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Images: Lunar crash course; interplanetary visitors

NASA is planning to crash a water-seeking probe into the moon while ESA visits Venus. Plus, news from Mars.
By Bill Detwiler, Contributor
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1 of 8 Bill Detwiler/ZDNET

Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter

NASA announced plans to crash the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter into the moon, twice, in 2008. The primary mission of the $73 million, 2-ton probe, shown in this illustration, will be to search for water that could be used for manned missions.

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Crash landing

When it reaches the moon, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter will break into two stages. The first stage will crash into a crater, and the remaining satellite will study the plume and fly through it to detect its composition.

When its studies are complete, the second stage will crash into the moon and be analyzed by other lunar orbiters and Earth-based oberservatories. The craft will also perform lunar mapping duties.

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Venus probe

This is an artist's impression of the Venus Express entering Venus' orbit on Tuesday. In this phase of the mission, the most challenging since launch, the spacecraft's main engine burns for about 50 minutes to reduce its speed as it approaches Venus. This enables the Venus Express to be captured by the planet's gravitation.

"Everything went as it was planned, clearly, without difficulties," said Gaele Winters, the European Space Agency's director of operations. "This is a great success."

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Venus Express control

The Venus Express flight control team follows the orbit insertion manoeuvres in the main control room at ESA's Spacecraft Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany.

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Spirit's last ride?

Despite a broken wheel, the Mars Rover Spirit is crawling across the Martian landscape to find haven for the winter. Spirit is currently navigating through rough terrain to reach a hillside that gives enough sunlight to keep it running over the dark Martian winter. Currently, Spirit can operate about an hour a day over flat ground.

Spirit is still working. This photo shows where the right wheels of Spirit were grinding in the soil, prompting NASA to backtrack the rover and attempt another route.

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Saturn spots

Meanwhile on Saturn: This image from the Cassini probe released Tuesday shows the horizontal cloud bands that rotate at different speeds across the giant planet. The vortices--counterparts to the east-west flowing streams--are prominent and can last for months or years.

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Mars in hi-res color

This is the first color image of Mars from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, taken during a turn round the planet on March 24.

The color is not as the human eye would see it, but was generated by combining data from green and near-infrared color bandpass detectors on the camera with black-and-white images (from red-bandpass detectors). The image also has been processed to enhance subtle color variations.

That the southern half of the scene is brighter and bluer than the northern half is perhaps due to early-morning fog in the atmosphere, NASA said. Large-scale streaks in the northern half are the result of wind on surface materials. The blankets of material ejected from the many small, fresh craters are generally brighter and redder than the surrounding surface, but a few are darker and less red. In the bottom half of the image is a redder color in the rough areas, where wind and sublimation of water or carbon dioxide ice have partially eroded patches of smooth-textured deposits. Click to see more photos from NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

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Mars Odyssey

NASA celebrates the fifth year of the Mars Odyssey spacecraft which is still orbiting the Red Planet. The satellite not only is collecting scientific data, it also is serving as a communications relay between NASA's two Mars rovers and Earth. Here is a recent photo from Mars Odyssey.

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