I am totally hooked on Scott Maxwell's new Mars Exploration Rover blog
Scott Maxwell is one of those many guys (and gals) at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory who rarely gets his name in the news but who is absolutely indispensable to the success of a space mission. I don't know what his official title is, but whatever it is, it's not as good as the colloquial name given to his position: Rover Driver. Yes, Scott drives the Mars Exploration Rovers for a living. I'd say he looks pretty pleased with his place in life, wouldn't you? I'll quote space poet Stuart Atkinson's description of him: he is "a very lively, exuberant, always smiling, great galloping puppy of a Mars geek."
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Scott Maxwell, Rover Driver
On the occasion of the fifth anniversary of Spirit's landing, Scott has begun a
new blog,
"Mars and Me." It seems that, in order to keep in touch with his wife while he
was working
on Mars time (and while she was sticking with Earth time), he kept a detailed
journal of the
daily events on the missions. Now, five years later, he's posting his notes, at
approximately the same rate at which the sols passed on Mars. There's one entry
for every
24 hours and 40 minutes or so. We're on sol 3 already, and I am totally hooked;
tosol's
notes spend a lot of time recalling the discussions the mission was involved in
over what
to name the geographic landmarks at Spirit's landing site, while yestersol, he
was
lamenting the fact that he spent the sol writing code instead of working
directly on Spirit's
first motions on Mars. It's a view of the mission that's the same, yet
different, to the one I
had for the first two months of operations. I was with the scientists, while he
is an
engineer. Unusually for space missions, the cooperation between the science and
engineering sides of the rover missions was very tight; it had to be, because
every slow
turn of the rovers' wheels and reach of the rovers' arms had to be programmed
and
executed by rover drivers like Scott, in sequence with the science operations
that the
science team was trying to perform. I'll be waiting impatiently for each day's
entry, and
hope that Scott can keep it up!
In today's entry he also talked about how the science team was trying to figure
out where
exactly Spirit had landed. I have a couple of snapshots from sol 2, of everyone
crowding
around giant printouts on the table...what a crush of scientists that was!
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Searching for Spirit's Landing Site
After the images came down, the race was on to figure out where the rover had
landed.
Scientists gathered around a large table in the middle of the Science Assessment
Room to
look at orbital images and try to figure out landmarks visible in Spirit's first
panorama. In
this picture: Tom Wdowiak (beard), Michael Sims (behind him), Bob Anderson (arms
crossed). Credit: The Planetary Society