August 02, 2013

A look at the challenges and achievements of Curiosity's first year on Mars


TRANSCRIPT

(Music)

Adam Stelzner:
That great things take many people working together to make them happen is one of the fantastic things of human existence.

Rob Manning:
Not only we’ve driven the rover, we’ve moved its arm, put it all through its paces. But it’s been in a thermal vacuum chamber, been kept very cold, parts of it have been in a centrifuge.

We’ve done drop tests, pull tests, drive tests, load tests, stress tests. Just amazing amount of testing this vehicle has gone through.

We’ve tried every way of operating the vehicle using the software. Literally, thousands and thousands of hours of software testing. It’s been just an amazing several years really of constant testing and development.

Finding problems and fixing those problems and going on to the next problem.

I think she’s ready to go.

LC this is the LD on channel 1.

LC you have permission to launch Roger, proceeding with the count

T-10, 9, 8,7,6,5,4,3,2,1 (Engines roar)

Am I confident that she’s going to go and she’s going to be successful? Absolutely.

It’s gonna go and she’ll be good.

We should have pressure deploy around Mach 1.7 Parachute has deployed.

We are decelerating.

(Applause)

Heat shield has separated we have found the ground Standing by for back shell separation

We are on powered flight

We’re at altitude of one kilometer descending. Standing by for skycrane

Skycrane has started Touch down confirmed. We’re safe on Mars.

(Cheering)

Time to see where Curiosity will take us.

(Cheering)

Charles Elachi:
What a fantastic demonstration of what our nation and our agency can do.
I could only think of the words of Teddy Roosevelt as I was sitting there.
“It is far better to dare mighty things even though we might fail, than to stay in the twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat.” And the team brought us victory today.

Charles Bolden:
Today, right now, the wheels of Curiosity have begun to blaze the trail for human footprints on Mars. This is an amazing achievement.

John Holdren:
Well, today on Mars history was made on Earth. The successful landing of Curiosity marks what is really an unprecedented technological tour de force.
It will stand as an American point of pride far into the future.

Pete Theisinger:
We’ve got a long mission ahead of us and because of that and the capabilities of this rover, we have this possibility for just monumental science accomplishments.

Michael Meyer:
Within two months the team found ancient riverbed, evidence of flowing water.

John Grotzinger:
We have found a habitable environment that is so benign and supportive of life that probably if this water was around and you had been on the planet, you would’ve been able to drink it.

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