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List of All Features
26-Nov-2003
Marsapalooza And Mars Education Programs: Inspiring The World One Student At A Time
"Exploration is the life blood of a civilization," said Dr. Rice. "It provides new frontiers and challenges that stimulate both its people and technology. Exploration is crucial for a civilization's survival. Read More...
14-Nov-2003
NASA's M-Team: Not Your Average "Rock" Stars
The six scientists and engineers who are the "rock" stars of the Marsapalooza tour are living evidence that these days, the word "scientist" no longer brings to mind the word "geek." Read More...
30-May-2003
Wheels in the Sky
When Chris Voorhees thinks about wheels, he doesn't imagine the rubber hitting the road, but aluminum crawling across the surface of Mars. In fact, he has already seen some of his handiwork making its way across the red planet. Read More...
14-Jan-2003
Mars and the Final Four
The launch dates for the two Mars Exploration Rovers are getting closer and so is the need to pick a place for them to land. Read More...
12-Nov-2002
Mars Rover Takes Baby Steps
Like any travelers worth their frequent flyer miles, the twin rovers of the Mars Exploration Rover Mission must prepare for a long journey. Unlike airline passengers, however, the rovers won't have an attentive flight crew to tend to their needs. Instead, the twins face a daunting 460 million kilometer (286 million mile) voyage to Mars. Read More...
25-Mar-2002
How to Land Softly on a Hard Planet
Just one of the many problems in landing on another planet, after it's been determined where to land and the method to get there, is landing safely. For NASA'a Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a safe landing is "the name of the game," as engineers work to prepare two rovers for the journey to Mars. Read More...
06-Mar-2002
Student Navigators Drive Mars Rover Testbed
Intense discussion, various viewpoints, chairs being scooted around, slightly raised voices, and eventual consensus: just a typical meeting of scientists in the lab; in this case a rover lab at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. Read More...
16-Jan-2002
Steve Alfery - Dealing for Rover Wheeling on Mars
No banks, stock exchanges or other financial institutions are known to exist on Mars. So how does a business and economics graduate of the University of California at Santa Barbara end up in a key role on a mission to the red planet? Read More...
Team Member
Role
Mission
Steve Alfery
acquisitions representative
2003 Mars Exploration Rover Mission
27-Dec-2001
Project Scientist for the Mars Exploration Rover Mission
Dr. Joy Crisp of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory devotes her time working to unearth answers about Mars' geology. Tucked away in her prefab trailer office in the middle of the JPL campus, she enables the efforts of the team of scientists whose instruments will be onboard two rovers destined to land on Mars in 2004. Read More...
Team Member
Role
Mission
Dr. Joy Crisp
geologist
2003 Mars Exploration Rover Mission
Dec-2001
Where to Land on Mars?
Of all the places to land on Mars, where in the world should twin rovers go? This question has been on the front burner of discussion with Mars scientists who have the arduous task of selecting a site where it is safe to land. Read More...
Dec-2001
If Santa Were a Martian
If Santa Claus were a martian, he'd be in for one bumpy ride.

That's the assessment of navigators and engineers controlling the flight of NASA's 2001 Mars Odyssey spacecraft as it presently flies four times daily above the north polar region of Mars. Read More...
19-Nov-2001
Machinists to the Stars
It's the middle of the night at JPL, and the usual dozens of deer are on their nightly foraging rounds across the campus. Mars is up. So is the Moon. And so are nine machinists in the lab's high-precision fabrication shop, working the second shift that ends between midnight and 3 a.m. Read More...
Team Member
Role
Mission
Gary Keel
night shift supervisor fabrication shop
2003 Mars Exploration Rover
Mike Mangano
mechanical systems project element manager
2003 Mars Exploration Rover
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