This Week in Science History - The Mars Odyssey MissionSarah Castor-PerryOn the 7th of April 2001, the Mars Odyssey spacecraft was launched to orbit and survey Mars, with 4 main aims – to search for the presence of water, to characterise the climate and the geology and to determine the radiation levels and if a human mission there would be safe. It reached the planet in October 2001 and started officially taking measurements in February 2002. Whilst not designed to directly look for life on Mars, the instruments would determine whether conditions are now or were at some time in the past suitable for life to arise.
On board Odyssey are 3 main instruments – THEMIS, a Thermal Emission Imaging System that detects visible and infrared light emitted from the planet’s surface, a Gamma Ray Spectrometer designed to detect the presence of gases, minerals and other chemicals, and MARIE, the Mars Radiation Experiment, that was to check levels of radiation on the planet to assess danger to astronauts should a manned mission ever go to Mars.
It has also been used as a relay for the Mars landers Spirit, Opportunity and Phoenix – helping to send back information from them to NASA and even helped to choose a landing site for the Phoenix lander in 2008, by monitoring surface and atmospheric conditions. Unfortunately, MARIE, the radiation detector on Odyssey, was destroyed by a solar flare in 2003, but it had managed to send back enough information to suggest that a manned mission to Mars would be safe. Both orbiting and landing missions to Mars have continued in the 21st Century, and in 2008, the Phoenix lander confirmed the presence of water ice just as Odyssey had predicted.
Since the Odyssey mission, NASA has discovered evidence of seasonal methane on Mars. This methane has two potential sources – volcanic activity or underground life. The idea that Mars might support life has been hugely popular in fiction, with examples like the aliens in Orson Welles’ War of the Worlds, so the real life search for Martian life has really captured the public imagination...
April 2009 |
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