Mars Rover Curiosity Featured in MAD Magazine


  NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity is exploring some new terrain — the pages of MAD magazine.
  
  The year-end issue of MAD, out Dec. 18, spotlights Curiosity in its fold-in, a feature that shifts from an obvious image to a hidden one when the page is folded. The rover shares space with the so-called “Tan Mom,” an American woman who gained notoriety earlier this year for her sun-scorched features (and for allegedly taking her five-year-old daughter to a tanning salon).
  
  “The main picture is a picture of the Mars rover, and somehow it magically turns into Tan Mom,” said artist Al Jaffee, who has drawn every MAD fold-in since the venerable humor magazine introduced the back-page feature in 1964 — more than 400 in all.

Mars Rover Curiosity Featured in MAD Magazine

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity is exploring some new terrain — the pages of MAD magazine.

The year-end issue of MAD, out Dec. 18, spotlights Curiosity in its fold-in, a feature that shifts from an obvious image to a hidden one when the page is folded. The rover shares space with the so-called “Tan Mom,” an American woman who gained notoriety earlier this year for her sun-scorched features (and for allegedly taking her five-year-old daughter to a tanning salon).

“The main picture is a picture of the Mars rover, and somehow it magically turns into Tan Mom,” said artist Al Jaffee, who has drawn every MAD fold-in since the venerable humor magazine introduced the back-page feature in 1964 — more than 400 in all.

ianbrooks:

Hand-Cut Curiosity Sculpture by Arnold Martin / Absurd Realities

The saddest realization I ever had in life was that I’ll never be able to have my very own Curiosity Rover to ride and take on walks and talk about science stuff with. Apparently NASA won’t build you a personal one, which makes me wonder what exactly they spend all those years doing. $225 USD will get you a smaller, less science-y version at etsy but it can still help you explore the alien terrain of your desktop.

(via: io9)


I squealed.

samaralex:

Navid Baraty captured the wonder of the Times Square crowds as they watched the Curiosity rover landing. 


second photo is pretty much my face when ever the full moon is out.

mothernaturenetwork:

Mars rover Curiosity celebrates its first birthdayOn Nov. 26, 2011, the rover began an 8-month journey to Mars that ended on Aug. 5, 2012.

You go Curiosity!

mothernaturenetwork:

Mars rover Curiosity celebrates its first birthday
On Nov. 26, 2011, the rover began an 8-month journey to Mars that ended on Aug. 5, 2012.


You go Curiosity!

thescienceofreality:

First X-ray Vision of Martian Soil.

“This graphic shows results of the first analysis of Martian soil by the Chemistry and Mineralogy (CheMin) experiment on NASA’s Curiosity rover. The image reveals the presence of crystalline feldspar, pyroxenes and olivine mixed with some amorphous (non-crystalline) material. The soil sample, taken from a wind-blown deposit within Gale Crater, where the rover landed, is similar to volcanic soils in Hawaii.”

Continue…

thescienceofreality:

First X-ray Vision of Martian Soil.


“This graphic shows results of the first analysis of Martian soil by the Chemistry and Mineralogy (CheMin) experiment on NASA’s Curiosity rover. The image reveals the presence of crystalline feldspar, pyroxenes and olivine mixed with some amorphous (non-crystalline) material. The soil sample, taken from a wind-blown deposit within Gale Crater, where the rover landed, is similar to volcanic soils in Hawaii.”


Continue…


  Curiosity Rover’s Secret Historic Breakthrough? Speculation Centers on Organic Molecules
  
  Much of the internet is buzzing over upcoming “big news” from NASA’s Curiosity rover, but the space agency’s scientists are keeping quiet about the details.
  
  The report comes by way of the rover’s principal investigator, geologist John Grotzinger of Caltech, who said that Curiosity has uncovered exciting new results from a sample of Martian soil recently scooped up and placed in the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument.
  
  “This data is gonna be one for the history books. It’s looking really good,” Grotzinger told NPR in an segment published Nov. 20. Curiosity’s SAM instrument contains a vast array of tools that can vaporize soil and rocks to analyze them and measure the abundances of certain light elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen – chemicals typically associated with life.
  
  The mystery will be revealed shortly, though. Grotzinger told Wired through e-mail that NASA would hold a press conference about the results during the 2012 American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco from Dec. 3 to 7. Because it’s so potentially earth-shaking, Grotzinger said the team remains cautious and is checking and double-checking their results. But while NASA is refusing to discuss the findings with anyone outside the team, especially reporters, other scientists are free to speculate.
  
