After a 36-week, 154-million-mile journey capped by a highly complex but flawlessly executed landing sequence, the rover Curiosity spent its first full day on Mars today at the dawn of a two-year $2.5 billion mission designed to determine if the Red Planet ever supported life and if it can do so in the future.
With excitement from Sunday night’s successful landing still lingering in the air at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, mission managers were getting down to the work of getting the rover ramped up for its long job ahead.