Rover Opportunity Lands on Mars
Posted on: Sunday, 25 January 2004, 06:00 CST
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - NASA's Opportunity rover successfully landed on Mars late Saturday, arriving at the Red Planet exactly three weeks after its identical twin set down.
"We're on Mars everybody," mission scientist Wayne Lee declared as fellow members monitoring the landing at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory burst into wild applause.
The unmanned, six-wheeled rover landed at 9:05 p.m. PST in Meridiani Planum, NASA said. The smooth, flat plain lies 6,600 miles and halfway around the planet from where its twin, Spirit, set down on Jan. 3.
Together, the twin rovers make up a single $820 million mission to determine if Mars ever was a wetter world capable of sustaining life.
Since arriving, Spirit has developed serious problems, cutting off what had been a steady flow of pictures and other scientific data.
Related Articles
- On Trip to Mars, NASA Must Rethink Death
- Rover Kicks Sand Away on Mars, NASA Says
- Twin Mars Rovers Still Making Progress
- 'Milestone in Humankind's Search for Life' ; Science Magazine Hails Twin Mars Rovers As Breakthrough of*'04
- Life could have thrived on water-filled Mars, Nasa reveals
- NASA works to resolve bug that threatens twin Mars rovers
- Scientists show their home movie from Mars ; NASA's 3-D panorama draws rave reviews
- `LIFE' ON MARS ; NASA joy after lander sends back pictures of the barren wastelandthat is the Red Planet
- US launches first of twin Mars rovers
- US launches first of twin Mars rovers, XINHUA
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds