At a time when Mars is on everyone's sights, a Jet Propulsion Laboratory scientist gives us his insider's look at the future of manned missions to the Red Planet.
On July 4, 1997, the youngest and most unusual team of scientists ever assembled by NASA saved America's planetary space program. They were the Pathfinder team, whose little Sojourner spacecraft had just landed on the surface of Mars. Now, as new probes race toward the red planet, Brian Muirhead - a Pathfinder alumnus - offers a history of Mars exploration and charts its enticing future.
Few people have as deep an understanding of this odyssey as Muirhead does. Indeed, two of the probes that are scheduled to land on Mars this year are direct descendants of the Sojourner he helped build. In 'Going To Mars', he recounts his firsthand experience at the heart of an epic endeavor - from the successes of Pathfinder, through the tragic failures of 1999, up to the exciting Mars explorations that are unfolding right now. He also offers and exciting and authoritative projection of what the future will look like, as Russia, China, the European Space Agency, and NASA all plan manned missions.
'Going To Mars' is a classic personal story of underdogs succeeding against the odds in an adventure as awe-inspiring as the best science fiction.