Wataalamu wa sayansi wa NASA wakishangilia baada ya Curiosity kuzungumza na dunia kwamba imetua salama ISHARA imeshafika duniani kut...
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| Wataalamu wa sayansi wa NASA wakishangilia baada ya Curiosity kuzungumza na dunia kwamba imetua salama |
ISHARA imeshafika
duniani kutoka Mars kwamba Curiosity ametua salama katika ardhi ya Mars.
Curiosity, roboti
ya maabara yenye uzito wa tani moja alitua karibu na Ikweta kwenye kreta kubwa
majira ya 06:32 BST (05:32 GMT).
Kazi kubwa ya
roboti huyo ni kutafuta ushahidi kwamba sayari hiyo inayofanana na dunia, kwa
wakati fulani ilikuwa na maisha.
Ishara kwamba
imetua salama imeifikia dunia kupitia chombo cha Shirika la Anga za juu la
Marekani (NASA) cha Odyssey ambacho kipo jirani na sayari hiyo nyekundu.
Kutua salama kwa
chombo hicho kumeleta raha kubwa kwa wanasayansi ambao wamekuwa wakifanyakazi
usiku na mchana kwa miaka 10 kufanikisha safari ya kilomita milioni 570 kutoka
duniani.
Curiosity aliingia
Mars akiwa anakimbia kiasi cha kilomita 20,000 kwa saa, spidi ambayo ni kali na
ya kuogofya na ililazimika kufanya
manuva ya kuiwezesha kukamata ardhi ya Mars kwa spidi ya 0.6m/s.
The success was
greeted with a roar of approval here at mission control at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
(JPL) in Pasadena, California.
Within minutes,
the robot was returning its first low-resolution images - showing us its wheels
and views to the horizon. A first colour image of Curiosity's surroundings
should be returned in the next couple of days.
Engineers and
scientists who have worked on this project for the best part of 10 years
punched the air and hugged each other.
The rover's
Twitter feed announced: "I'm safely on the surface of Mars. GALE CRATER I
AM IN YOU!!!"
The descent
through the atmosphere after a 570-million-km journey from Earth had been
billed as the "seven minutes of terror" - the time it would take to
complete a series of high-risk, automated manoeuvres that would slow the rover
from an entry speed of 20,000km/h to allow its wheels to set down softly.
The Curiosity team
had to wait 13 tense minutes for the signals from Odyssey and the lander to
make their way back to Earth.
Data suggested the
vehicle had hit the surface of Mars at a gentle 0.6m/s.
"It looked at
least with my eyeball that we landed in a nice flat spot. Beautiful," said
Adam Steltzner, who led the descent operation.
The JPL director,
Charles Elachi, added: "Tonight was a great drama that was played. I felt
like I was in an adventure movie but I kept telling myself this is real; and
what a fantastic demonstration of what our nation and our agency can do."
That sense of
national pride was picked up by US President Barack Obama's chief science
adviser, John Holdren.
"Landing the
Mars Science Laboratory rover Curiosity on the Red Planet was by any measure
the most challenging mission ever attempted in the history of planetary
exploration," he said.
"And if
anyone has been harbouring doubts about the status of US leadership in space,
well there's a one tonne automobile-sized piece of American ingenuity sitting
on the surface of the Red Planet right now."
This is the fourth
rover Nasa has put on Mars, but its scale and sophistication dwarf all previous
projects.
Its biggest
instrument alone is nearly four times the mass of the very first robot rover
deployed on the planet back in 1997.
Curiosity has been
sent to investigate the central mountain inside Gale Crater that is more than
5km high.
It will climb the
rise, and, as it does so, study rocks that were laid down billions of years ago
in the presence of liquid water.
The vehicle will
be scouring Mount Sharp in the crater's centre looking for evidence that past
environments could have favoured microbial life.
It is a region
that Curiosity project scientist John Grotzinger told the BBC's Horizon
programme reads like a "book about the early environmental history of
Mars".
Scientists warn,
however, that this will be a slow mission - Curiosity is in no hurry.
For one thing, the
rover has a plutonium battery that should give it far greater longevity than
the solar-panelled power systems fitted to previous vehicles.
"People have
got to realise this mission will be different," commented Steve Squyres,
the lead scientist of the Opportunity and Spirit rovers put on the surface in
2004.
"When we
landed we only thought we'd get 30 sols (Martian days) on the surface, so we
had to hit the ground running. Curiosity has plenty of time," he told the
BBC.
Initially, the
rover is funded for two Earth years of operations. But many expect this mission
to roll and roll for perhaps a decade or more.


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