NASA Mars Rover Photos Draw Heavy Web Traffic
Posted on: Sunday, 4 January 2004, 06:00 CST
By ANDREW BRIDGES
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) -- A six-wheeled rover appeared on track Sunday to become the biggest Web draw in NASA history, just hours after it safely landed on Mars.
Traffic on Web sites operated by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration climbed steadily Sunday, as computer users around the world logged on to see the first images of Mars taken by the Spirit rover.
NASA recorded 109 million hits on its home page and related Web sites during the 24-hour period coinciding with the late Saturday landing of Spirit on Mars.
Nearly 17 hours after the successful landing, that figure had more than doubled, said Brian Dunbar, NASA's Internet services manager.
"As we put out more pictures, we'll continue to see that," Dunbar said of the steady growth in traffic. To support the onslaught, NASA is relying on 1,300 servers around the world to host Web pages containing details of the Spirit mission.
The loss of the space shuttle Columbia and its crew nearly a year ago and the landing of the Pathfinder spacecraft on Mars in 1997 each drew about 750 million hits.
By midday Sunday, less than a day into a mission expected to last 90 days, Spirit-related Web sites were already at roughly one-third that tally.
NASA recorded 47 million hits during the busiest 24-hour period of the Pathfinder mission, which sent the tiny Sojourner rover scurrying across the surface of Mars. At the time, it was among the busiest Web events ever on the then-nascent medium.
-----
Follow every step of the Mars Exploration Rover Mission with RedNova. Click here...
-----
On the Net:
Mars Exploration Rover Mission
More science, space, and technology from RedNova
Copyright © 2003 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The information contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.
Related Articles
- Proposed NASA Mission Could Explore Twisted Space Around Black Holes
- Spectrometer on NASA Orbiter Maps Minerals at Possible Mars Landing Sites
- Aerojet Propulsion Launches NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander Mission
- NASA Sends Rover Across Patch of Mars
- Opportunity knocks; NASA exults Back-to-back spot-on landings on Mars are huge boosts to the agency's credibility.
- NASA's Opportunity Rover Lands on Mars Tonight
- NASA Awaits Rover's Color Photos of Mars
- NASA hopes rovers produce: ; Spirit could send its first photos from Mars on Saturday
- Astronomer Analyzes Mars Rover Landing Sites
- NASA Rovers Slated to Examine Two Intriguing Sites on Mars
User Comments (0)


RSS Feeds