Skip to page main content
NASA Logo - Mars Astrobiology Magazine - Mars Exploration - Red Planet - terrestrial planet - Mars Exploration: Mars, Red Planet, Mars exploration rover mission, Beagle, NASA, ESA, martian, pathfinder, mars life + View the NASA Portal
FIND IT @ NASA
NASA HomepageMars Astrobiology Magazine - Mars Exploration - Red Planet - terrestrial planet - Mars Exploration: Mars, Red Planet, Mars exploration rover mission, Beagle, NASA, ESA, martian, pathfinder, mars life
Home Science and Research Datasets and Images Publications Multimedia
Main Menu
· Home
· Subscribe
· Calendar
· Browse
· Astrobio Edition
· SETI Edition
· Edición Española
· Robotics Edition

Features
· Photo Gallery
· All Topics
· Earth and Mars
· Imagery
· Landers
· Life
· Mappers
· Meteors
· Missions
· Rocks
· Terraform
· Water
· Weather

Find It
· Most Recent
· Monthlies
· Advanced Search

Net Serivices
· Syndication
· Random Start
· Daily Rotation
· Book Reviews
· Bare-Bones

Sound Off
· Spread the World
Periscope





Space Channel

 

Imagery Summary (Oct 26, 2007): Today's images from Mars include: and , from the Mars Global Surveyor and 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecrafts.

Display Options: Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page


mars daily image

Images released by the orbiting instruments around Mars.

Mars 2001 Odyssey

Image Credit: NASA/JPL/Arizona State University



Left: Mars 2001 Odyssey, Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS), Mars Orbital Laser Altimeter (MOLA) Team

Mars Global Surveyor

Image Credit: Mars Global Surveyor, Malin Space Systems

About the Missions

By launching the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) spacecraft in November 1996, NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory began America's return to Mars after a 20-year absence. The Surveyor spacecraft is a rectangular-shaped box with wing-like projections extending from opposite sides. When fully loaded with propellant at the time of launch, the spacecraft weighed only 1,060-kilograms (2,342 pounds). The spacecraft travelled nearly 750 million kilometers (466 million miles) over the course of a 300-day cruise to reach Mars on September 11, 1997. During mapping operations, the spacecraft circled Mars once every 118 minutes at an average altitude of 378 kilometers (235 miles). After mapping finishes, the spacecraft will function as a communications satellite to relay data back to Earth from surface landers launched as part of future Mars missions.

2001 Mars Odyssey launched on April 7, 2001, and arrived at Mars on October 24, 2001. The mission is mapping the amount and distribution of chemical elements and minerals that make up the Martian surface. The spacecraft especially looks for hydrogen, most likely in the form of water ice, in the shallow subsurface of Mars. One of its three primary instruments is called THEMIS (Thermal Emission Imaging System), for determining the distribution of minerals, particularly those that can only form in the presence of water. It also provides the communications relay for U.S. and international landers, including missions in NASA's Mars Program, the Mars Exploration Rovers. The name "2001 Mars Odyssey" was selected as a tribute to the vision and spirit of space exploration as embodied in the works of renowned science fiction author Arthur C. Clarke.

Related Web Pages

NASA
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Malin Space Systems
Mars Global Surveyor
Arizona State THEMIS
Mars 2001 Odyssey

Note: Imagery: [2007-10-26]
Display Options: Send this story to a friend Printer friendly page

Friday, October 26, 2007
Login/Create an account | 1 Comment
Threshold
Comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
Re: (Score: 1)
by oMhzHACkdw on Feb 29, 2008 - 11:27 PM
(User info | Send a Message)
Undoubtedly this is that is s simple, yet because of the simplicity, it is usually skipped. The boundless preponderance of citizens do not analyze all of their choices and typically spend too much for credit. Finding <a href="http://www.bestleadinglenders.com/debt-consolidation/">Debt Consolidation</a> you could reduce severely the amount of cash you are sending out each month, yet still handling each of your economic obligations. This creates hem the perfect option that you have to pay off all of your debt and still manage to hold your finances within limits. Deciding a speedy or even immature decision can be quite infuriating as you are expected to discover yourself burdened with a card that carries atrocious interest fees, absurd yearly fees and no benefits to you. Choosing carefully is necessary seeing as a good card can encourage you to re-build your credit rather than tug you under. <a href="http://www.bestleadinglenders.com/credit-cards/">Credit Card Offers</a> decision can put you even more into a deficit and make it very troublesome for you to secure any credit in the future.


 
Credits Feedback Related Links Sitemap
FIRST GOV + Privacy, Security, Notices
+ Syndication Help
+ RSS Syndication
Home Page + Website Designed & Curated: Mobular Technologies
+ Chief Editor & Executive Producer: Helen Matsos
+ Daily Calendar Syndication