  “If it’s going in the history books, organic material is what I expect,” says planetary scientist Peter Smith from the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. Smith is formerly the principal investigator on a previous Mars mission, the Phoenix lander, which touched down at the Martian North Pole in 2008. “It may be just a hint, but even a hint would be exciting.”
  
  Smith added that he is not in contact with anyone from the Curiosity team about their results and offered his assessment as an informed outside researcher.
  
  Organic molecules are those that contain carbon and are potential indicators of life. During its mission, Phoenix heated a sample of soil to search for organics but these efforts were stymied by the presence of perchlorates, chemical salts that sit in the Martian soil. Perchlorates react to heat and destroy any complex organic molecules, leaving only carbon dioxide, which is abundant in the Martian atmosphere.
  
  The Viking landers, which explored opposite sides of Mars in the late 1970s, also conducted a search for organic molecules and came up empty. For decades afterward, astronomers considered Mars to be a dead planet, with conditions not very conducive to life. After the results from Phoenix, scientists realized that perchlorates were probably messing with those earlier findings as well, and could account for their negative outcome.
  
  Curiosity’s suite of laboratory instruments are able to slowly heat a sample in a way that doesn’t trigger the perchlorates. They can also weigh any molecules present, determining how much carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen they are made from. Simple organic compounds wouldn’t be completely shocking, said Smith, since these probably come from meteorites originating in the asteroid belt and probably are around on present-day Mars. But they would indicate that the building blocks for life are present on Mars and might only need the addition of water, which Mars had in the past, in order to produce organisms.
  
  “If they found signatures of a very complex organic type, that would be astounding,” said Smith, since they would likely be leftovers from complex life forms that once roamed Mars. But the odds of finding such a startling result in a sample of sand scooped from a random dune are “very, very low,” Smith said.
  
  Smith cautioned against speculating too much, since rumors have a way of spreading rapidly when it comes to any discussion of potential life on Mars. During his tenure on the Phoenix mission, his team was evaluating the interesting perchlorate results, which they kept secret during analysis. Rumors got out and then became worse when some unsubstantiated report claimed a member of his team meeting was meeting with the White House.
  
  “When you keep things secret, people start thinking all kinds of crazy things,” he said.

Curiosity Rover’s Secret Historic Breakthrough? Speculation Centers on Organic Molecules

Much of the internet is buzzing over upcoming “big news” from NASA’s Curiosity rover, but the space agency’s scientists are keeping quiet about the details.

The report comes by way of the rover’s principal investigator, geologist John Grotzinger of Caltech, who said that Curiosity has uncovered exciting new results from a sample of Martian soil recently scooped up and placed in the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument.

“This data is gonna be one for the history books. It’s looking really good,” Grotzinger told NPR in an segment published Nov. 20. Curiosity’s SAM instrument contains a vast array of tools that can vaporize soil and rocks to analyze them and measure the abundances of certain light elements such as carbon, oxygen, and nitrogen – chemicals typically associated with life.

The mystery will be revealed shortly, though. Grotzinger told Wired through e-mail that NASA would hold a press conference about the results during the 2012 American Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco from Dec. 3 to 7. Because it’s so potentially earth-shaking, Grotzinger said the team remains cautious and is checking and double-checking their results. But while NASA is refusing to discuss the findings with anyone outside the team, especially reporters, other scientists are free to speculate.

“If it’s going in the history books, organic material is what I expect,” says planetary scientist Peter Smith from the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. Smith is formerly the principal investigator on a previous Mars mission, the Phoenix lander, which touched down at the Martian North Pole in 2008. “It may be just a hint, but even a hint would be exciting.”

Smith added that he is not in contact with anyone from the Curiosity team about their results and offered his assessment as an informed outside researcher.

Organic molecules are those that contain carbon and are potential indicators of life. During its mission, Phoenix heated a sample of soil to search for organics but these efforts were stymied by the presence of perchlorates, chemical salts that sit in the Martian soil. Perchlorates react to heat and destroy any complex organic molecules, leaving only carbon dioxide, which is abundant in the Martian atmosphere.

The Viking landers, which explored opposite sides of Mars in the late 1970s, also conducted a search for organic molecules and came up empty. For decades afterward, astronomers considered Mars to be a dead planet, with conditions not very conducive to life. After the results from Phoenix, scientists realized that perchlorates were probably messing with those earlier findings as well, and could account for their negative outcome.

Curiosity’s suite of laboratory instruments are able to slowly heat a sample in a way that doesn’t trigger the perchlorates. They can also weigh any molecules present, determining how much carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen they are made from. Simple organic compounds wouldn’t be completely shocking, said Smith, since these probably come from meteorites originating in the asteroid belt and probably are around on present-day Mars. But they would indicate that the building blocks for life are present on Mars and might only need the addition of water, which Mars had in the past, in order to produce organisms.

