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UM-Bot
user posted image rNASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is approaching Mars and, if maneuvers go well, will join three other Earth spacecraft in orbit around the planet. About 4:25 p.m. EST Friday the $720 million spacecraft will reduce its speed by 2,200 mph, and begin to orbit Mars, The Washington Post reported Monday. If all goes well -- 21 Mars missions have ended in disaster -- after six months of course and speed corrections, it will settle into a "science orbit" between 199 and 158 miles above the Martian surface, joining three currently operating satellites -- two from NASA and one from the European Space Agency, the Post said. There it will remain for two years, using inspecting the planet. After that time it will be sent into a higher orbit to become a communications relay satellite. The Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter has been operating flawlessly since its launch in August.

"But we are getting into the dangerous portion of the mission," says Jim Graf of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. "A lot can go wrong, and if we don't succeed, we will fly right by the planet."

user posted image View: Full Article | Source: Physorg
Waspie_Dwarf
Well it's made it into orbit OK, now we just have to wait 6 months whilst it adjusts it orbit.
Triad
It is interesting to note so many disasters have occurred in relation to Mars but so many successes are in places that are much further away......?

Any thoughts?
Waspie_Dwarf
A large portion of these disasters have been attempted landings, with the exception of Huygens on Titan, the only other place we have attempted landing is Venus. The deep space missions to Jupiter, Saturn and beyond have all been fly-by or orbiter missions, these are safer than an attempted landing.
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