Sunday night, it's back to Mars. This time, it's NASA's MAVEN spacecraft. The probe will fire its six main engines, slowing down enough so it can be captured by the gravity of Mars and go into orbit.
You can describe the point of the MAVEN mission in one simple sentence: "The MAVEN Mission is about understanding the history of the climate on Mars," says Bruce Jakoski of the University of Colorado in Boulder, who has been working on this mission for more than a decade.
At a news conference last week, Jakoski explained that something happened in the past billion years or so that changed the climate on Mars dramatically.
Jakoski says when you when you look at aerial pictures of the Martian surface, you see unmistakable signs that Mars was once upon a time a fairly wet planet.
"We see evidence for lakes, for river channels, a lot of evidence for liquid water that required a very different climate from the one we have today," Jakoski says.
Because today, the surface of Mars is bone dry. So the question is: Where did the water go? Jakoski says there are basically only two possibilities: One, it could have sunk into the ground; or two, evaporated and gone up into the atmosphere. MAVEN will study option number two.
"We're going to be exploring an aspect of the Martian atmosphere and upper atmosphere that really hasn't been explored by any spacecraft to date," Jakoski says.
There's not much left of the Martian atmosphere these days. Scientists think a stream of charged particles coming from the Sun called the solar wind is largely responsible for knocking a lot of the atmosphere — including water vapor — out into space.
Earth's atmosphere is also blasted by the solar wind, but Earth's magnetic field deflects most of the particles in the wind around the planet. It seems Mars also once had a magnetic field protecting it, but sometime in the past few billion years that magnetic field went away; probably because the planet's core solidified. Without that shield the solar wind was free to do its damage.
Jakoski says MAVEN will study how solar wind and other factors are affecting the planet's atmosphere today.
"We measure these things today, even though the processes we're interested in operated billions of years ago," he says. "By looking today we can understand the processes and how they operated, and extrapolate backwards in time."
And that understanding should help explain how major climate changes can occur here on Earth as well.
But before MAVEN can make its measurements, its rockets have to fire on time and for the right length of time. Guy Beutelschies, MAVEN's program manager for Lockheed Martin, the company that built the spacecraft, says mission managers have already sent the spacecraft it's rocket firing sequence.
"The commands will execute according to the onboard clock," Guy Beutelschies says. "So there's actually nothing that the teams needs to do, the spacecraft will execute all of those on its own."
Even though the rockets are set to start firing at 9:37 p.m., but mission managers won't know right away if that happened.
"Keep in mind it takes twelve and a half minutes for the radio signals to travel all the way from Mars to the Earth," Beutelschies says. "So we won't actually see the start of the burn until approximately 9:50."
The rocket burn should put MAVEN into an orbit that will take it 35 hours to make one revolution around Mars. Beutelschies says scientists ultimately want a much shorter orbit — about 4.5 hours — but he says several more rocket firings are necessary to achieve that.
"It'll be a six-week period where we will be getting the spacecraft configured and ready to start science mapping," he says.
And then Bruce Jakoski can start getting the data from the Martian atmosphere he's been waiting more than a decade for.
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