did get to spend the whole day at work!!!!!!!! LOL
Yes, Happy MaxxBirthay John! Ain’t it great to be at work on your day of Birth? Born to work!
WorkMAXX Extreme! lol
Happy Birthday
Thanks Chris!