The seven minutes of terror
were over. Mission Control at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena finally had the news: Curiosity had landed as gently as a
feather on the surface of Mars, every step of the complex landing
process proceeding with unparalleled perfection. Even the weather conditions on the red planet were ideal for the landing. It was a spectacular accomplishment.
This was a huge victory for NASA and JPL, but much of the enthusiasm
got lost in the much greater excitement over the Olympics and negativity
of the multiple mass murders of recent weeks. A few weeks ago, a panorama of Mars
exploded onto the internet, filling the public with awe over the alien
yet strangely familiar landscape. President Obama’s lauding of the great
accomplishment of this mission was not met with the rapt attention of
the American public the way our great space explorations of the past
were. The urge to explore is still out there – in all of us – but why is
it that Curiosity’s landing was so overshadowed by everything else in
the news?
Read more at The Inclusive.
Showing posts with label mars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mars. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Monday, July 9, 2012
Past Our Horizons
Science fiction as a genre has existed almost as long as storytelling
itself. Jules Verne wrote of travel to the moon in the eighteen
hundreds. The Princess of Mars, upon which Disney’s recent film John Carter of Mars
was based, was published in the early part of the twentieth century.
Even in Ancient Greece there was sci-fi: Lucian of Samasota wrote of creatures that resided on the sun and the moon
in the second century C.E. That’s right – nearly two thousand years
ago, someone wrote a book about aliens. Philosophy, science, and
literature have always sought to reach beyond our planet, and the
general public devours stories that combine this super-terrestrial
striving with the very human desire for adventure and exploration.
Last week, NASA released a panoramic photo taken by Opportunity, the sole remaining functioning Mars rover since Spirit fell silent in August 2010. (The new Mars rover, Curiosity, will not land until this August). This beautiful image (which you can click to make massively large) was seen worldwide – the alien landscapes of Mars brought home to Earth. This is the power of space exploration. Children dream of becoming astronauts. Consumers in cafés discuss the possibility of alien life. Dreams of exploring other planets, other galaxies, and even other universes enthrall the public. It is possibly the single greatest way to popularize science as a whole.
Read more at The Inclusive.
Last week, NASA released a panoramic photo taken by Opportunity, the sole remaining functioning Mars rover since Spirit fell silent in August 2010. (The new Mars rover, Curiosity, will not land until this August). This beautiful image (which you can click to make massively large) was seen worldwide – the alien landscapes of Mars brought home to Earth. This is the power of space exploration. Children dream of becoming astronauts. Consumers in cafés discuss the possibility of alien life. Dreams of exploring other planets, other galaxies, and even other universes enthrall the public. It is possibly the single greatest way to popularize science as a whole.
Read more at The Inclusive.
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