Donald Savage 
Headquarters, Washington                    January 12, 2004
(Phone: 202/358-1547)

Guy Webster 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
(Phone: 818/354-5011)

RELEASE: 04-020

SPIRIT'S SURROUNDINGS BECKON IN COLOR PANORAMA

     The first 360-degree color view from NASA's Spirit Mars 
Exploration Rover presents a range of tempting targets from 
nearby rocks to hills on the horizon.

"The whole panorama is there before us," said rover science-
team member Dr. Michael Malin of Malin Space Science Systems, 
San Diego. "It's a great opening to the next stage of our 
mission."

Spirit's flight team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory 
(JPL), Pasadena, Calif., continues making progress toward 
getting the rover off its lander platform, but expected no 
sooner than early Thursday morning. "We're about to kick the 
baby bird out of its nest," said JPL's Kevin Burke, lead 
mechanical engineer for the rover's egress off the lander.

The color panorama is a mosaic stitched from 225 frames taken 
by Spirit's panoramic camera, or Pancam. It spans 75 frames 
across, three frames tall, with color information from shots 
through three different filters. The images were calibrated 
at Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., home institution for Dr. 
Jim Bell, Pancam team leader.

Malin said, "Seeing the panorama totally assembled instead of 
in individual pieces gives a much greater appreciation for 
the position of things and helps in developing a sense of 
direction. I find it easier to visualize where I am on Mars 
when I can look at different directions in one view. For a 
field geologist, it's exactly the kind of thing you want to 
look at to understand where you are."

Another new image product from Spirit shows a patch of 
intriguing soil near the lander in greater detail than an 
earlier view of the same area. Scientists have dubbed the 
patch "Magic Carpet" for how some soil behaved when scraped 
by a retracting airbag.

"It has been detached and folded like a piece of carpet 
sliding across the floor," said science-team member Dr. John 
Grotzinger of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 
Cambridge.

Spirit's next step in preparing to drive onto the surface of 
Mars is to sever its final connection with the lander 
platform by firing a cable cutter, which Burke described as 
"an explosive guillotine." The planned sequence after that is 
a turn in place of 115 degrees clockwise, completed in three 
steps over the next two days. If no obstacles are seen from 
images taken partway through that turn, drive-off is planned 
toward the northwestern compass point of 286 degrees.

Spirit landed on Mars Jan. 3 (EST) after a seven-month 
journey. Its task is to spend the next three months exploring 
rocks and soil for clues about whether the past environment 
in Gusev Crater was ever watery and suitable to sustain life.
Spirit's twin Mars Exploration Rover, Opportunity, will reach 
Mars Jan. 25 (EST) to begin a similar examination of a site 
on a broad plain called Meridiani Planum, on the opposite 
side of the planet from Gusev Crater.

NASA JPL, a division of the California Institute of 
Technology, Pasadena, manages the Mars Exploration Rover 
project for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington.
For information about NASA and the Mars mission on the 
Internet, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

Additional information about the project is available on the 
Internet at:

http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov 

Mission information is also available from Cornell 
University, at:

http://athena.cornell.edu 

-end-



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