“If they found signatures of a very complex organic type, that would be astounding,” said Smith, since they would likely be leftovers from complex life forms that once roamed Mars. But the odds of finding such a startling result in a sample of sand scooped from a random dune are “very, very low,” Smith said.

Smith cautioned against speculating too much, since rumors have a way of spreading rapidly when it comes to any discussion of potential life on Mars. During his tenure on the Phoenix mission, his team was evaluating the interesting perchlorate results, which they kept secret during analysis. Rumors got out and then became worse when some unsubstantiated report claimed a member of his team meeting was meeting with the White House.

“When you keep things secret, people start thinking all kinds of crazy things,” he said.

NASA Pumpkin Carver Creates Curiosity Space-O’-Lantern

Liz Warren’s 2012 “space-o’-lantern” features Curiosity rover. She writes: “Bobak Ferdowski is going to be in Houston late next week and I think it would be fun to give him the pumpkin!”
Credit: Liz Warren

NASA Pumpkin Carver Creates Curiosity Space-O’-Lantern

Liz Warren’s 2012 “space-o’-lantern” features Curiosity rover. She writes: “Bobak Ferdowski is going to be in Houston late next week and I think it would be fun to give him the pumpkin!” Credit: Liz Warren

fullerenes:

Frederik Ruysch (1744) Epistola anatomica, problematica nona. Amsterdam. Plate X.
Ruysch (1638-1731) was a Dutch anatomist famous for his anatomical preparations — that is, organs and body parts preserved using wax, spirits, and other embalming materials. He kept his specific recipe and technique a secret, since he gained a good deal of commercial success with his preparations. In fact, the Russian tsar Peter the Great eventually bought Ruysch’s entire anatomical collection (or his “cabinet of curiosities”) in 1717.
This illustration depicts his method of wax injection, which he used to preserve and solidify blood vessels. Using this method, he was able to map out the lymphatic system and prove that these vessels have valves, just like blood vessels.

fullerenes:

Frederik Ruysch (1744) Epistola anatomica, problematica nona. Amsterdam. Plate X.

Ruysch (1638-1731) was a Dutch anatomist famous for his anatomical preparations — that is, organs and body parts preserved using wax, spirits, and other embalming materials. He kept his specific recipe and technique a secret, since he gained a good deal of commercial success with his preparations. In fact, the Russian tsar Peter the Great eventually bought Ruysch’s entire anatomical collection (or his “cabinet of curiosities”) in 1717.

This illustration depicts his method of wax injection, which he used to preserve and solidify blood vessels. Using this method, he was able to map out the lymphatic system and prove that these vessels have valves, just like blood vessels.

discoverynews:

 Could Mars Rover Curiosity Come Home?

As soon as NASA’s newest six-wheeled rover touched down on the Martian surface, the world was hooked. Those JPL geniuses not only managed to land a robot the size of a small SUV on another planet, they captured the imagination of millions.
But with all this love and fondness for a rover called ‘Curiosity’ came the inevitable question: Will she come home?
My answer has always been: Of course not! How the heck could that huge robot be shipped back to Earth? It didn’t land on Mars with an open return ticket and it certainly didn’t bring its own return rocket booster!
But it turns out that my “obvious” answer may have been a little hasty. NASA’s Mars mission chief thinks a return trip might be an option for future explorers.

find out how…

discoverynews:

Could Mars Rover Curiosity Come Home?

As soon as NASA’s newest six-wheeled rover touched down on the Martian surface, the world was hooked. Those JPL geniuses not only managed to land a robot the size of a small SUV on another planet, they captured the imagination of millions.

But with all this love and fondness for a rover called ‘Curiosity’ came the inevitable question: Will she come home?

My answer has always been: Of course not! How the heck could that huge robot be shipped back to Earth? It didn’t land on Mars with an open return ticket and it certainly didn’t bring its own return rocket booster!

But it turns out that my “obvious” answer may have been a little hasty. NASA’s Mars mission chief thinks a return trip might be an option for future explorers.

find out how…

Where Curiosity May Roam

This image is part of a series of color strips being acquired by HiRISE to support future traverse planning by the Curiosity rover.

Where Curiosity May Roam

This image is part of a series of color strips being acquired by HiRISE to support future traverse planning by the Curiosity rover.

Curiosity Rover Touches 1st Martian Rock, Makes Longest Drive Yet

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity reached out and touched a Martian rock with its huge robotic arm for the first time, then took off on its longest Red Planet drive to date.

