The opposition opposition of Mars, 1997
Tags: SPACE flight to Mars; INNER planets; DUST storms; WIND erosion; OUTER space -- Exploration; MARS (Planet) -- Exploration; MARS (Planet) -- Dust storms
Related Articles
- LIFE ON MARS. // Australian Geographic;Jul-Sep2003, Issue 71, p60
Provides information on the planet Mars and the search for the possibility of any life on the planet. Topography of the planet; Focus of the missions in the search for life; Missions that were partially or completely successful in their encounters with Mars.
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Focuses on space exploration of the planet Mars and the difficulties associated with viewing the planet from Earth. How Christiaan Huygens of the Netherlands observed the feature called Syrtis Major on the surface of Mars; Use of an eyepiece called a filar micrometer to make astronomical...
- Beagle 2 lives on. // New Scientist;12/20/2008, Vol. 199 Issue 2687, p5
The article presents the author's comments on why Beagle 2, the first Mars probe of Great Britain, failed. Why the mission failed remains a mystery. According to the author, like the Australian Mars Mission, the British mission also reiterates the foolhardiness of running space missions without...
- Fresher Water. Dornheim, Michael A. // Aviation Week & Space Technology;7/26/2004, Vol. 161 Issue 4, p41
New evidence points to an era of water on the Meridiani Planum region of Mars more recent than already found, based on continuing scouting by NASA's Opportunity space vehicle Mars Exploration Rover inside the Endurance crater. The Rover Spirit has also found new water signs at the Gusev Crater...
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- The great perihelic opposition of Mars, 2003: Part 1. McKim, Richard // Journal of the British Astronomical Association;Oct2010, Vol. 120 Issue 5, p280
The 2003 great perihelic opposition - marginally the closest for tens of thousands of years - fortuitously coincided with revolutionary new techniques of imaging and image processing. In Part I we show how several albedo changes resulting from the 2001 global storm persisted, notably the fading...
- Mission to Mars. Ezarik, Melissa // District Administration;Mar2004, Vol. 40 Issue 3, p80
Features the exploration of the planet Mars through different activities in the U.S. Collaboration between students, scientists, mission planners and educators from Arizona State University to view Mars using a visible wavelength camera; Promotion of robotics through a Lego League tournament...
- Lost but not forgotten. Cleere, Gail S. // Natural History;Jan94, Vol. 103 Issue 1, p70
Comments on the loss of Mars Observer in August 1993 after it had journeyed 450 million miles on its way to planet Mars. Consideration of the incident as a major setback for planetary scientists; Investigation of the Russian mission to Mars in 1995; Positions of the planets in January 1994;...
- Split Decision. Taverna, Michael A. // Aviation Week & Space Technology;10/19/2009, Vol. 171 Issue 15, p34
The article reports on a solution suggested by European Space Agency for a Mars lander initiative that would reconcile technological and science goals with available budgets. The sole mission of the agency to the red planet involves the Mars Express orbiter that was launched in 2003. The goal of...


