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Human Stories of Mars
The successful landing of the NASA rover Spirit in Gusev Crater
on Mars has caught the world's imagination, but England's favourite
hard SF author, Stephen Baxter, thinks that our attention will soon
move on.
The
successful landing of the NASA rover Spirit in Gusev Crater on Mars
has caught the world's imagination. But our attention will soon
move on.
Even if there were human astronauts aboard, that would be so. The
lesson of Apollo's journeys to the Moon is that once the footprints
and flags have been planted, it is hard to motivate the public imagination.
'There's nothing on Mars but rocks,' we will say-just as was perceived,
even by some astronauts, about the Moon.
But
there is, however, already 'something there' on Mars, already human
stories to be told. Spirit is just the latest of a line of unmanned
spacecraft that have striven to reach the planet since 1962, and
relics of many of these missions survive. These unwitting monuments
could provide headline-grabbing targets for early expeditions.
The first human artefacts to be encountered at Mars may, in fact,
be in orbit rather than on the Martian surface. The first craft
successfully to enter orbit around another planet was NASA's Mariner
9, which reached Mars in November 1971. The first Soviet orbiters
were Mars 2 and 3, which also reached Mars in late 1971. Future
visitors may be intrigued by the technology; one Soviet probe actually
carried on board a chemical film-processing laboratory!
Mariner 9, as the first orbiter of all, would naturally attract
the greatest interest. As early as 1973 Carl Sagan was dreaming
of Mariner 9's retrieval (in The Cosmic Connection, 1974): 'Perhaps,
then, sometime around 1990, as a small side-trip in a grand manned-orbital
exploration of Mars, there will be a rendezvous with Mariner 9.
The old and battered spacecraft will be taken aboard a large manned
station and returned home - perhaps to be put in the Smithsonian
Institution ...' Sadly 1990 came and went without manned missions
to Mars, and time may be running out for Mariner; its orbit will
probably decay before 2020.
The earliest Martian pioneers of all were flyby probes. Mariner
4, which sent back 22 images from Mars in July 1965, to be followed
by Mariners 6 and 7 in 1969. These probes are surely still intact,
but are forever lost in their endless orbits around the sun.
The Soviets achieved the first landings on Mars, although they
were not complete successes. In 1971 the Mars 2 and 3 probes sent
landers to the southern hemisphere of Mars. The first appears to
have crashed, while Mars 3 landed successfully but fell silent only
20 seconds after the start of a TV scan. In 1973 the Mars 6 lander
returned data during its atmospheric entry, but its controllers
lost contact with it an agonising 0.3 seconds before touchdown.
The first American probes to land on the surface of Mars were the
spectacular Vikings, which reached Chryse and Utopia Planitia in
July and August 1976. The next American lander was the Pathfinder,
which reached the Ares Vallis in 1997. Imagine visiting these silent
sentinels! It would be fascinating to explore the Pathfinder rock
garden, and perhaps to resolve long-standing mysteries such as the
Vikings' ambiguous biological results.
There are technical goals too. The old craft are test-beds for
the behaviour of materials and systems like electrical insulation
and solar-power cells over decades in the Martian environment. And
many of the relics are situated in areas of exceptional scientific
interest, such as Mars 3 in the southern highlands, and the Pathfinder
in the Ares Vallis outflow region.
For safety, the Viking probes landed in relatively uninteresting
areas. But these landers were massive machines containing rare metals
and thousands of electronic parts. Perhaps the Vikings' first visitors
will seek them out as a scavengable lode of raw materials; the Vikings
may not have discovered life on Mars, but they may save human lives
in the future.
The most compelling scientific reason for visiting these probes
is the possibility that life from Earth may have been transmitted
to the Martian surface. Sterilisation procedures for spacecraft
dating back to the 1960s have to be questioned, especially for the
Soviets.