Curiosity spent the past several days investigating a strange pyramid-shaped stone named “Jake Matijevic,” testing out some of the gear at the end of its 7-foot-long (2.1 meters) arm. These tools include the Alpha Particle X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS), which measures elemental composition, and the Mars Hand Lens Imager close-up camera, or MAHLI.

The rover performed these initial “contact science” operations on Saturday and Sunday (Sept. 22 and 23), researchers said. Photos snapped on those days show Curiosity’s arm sidled up against “Jake Matijevic,” with the arm’s turret obscuring most of the 16-inch-tall (40 centimeters) rock.

Full Article

Curiosity Rover Touches 1st Martian Rock, Makes Longest Drive Yet

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity reached out and touched a Martian rock with its huge robotic arm for the first time, then took off on its longest Red Planet drive to date.

Curiosity spent the past several days investigating a strange pyramid-shaped stone named “Jake Matijevic,” testing out some of the gear at the end of its 7-foot-long (2.1 meters) arm. These tools include the Alpha Particle X-Ray Spectrometer (APXS), which measures elemental composition, and the Mars Hand Lens Imager close-up camera, or MAHLI.

The rover performed these initial “contact science” operations on Saturday and Sunday (Sept. 22 and 23), researchers said. Photos snapped on those days show Curiosity’s arm sidled up against “Jake Matijevic,” with the arm’s turret obscuring most of the 16-inch-tall (40 centimeters) rock.

Full Article

This image was taken by Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) onboard NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity on Sol 45 (2012-09-21 10:42:17 UTC).

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Malin Space Science Systems

This image was taken by Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) onboard NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity on Sol 45 (2012-09-21 10:42:17 UTC).

Image Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Malin Space Science Systems

Partial Solar Eclipse on Mars Photographed by Curiosity Rover

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has snapped stunning shots of a brief partial solar eclipse on the Red Planet, capturing images of the tiny Martian moon Phobos crossing the face of the sun.

Image: NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity snapped this picture of the Martian moon Phobos transiting the sun on Sept. 13, 2012 Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Malin Space Science Systems

Curiosity took the photos of Phobos on Thursday (Sept. 13), roughly five weeks after landing inside the Red Planet’s huge Gale Crater on Aug. 5.

The images, taken with Curiosity’s Mast Camera (Mastcam), look very different than the solar eclipses on Earth that we’re used to. That’s because our planet’s moon is about 2,160 miles across (3,476 kilometers), big enough to block out the solar disk entirely when Earth, moon and sun are perfectly aligned. Even partial eclipses of the sun by our moon are impressive celestial events.

Partial Solar Eclipse on Mars Photographed by Curiosity Rover

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity has snapped stunning shots of a brief partial solar eclipse on the Red Planet, capturing images of the tiny Martian moon Phobos crossing the face of the sun.

Image: NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity snapped this picture of the Martian moon Phobos transiting the sun on Sept. 13, 2012 Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Malin Space Science Systems

Curiosity took the photos of Phobos on Thursday (Sept. 13), roughly five weeks after landing inside the Red Planet’s huge Gale Crater on Aug. 5.

The images, taken with Curiosity’s Mast Camera (Mastcam), look very different than the solar eclipses on Earth that we’re used to. That’s because our planet’s moon is about 2,160 miles across (3,476 kilometers), big enough to block out the solar disk entirely when Earth, moon and sun are perfectly aligned. Even partial eclipses of the sun by our moon are impressive celestial events.

Mars Rover Curiosity ‘Flawlessly’ Acing Health Checks

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity is on the verge of passing a rigorous month-long health checkup with flying colors, scientists announced today (Sept. 12).

Since Curiosity landed inside Mars’ Gale Crater on Aug. 5, researchers have been systematically checking out the rover’s systems and its 10 science instruments to make sure they’re all in good working condition. Those inspections have gone very well and should be finished by the end of Curiosity’s next Martian day, or sol, mission team members said today.

“The success so far of these activities has been outstanding,” said Curiosity mission manager Jennifer Trosper, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. “Throughout every phase of the checkouts, Curiosity has performed almost flawlessly.”

Mars Rover Curiosity ‘Flawlessly’ Acing Health Checks

NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity is on the verge of passing a rigorous month-long health checkup with flying colors, scientists announced today (Sept. 12).

Since Curiosity landed inside Mars’ Gale Crater on Aug. 5, researchers have been systematically checking out the rover’s systems and its 10 science instruments to make sure they’re all in good working condition. Those inspections have gone very well and should be finished by the end of Curiosity’s next Martian day, or sol, mission team members said today.

“The success so far of these activities has been outstanding,” said Curiosity mission manager Jennifer Trosper, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. “Throughout every phase of the checkouts, Curiosity has performed almost flawlessly.”