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Watch NASA's Curiosity Land On Mars in Times Square; Or Boulder, Or Denver. Your Choice.

NASA
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JPL-Caltech

NASA's Curiosity Rover will be touching down on the Red Planet Sunday, August 5th at 11:15 p.m. MDT. If you happen to be in Times Square you can catch mission coverage on the big screens. Closer to Colorado, maybe it's time for a pajama party.

Credit NASA
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NASA
Artist's rendering of the space crane manuever.

Why the excitement? Two words: space crane. This isn't just another robot rover landing on another planet. As NPR's Joe Palca reported last August:

John Grotzinger is principal investigator for the new rover. He says it's not going to bounce down to Mars the way the rovers Spirit and Opportunity did. "The Mars exploration rovers basically crash-landed — softly with air bags," he says. "Mars Science Laboratory is so large that we need an active propulsion system." In other words, a rocket-powered soft landing. It's a new system that involves a space crane that lowers the rover to the ground on a tether.

The Curiosity weighs 1,982 pounds and is about the size of small car, or a Ford truck. It's an engineering marvel to land something that size on a distant planet that's only 154 million miles away.

If you haven't seen it yet, be sure to watch NASA's Seven Minutes of Terror. It can be considered the action movie description of the space crane and the landing.

http://youtu.be/Ki_Af_o9Q9s

NASA announced that live mission coverage of the landing will be shown on the Toshiba Vision big screens in New York's Times Square. There are some events in Colorado to consider if you won't be on the East Coast this weekend:

If an event isn't in the cards, you can follow the live mission coverage via NASA's live stream with or without commentary or you can follow the rover on Twitter.

I’m not a Colorado native (did you know that "I'm from Missouri" means "I'm skeptical of the matter and not easily convinced?") but I have lived here for most of my life and couldn't imagine leaving. After graduating from Colorado State University, I did what everyone wants to do; I moved to the mountains and skied, hiked, and hid from responsibility! Our listeners in the mountains may know me from my time in Steamboat Springs and Vail or as the voice of the Battle Mountain Huskies Hockey team in Vail.
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  • With the darkest days of the Martian winter now over, NASA took its Opportunity Mars Rover for a drive this week. The rover had been stationary while its solar panels lacked enough sunlight to power its batteries.
  • NASA launched the Mars Science Laboratory from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on Saturday. The MSL is five times heavier than the rovers currently on Mars and has twice as many scientific instruments. It will take nine months for the spacecraft to reach the Red Planet, and there's plenty of things for it to do before then.
  • NASA has relied on a special kind of fuel, called plutonium-238, to power robotic space missions for five decades. And some scientists have found that it sometimes seems easier to chart a course across the solar system than to navigate the budget process inside Washington, D.C.
  • The Mars rover Spirit conked out in May, but its twin, the rover Opportunity, is still functioning and has just arrived at a spot NASA's dubbed Spirit Point. Guest host John Ydstie speaks with geologist John Grant about his decades working on the Mars Rover project.