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OverviewIt's the age-old question: is there life on Mars? This is the story of the Mars Exploration Rover mission, the most ambitious attempt yet to explore the surface of another planet and the first great voyage of exploration of the 21rst century. If so much as a fossilised microbe is found, it will change fundamentally the way we view our place in the universe. Squyres is the charismatic scientist behind the Mars mission. Considered the leading authority on all things Mars, he uses his firsthand knowledge to bring this historic mission in perspective. Features a 16-page photo insert. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Steven SquyresPublisher: Hyperion Imprint: Hyperion Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 28.00cm Weight: 0.752kg ISBN: 9781401301491ISBN 10: 1401301495 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 01 August 2005 Recommended Age: From 13 years Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: No Longer Our Product Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsDeep background on the nuts, bolts and sticky-wicket politics of building a payload for NASA's Mars program and watching it go to work. On national TV, handling questions on the spectacularly successful twin Rovers that landed in January 2004 and are now mining Mars for scientific data, Squyres seems like a normal, confident guy. Yet the Rover mission's top scientist writes candidly here about being obsessed with interplanetary exploration since high school, and about the string of stumbles and bumbles that preceded his team's winning the contract for the $400-million payload comprising the Rovers and their incredibly complex package of instrumentation, sensors, probes, etc. As a geologist analyzing data from NASA fly-by planetary programs going back to 1978, the author always had his mind on Mars. Was there ever water there? How much? When? Squyres brings the reader up to speed on the logic behind the quest: if water existed, then it could have fostered a life-forming process paralleling that of Earth's, evidence of which would be far less disturbed by seismic upheavals or atmospheric weathering and thus invaluable to science. Pursuing answers, Squyres spent 11 years putting together teams to write unsuccessful payload proposals for NASA. On an early venture, the misreading of a diagram led to a camera design that did not fit the space allocated. With one terrible boneheaded mistake, he writes, we had thrown away five years of work. The eventual win for the Rovers Spirit and Opportunity changed all that. Squyres details days and weeks of Mars observations ( I love this rock, but it's starting to drive me nuts ) as tantalizing hints of water presence accrue. Geological implications come fast and furious, with enough human perspectives to boost future manned Mars exploration. A fascinating, passionate insider's account. (Kirkus Reviews) Author InformationSteve Squyres is known in the media as Mr. Mars. Having seen firsthand NASA's previous attempts at missions to Mars, Squyres has the unique ability to put this pivotal mission into historical context. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |