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Bill's Broadsides
POSTED:Wed, March 26, 2008 @ 9:49PM
Rover gets a reprieveEarlier this week, we ran a short item from the Associated Press saying NASA was poised to shut down one of its two exploratory rovers on the planet Mars. NASA said it would be necessary to allow for a budget-tightening move.The space agency needs to save $4 million this year and $8 million next year, partly to pay for a new Mars mission in 2009 that is supposed to be even more ambitious. The plan is to send a larger rover the size of a sport-utility vehicle (a BIG one, not one of those dinky Ford Eclairs) to Mars at a cost of about $200 million. Now, I am relieved to hear the leadership at NASA has changed its mind and will let both rovers continue their missions. Spirit and Opportunity are a scrappy pair: When NASA plopped them down on the Red Planet's surface in 2004, the scientists hoped the solar-powered machines would continue to function at least three months. More than three years after their warranties expired, they're still rolling around, collecting data and connecting us to a world hundreds of millions of miles away. NASA has had a lot of tough luck in the last few years, so I'm glad they decided not to stop a mission that has not been a tragic, pyroclastic failure. Are these Mars projects worth the hundreds of millions we spend on them? Considering we're spending more than $330 million per day on the war in Iraq -- or about $11 billion a month, with the total tab since the 2003 invasion topping half a trillion dollars -- I'd say it seems like a worthwhile investment. (I won't even get into the war's toll of human lives -- you've seen the headlines.) The rovers did confirm that Mars once had water on its surface, which was a huge leap forward in the human race's knowledge of our neighboring planet. I'm no scientist, however, so I can't quantify the value of all the information gleaned from the Mars rovers. You can see for yourself what they're up to, and decide for yourself whether it's worthwhile) at either of these Web sites: http://marsrovers.nasa.gov http://space.newscientist.com/channel/space-tech/mars-rovers
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Bill Ackerbauer![]() Assistant City Editor A Johnstown native, Bill Ackerbauer began his journalism career in 1996 as a beat reporter with The Leader-Herald. He returned to the Glove Cities in 2000 after working in various editorial positions with newspapers in Saratoga Springs, Schenectady and New Hampshire. He has degrees in English literature from Union College and the University at Albany, where he teaches courses in journalism. In addition to writing, editing and teaching, Bill is an aficionado of old-time folk and blues music and performs locally on acoustic guitar, banjo and other traditional instruments. He lives in Johnstown with his wife, Jennifer, and their two sons, Liam and Carter.
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