Fortuna's Favor Rites

...when you have once put your neck beneath the yoke of Fortune, you must with steadfast heart bear whatever comes to pass within her realm... Ah! dull-witted mortal, if Fortune begin to stay still, she is no longer Fortune.

Serving irreverent virgins and margarita tea since 2002.
Or was that virgin tea and irreverent margaritas?

Always a bit more tart than sweet.

(Home)

Oct 13

Science Saturday: Steve Squyres Inspires

Celebrating Contact With Spirit

Remember Carl Sagan? Remember how he popularized astronomy with his Cosmos series, made science understandable, and talked to us in a friendly, "c'mere, I wanna show you this cool stuff I found!" kinda way? Well, Carl is gone now, but he's got a successor, and if you don't know him by now, you haven't been living on the right planet. He's been on Mars, where have you been? :)

Not literally, of course, but Steve Squyres of Cornell University is the lead scientist for the Mars Exploration Rover operations. More than that, he's the guy that dreamed them up. I'd seen Steve (I can call you Steve, right?) a few times in news briefs, but a few years ago, I watched the Nova program on the Mars landings, Mars Dead or Alive, and I became enamored. Not crush-like, but... just a general, "this guy is so cool" kind of enamored. The same way that Carl Sagan wound his way into our collective science-consciousness, so too has Steve Squyres. The guy is brilliant, he has a sense of humor, he's... excited by all this stuff. And he excites us, too, subtly giving us a foundation for understanding what he's talking about, teaching us, and generating an enthusiasm that's like a ski-run, racing to a goal, and leaving us breathless in anticipation of the next one. He can't wait to find stuff out, and we can't either, by the time he's had his way with us.

Listen to his 2004 interview with Terry Gross for Fresh Aire for an idea of what I'm talking about.

From 2004: "I am flabbergasted. I am astonished. I am blown away. Opportunity has touched down in an alien and bizarre landscape.I still don't know what we're looking at."

He doesn't know. Wow! Have you ever met a scientist (other than Sagan) that could say that, and leave you thinking, "well, let's go find out, then!"

"... I can't find the words for it. I've been dreaming about this for so long, and there have been so many points along the way where it looked like we wouldn't get the things built, let alone put them on top of rockets and send them off to Mars, that the first time I stood next to the rover and watched it drive, it brought tears to my eyes. You know, I try to be this steely-eyed space explorer dude, but it was just too much seeing that. It was a phenomenal feeling."

And that's why we cheered right along with him when each of the rovers successfully landed, and called "Dad, I'm here, and I'm safe!"

If you don't know Steve Squyres yet, then take off your little tin foil hat, sit yourself down, and go click on that Nova link I gave you. The entire program is available online, as well as an interview with him, NASA simulations of the MER landings and more. Go!

Steve Squyres inspired me, and thousands of others across the globe with his infectious enthusiasm for astronomy, and for the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) missions. If you're not inspired by now, you're not into space.

Mark Davis, the producer of "MARS Dead or Alive" and "Welcome to Mars" says of Squyres, "...the scientist who had spent 10 years chasing the dream of sending robot geologists to Mars (see Man on a Mission) and who now faced a series of increasingly difficult challenges leading to the climax of landing on Mars. And it didn't hurt that he was the most articulate and charismatic space scientist to come along since Carl Sagan, his former mentor."

Yes, the Mars Exploration Rover mission launched several years ago, but good science is good science, and good, accessible scientists are hard to come by, so it's still timely to introduce you to Prof. Squyres.

Steve Squyres received the Benjamin Franklin award from the Franklin institute in 2007, the 2005 Wired Rave Award, the H. C. Urey Prize from the Planetary Division of the American Astronomical Society in 1987, and was named a World News Person of the Week for January 9, 2004. Squyres also won the 2004 Carl Sagan Memorial Award, and is listed as #2 in the Top 10 Space Imaginations at Work at Space.com.

The Benjamin Franklin Award reads in part, "It is a rare occurrence when the principal investigator on a science project can capture a whole nation's fascination, but Steven Squyres did just that when he led the Mars Exploration Rover project, which landed the rovers Spirit and Opportunity on Mars in January 2004. The daily photos of sunsets over Mars's horizon, dramatically wind-swept dunes, and deep Martian trenches helped re-ignite interest in the U.S. space program. The rovers did more than send back pretty pictures; they found evidence that there was once water on Mars, and they have imaged the surface of the red planet to help scientists understand how it formed. While the mission was originally expected to last just 90 days, the rovers continued to work long past their planned lifetime and are still gathering data on the surface of Mars over three years later. ... Squyres oversaw the science on it all."

For more about Professor Squyres, including many links to MER sites, see my Squidoo Lens.

 
Current Poll
I am a member of a secret superhero organization.


Fortune Turns the Wheel
Fortunalee

Come fill the cup, let's drink about ~
This nicht, we'll merry be ~
For friends and for harmony ~
Likewise my comrades three ~
To meet yence mair some other nicht ~
My secret joy reveal ~
For I now maun stray so far away ~
Til fortune turns the wheel ~


DelphiPlusMember Icon This blog is: Satire with a dose of twisted up humor, science, various arts,(half)baked on with a heavy dose of irreverent commentary.

DelphiPlusMember Icon Home of: The Eleventy O'Clock News™ - where nothing is real, Get A Clue U(niversity)™, Plain Talker™ Translation Services, and our newest feature, Frankly Fortuna. 



DelphiPlusMember Icon Blogs are great, but there's more! If you really want to connect with people, talk things over, have your say and listen to what others think, then interact with them on a discussion forum. Delphi has the best forums in the business, and you can hang out with my friends and me here:


Twitter page: Fortunalee


landscape photos

 


DelphiPlusMember Icon Who or what is a truffula?
You can read The Lorax here. Alas, it is not an official copy, which does not appear to exist online.

Why Dr. Seuss? Because those that take themselves too cerealsly, are bound to drown in the milk.

Ticking Off Time
«February 2010»
SMTWTFS
31123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28123456

Serving irreverent virgins and margarita tea since 2002.
Or was that virgin tea and irreverent margaritas?

Always a bit more tart than sweet.

(Home)


©2010 Mzinga All Rights Reserved