It would be unfortunate to have contaminated the planet - even
though, ironically, the survival of organisms over such long periods
would teach us a great deal about the viability of terrestrial life
on Mars. Perhaps on an inhabited Mars of the very far future, the
areas around ancient landers will be preserved as samples of primitive
Martian wilderness. And then there are the mysteries.
Two-thirds of all missions to Mars have failed. Of course there
is no 'Martian jinx'. It's just that getting to Mars is very hard:
one strike and you're out. The most frustrating thing of all for
wistful mission planners, who put years of their lives into such
projects, is that they often never get to learn what it was specifically
that went wrong. It would be intriguing to learn the fate of lost
craft such as the Mars Polar Lander at the south pole.
And it would be fascinating to learn at last what befell Beagle
2 as it fell towards Isidis Planitia on Christmas morning, 2003.
Stephen Baxter
The following material is being reprinted
with permission from the Del Rey Internet Newsletter (a big Ta to
Fleetwood Robbins and his crew). To subscribe to this free, monthly
e-newsletter, visit http://www.delreybooks.com
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OTHER CONTENT - February 2004
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The
Man Who Sold the Moon
Scots SF author Ken Macleod reckons that watching George W. Bush's recent speech
at NASA felt like science fiction coming true. But reservations ... well, he's
got a few.
(COMMENT)
Human
Stories of Mars
The successful landing of the NASA rover Spirit in Gusev Crater on Mars has
caught the world's imagination, but England's favourite hard SF author, Stephen
Baxter, thinks that our attention will soon move on.
(ARTICLES)
Sixty-Two
And A Half Miles High
Scottish SF writer Rod MacDonald on the X Prize Foundation and the strange British
dreams of a privately funded space race.
(ARTICLES)
Starfleet
In Motion
There's rather a lot of crew on a Federation starship. So apart from jogging
around a lot during a red alert, what the heck do they all do? Uncle Geoff muses
on the unlucky blue shirts who draw the Enterprise's toilet duty.
(ARTICLES)
Offworld
Report: Science Fiction & Fantasy - Feb '04
Authors Brian Aldiss, Lucius Shepard, Robert Sheckley, Stephen Baxter and Gene
Wolfe are interviewed, as is Kim Stanley Robinson, whose latest novel is somewhat
... wet. There's also new articles by Isaac Asimov, James Patrick Kelly and
John Clute.
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report: Weird Science - Feb '04
Plenty of articles on Mars missions and moon bases, a look back at the top scientific
advances of 2003, a new supersolid state of matter is discovered, and why the
Earth's magnetic field is fading fast.
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report: Comics, Manga and Anime - Feb '04
An Alan Moore retrospective, another look at Tank Girl, and why poor old Captain
America is now awakening in a parallel reality where the Nazis won WWII and
control the USA ... hmmm, a bit of politics, anyone?
(NEWS)
Offworld
Report: Roleplaying Games - Feb '04
Why presenting an RPG player with impossible choices helps makes for a great
game, a look at the secret lives of Wood Elves, and a free PDF rules download
for the 28mm figures wargame Cobalt-2 from Westwind.
(NEWS)
Paycheck
Sadly, our Frank discovers this film is one Paycheck not worth necessarily cashing
or depositing as Woo waters down his boisterously banal and generic thriller
all too convincingly.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Peter
Pan
Visually vibrant and mystical in its charming presentation, Franks happily discovers
Hogan's live action take on Peter Pan is an exquisite and sparkling celluloid
fable that just pops into life.
(FILM REVIEWS)
The
Return of the King
Inherently grand, vibrant, inviting and whimsically overwhelming, Jackson packs
an urgent sense of vitality into this third installment that will certainly
amaze those who were attentive to the previous colorful two TLoTR epics.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Peter
Pan
In this new movie, Mark discovers a feast for the eyes that he can recommend
with more conviction for parents than he can for the children who might see
it.
(FILM REVIEWS)
Sea
of Souls
Interviews with actors Bill Paterson and Archie Panjabi, stars of the BBC's
shortly-to-be-released new X Files-style television series, 'Sea of Souls'.
(INTERVIEWS)
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