Roving Mars: Spirit, Opportunity, and the Exploration of the Red Planet

by Steve Squyres

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An inside look at NASA's Mars Exploration Rover mission chronicles the evolution of the project, from its conception in 1995 to successful landing on the planet Mars in 2004, covering the politics, mistakes, and technological innovation involved.

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12 reviews
Steve Squyers, the Principle Investigator on the Spirit and Opportunity Mars rover missions, takes readers through the development of those missions, from early discussions about what to do next on Mars, through the planning, design and building of the rovers, to their scientific adventures on Mars up through their first shutdown for the Martian winter.

He goes into a lot of detail about all the various trials and tribulations involved: convincing people at NASA to do the two-rover mission, funding and scheduling problems (so many scheduling problems!), technical problems that cropped up both before and after launch... And, to be honest, many of those details are not quite as interesting as you might want them to be. But Squyres' account show more does give a good general sense of what it's like to scramble desperately to get a something like this off the ground and onto Mars, and it does leave me impressed that they got it to work at all, never mind as incredibly well as they did.

And there's no denying that both Spirit and Opportunity were immense successes. It's rather amusing to read Squyres words here, writing in 2004 or 2005 and anticipating the rovers' future: "Surely they'll die before long... within months, perhaps, or in a year or two at the outside. Even in the most optimistic scenario, it's hard to believe that Spirit can survive a second winter on Mars. And Opportunity, the good-luck rover in the warm and sunny climate of Meridiani Planum, will succumb, too, one way or another." Spirit, of course, ended up functioning for over six years on Mars, and good-luck rover Opportunity made it nearly fifteen. Fifteen! Not bad for machines whose nominal operational lifetime was supposed to be 90 days!

So, even though this book held my attention much, much better at some points than at others, the rovers themselves, and the folks behind them, have my complete and unflagging respect.
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½
Author has a cool job as science lead on the rover. Sounds friggin awesome! Loved hearing the stories and challenges. However, the writing was a bit uneven. Often he would allude to an issue or problem, but then skip right over it and not give any clarity on how it was solved or what happened. But really fun reading about such an historic science mission.
½
This is sort of about roving mars, but more about getting the rover TO mars- I can't say I was really all tha interested in NASA's politics when I picked this up but Squyres managed to hook me- was odd, I KNEW the rovers got there, but he somehow managed to make me doubt it. Enjoyable read anyhow.
Steve Squyres was the Principal Investigator for the Spirit and Opportunity missions and this is his memoir of how the idea came into being, how they were designed and built, launched and mission on Mars for the first 150 days. It's fairly lively as his excitement bleeds over but lets face it, the byzantine bureaucracy of NASA can be boring no matter how well written. But you learn what goes on and shows how close the mission came to being canceled many times. The engineering challenges were sometimes interesting. The science aspect was boring for me since the discovery of water (or evidence of) is now well known and no great surprise. Overall this is a detailed but interesting look into the people, processes, engineering, technology show more and science behind probably the most famous NASA mission of the 2000's, as told from the perspective of the lead investigator whose idea it was from the start. show less
½
An excellent book! I thoroughly enjoyed reading about all of the work that went into building the rovers and sending them to Mars. I also thought that the author did a good job of finding the right balance of science/tech talk and layman's terms. The book is educational but also approachable to those of us with average intelligence. I found myself rooting for the two rovers as they went to work on our neighboring planet.
The author is the PI for the science payloads on Spirit & Opportunity. This is a very very fun book. It is full of technical details & provides detailed discussion of each glitch & what they did to get around it. Some of the technical info gets long, but it is fun to see how they kept going against the odds. It is incredible once S & O start running around taking pictures, doing analysis, and finding indications that there might once have been water on Mars.
This is like Andy Weir's "The Martian," but it's all true! A whole series of problems arise, and Squyres and the JPL team have to engineer their way through them. I loved it.

> But back during the earliest days of the project Glenn realized that someday we might need the flexibility to deal with a broken flash file system, and he put INIT_CRIPPLED in the system and left it there. And when the anomaly hit, it saved the mission.

> it’s the Spirit guys who’ve consistently felt shortchanged by events ever since we landed. We rejoice when Spirit touches down safely, and then Opportunity rolls to a stop right in front of a stack of sedimentary rocks. We rejoice when Spirit drives 50 meters in a sol, and then Opportunity reels off 140. We show more rejoice when Spirit gets to Bonneville and finds a pretty view, and then Opportunity gets to Endurance and finds layered cliffs of sediments

> The Pathfinder system was a wonderful way to land on Mars, but it was definitely not rover-shaped on the inside. Using the Pathfinder lander would mean that we’d have to find a way to fold our rover up into a tetrahedron, and then do the same trick again in reverse once we landed.

> The original plan for the parachutes had been the same as for the airbags: use the Pathfinder chute. But by the time Adam showed up on the project, that idea was already dead. The lander had grown so much that there was no point in even testing the Pathfinder design to see if it might work. Simple calculations were enough to prove that the Pathfinder chute was too small to keep us from crashing

> Something wasn’t right. They flew an identical chute the next day, under perfect conditions again. Again the chute exploded. They had a problem. … when the forces that want to pop the chute open are repeatedly overcome by other forces that flap it closed again. Squidding had never been seen in a parachute like ours before, not in thirty years of testing. But now this chute, the one that Adam was betting would take us to Mars, was squidding … Adam found a tape measure, and sure enough, the vent hole in the middle of the parachute was too big. Something hadn’t been communicated quite right between JPL and the parachute vendor. … The chute still opened too slowly. Even more frustrating, measurements afterward showed that the vent hole was still bigger than he’d wanted it to be. Miscommunication and aerodynamics were conspiring against him

> But in 2005, the next chance to go to Mars, the geometry was terrible. If we launched in 2005, we’d arrive at Mars when the planet was far from the Sun, and when it was almost as far away from Earth as it ever gets. Solar power would be bad, and communication to Earth would be awful. The mission was so bad in 2005 that it wasn’t clear that it made sense to fly it at all.

> But that doesn’t mean that the rocks of the Columbia Hills aren’t older still. In fact, the water that once soaked the hills may date from some truly ancient epoch that has nothing whatsoever to do with the lake that brought us to Gusev Crater.

> At Meridiani, there’s no question that we found what we came looking for, and more. The rocks there were laid down in liquid water, in an environment that surely must have been suitable for some primitive forms of life.
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Common Knowledge

Important places
Mars (planet)
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
Science & Nature, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, History
DDC/MDS
523.43Natural sciences & mathematicsAstronomyThe Solar SystemPlanets, asteroids and trans-Neptunian objectsMars
LCC
QB641 .S678ScienceAstronomyAstronomyDescriptive astronomySolar system
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Reviews
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Languages
English
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Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
7
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5