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A tale of two landers: NASA's Spirit phones home, but Europe's Beagle 2 remains mum on Mars.


NASA's latest emissary EMISSARY. One who is sent from one power or government into another nation for the purpose of spreading false rumors and to cause alarm. He differs from a spy. (q.v.)  to Mars, the rover called Spirit, triggered cheers and high fives among mission members when it sent its first signals home soon after touching down on the Red Planet on Jan. 3. In stark contrast, somber but hopeful scientists with the European Space Agency European Space Agency (ESA), multinational agency dedicated to the promotion, for exclusively peaceful purposes, of cooperation among European states in space research and technology.  haven't yet heard from their Beagle 2 lander, which dropped to the Martian surface on Dec. 24, 2003.

Spirit's lander descended into the 150-kilometer-wide Gusev crater
This article is about the crater on Mars. There is also Gusev crater on Earth.

For other uses of "Gusev", see Gusev (disambiguation).

Gusev Crater is a crater on the planet Mars and is located at 175.4°E 14.6°S.
 about 15[degrees] south of the Martian equator. The flat, dusty locale (see panoramic view below) is littered with rocks up to 20 centimeters across. The scientists expect that terrain to be easily traversable once the 174-kilogram, golf cart-size rover begins moving during the upcoming week.

Meanwhile, NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 scientists are performing equipment checks and analyzing images to develop Spirit's itinerary. Air temperatures at the landing site range between -70[degrees]C and 0[degrees]C, and the images that have reached Earth suggest windy weather: Many rocks appear to have been sandblasted smooth.

Mission planners already have spied one potential target for the rover. About 12 meters from the lander, there's a shallow, 9-meter-diameter depression, which the scientists have dubbed Sleepy Hollow Sleepy Hollow

out-of-the-way, old-world village on Hudson. [Am. Lit.: “Legend of Sleepy Hollow” in Benét, 575]

See : Isolation
. It might be a wind-carved basin or a small, dust-filled impact crater.

Mission members are also intrigued by an apparent crust on the landing site's soil that was scuffed by the lander's airbags. Cameras onboard NASA's Viking probes, which landed on Mars at other sites in 1976, observed similar crusts.

A NASA craft carrying Spirit's twin rover, named Opportunity, is on track for a Jan. 24 landing near the Martian equator but on the opposite side of the planet from Gusev crater.

Beagle 2, a part of the European Space Agency's Mars Express mission, dropped to the planet's surface just as Christmas arrived in Europe. However, repeated attempts to contact the lander by the mission's Mars-orbiting mother ship have gone unanswered. Attempts at communication via NASA's Odyssey and Mars Global Surveyor The Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) was a US spacecraft developed by NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and launched November 1996. It began the United States's return to Mars after a 20-year absence.  orbiters have been unsuccessful as well.

The 33-kg Beagle 2, about the diameter of a bicycle wheel, is designed to deploy its four solar panels and a package of scientific instruments by unfolding like a flower. If Beagle 2 landed near a large rock, some solar panels may not be fully deployed and its radio signals may accordingly be weakened, say mission scientists. As of press time, the Mars Express orbiter's only low-altitude pass over Beagle 2's landing site hadn't picked up a signal from the lander.

If Beagle 2 remains silent during future low-level passes, it may have fallen afoul of a jinx jinx  
n.
1. A person or thing that is believed to bring bad luck.

2. A condition or period of bad luck that appears to have been caused by a specific person or thing.

tr.v.
 that seems to afflict af·flict  
tr.v. af·flict·ed, af·flict·ing, af·flicts
To inflict grievous physical or mental suffering on.



[Middle English afflighten, from afflight,
 most missions to Mars. Overall, 23 of the 34 probes previously sent to the Red Planet have failed.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Perkins, S.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:4E
Date:Jan 10, 2004
Words:452
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