
Celebration After a Perfect Landing
Members of the Mars Science Laboratory team in the MSL Mission Support
Area react after learning the the Curiosity rover has landed safely on
Mars.
NASA/JPL
PASADENA, Calif. -- Long minutes of thunderous applause greeted the
managers and engineers who paraded into an auditorium here Sunday night,
triumphant after a perfect landing on another world. The Mars rover
Curiosity sent a picture from the Martian surface just moments after its
self-piloted descent and airdrop, and everyone assembled at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory could not help but cheer. It's a huge moment for
NASA, which delivered the rover over budget and two years late -- but
delivered it, and beautifully.
Nothing is harder than landing on Mars, and no one does it better
than the United States, said Charles Bolden, NASA's administrator. In a
few moments of proud flag-waving, Bolden, White House science adviser
John Holdren and others trumpeted the space agency's momentous
achievement.
"Tonight, there are at least 4 countries, and I won't name them, who
are on Mars. And they're on Mars because they went with the United
States," Bolden said. "Our leadership is going to make this world
better."
The landing comes at a transition time for NASA and space exploration
generally -- the agency retired its storied space shuttles a year ago,
and its Mars program has been in question amid ongoing federal budget
debates. A successful landing carries much more than the promise of
groundbreaking science -- it's a moment fraught with enormous pressure,
weighing on the agency's prestige, and this was evident in all the
speeches and words of congratulations Sunday night.

The First Image Returned by Mars Rover Curiosity: Includes a bit of wheel
"It will stand as an American point of pride far into the future," Holdren said of Curiosity.
Obama himself said via Twitter that the U.S. had made history once
again. "I congratulate and thank all the men and women of NASA who made
this remarkable accomplishment a reality," the tweet said.
So many people followed the landing on Twitter and through NASA
channels that the space agency's websites briefly crashed in the moments
after the landing. Members of the public (and media) who were hoping to
access Curiosity's first images via a special NASA site were instead
greeted with error messages. It was a frustrating glitch, but it was
also strong evidence of the public's fascination with the robot
geologist and all it represents.
Charles Elachi, JPL's director, said he hoped the landing would
inspire new generations of engineers and spark their curiosity. It's
what NASA is about.
"This movie cost you less than seven bucks per American citizen, and
look at the excitement we have," he said, to further applause.
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