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Projects: Space Information

The Planetary Report

Volume XXIV, Number 3, May/June 2004

May / June 2004
Credit: JPL / NASA / Space Science Institute


On the Cover

Cassini-Huygens, too close to image a full view of Saturn, took this picture on April 16, 2004 from a distance of 38.5 million kilometers (nearly 24 million miles). Contrast has been enhanced to make features in the atmosphere easier to see. The bright dot to the left of the south pole is Saturn’s moon Mimas.

From The Editor

Next year, The Planetary Society will celebrate its 25th anniversary—a quarter-century of helping to make space exploration happen. The first issue of The Planetary Report featured Voyager 1’s encounter with Saturn, and in the time since then, we’ve covered missions from Venus to Neptune and reported on plans to take us from Mercury to the stars.

Not all those years were rich in discoveries. From 1977 to 1989, NASA launched no new spacecraft, while Europe, the Soviet Union, and Japan explored the solar system only as far out as Venus. Sometimes we had to be creative in filling these pages.

But today, we’re swamped with new discoveries as Spirit and Opportunity investigate plains and craters of the Red Planet while Mars Express explores from orbit, along with Mars Global Surveyor and Mars Odyssey.

Cassini has reached Saturn and is now exploring that ringed world. In January, Huygens penetrates Titan’s atmosphere. Smart-1 is on its way to the Moon, and Genesis is on its way home with samples of the solar wind.

This may well be the richest year since the Society’s founding for sheer volume of discoveries—and now the task is to fit it all into only 24 pages. There’s more than enough to keep us busy for the next 25 years.

— Charlene M. Anderson

Features

The Proof Is In: Ancient Water on Mars
Mike Carr literally wrote the book about Water on Mars, so when the rest of the media were filled with quotations about water on Mars from exultant scientists and triumphant NASA officials, we turned to Mike to get some perspective on why they were so excited. Since Mariner 9 in 1971, scientists have had evidence that liquid water once flowed across the surface of Mars. The Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, found what they were expected to find, yet Mike uses the word “breakthrough” to describe their discoveries. In this article, he explains why he, too, is excited by the rovers’ findings—and looks forward to someday seeing robotic and human paleontologists searching among the rocks on Mars for traces of fossil life.

Cassini and Huygens Arrive at Saturn: A Grand Adventure Is Beginning
The lord of the rings has a new satellite—the Cassini spacecraft is now orbiting Saturn. Early next year, the Huygens probe will enter the dense, hydrocarbon-rich atmosphere of Titan. Together, these two spacecraft will enable us to know, in depth, a planetary system that we have known only from three brief flyby missions. To give our members a detailed preview of what to expect, we asked the project scientist, Dennis Matson, and deputy project scientist, Linda Spilker, to describe their mission. Both are veterans of the great Voyager mission and look forward to completing the reconnaissance of the beautiful and enigmatic Saturnian system.

DEPARTMENTS

Members’ Dialogue
We Make It Happen!
World Watch
Questions and Answers
Society News

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