You can watch the post-launch press conference under way on NASA TV.
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NASA Administrator Congratulates MAVEN Teams
“This is the result of the effort of a really tight team that’s been working really hard,” said NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden as he congratulated the MAVEN launch teams on Monday’s liftoff. “I hope this mission serves as a model for those that come after it.”
Spacecraft Separation Call (Video)
MAVEN’s Solar Arrays Deployed
Another roar of applause today as MAVEN deployed its twin solar arrays. The gull-wing-shaped arrays are essential to generate electrical power for the spacecraft and recharge the spacecraft’s batteries.
MAVEN Flies Free!
MAVEN is on its own now, headed for Mars! Applause roared up from the control rooms.The Centaur is far behind the scientific spacecraft and getting farther behind. The Centaur will be maneuvered so it doesn’t interfere with MAVEN or Mars later. Next up for MAVEN is the unfurling of its gull wing solar arrays so it can begin recharging its onboard batteries in about 20 minutes.
Pre-Separation Sequence
The Centaur’s small thrusters are positioning the stage and MAVEN into the proper attitude before releasing the 5,410-pound spacecraft to fly on its own.
Engine Shutdown, MAVEN Sep Coming Up
The Centaur engine shut down as planned after putting MAVEN on a proper course for Mars orbit. MAVEN, with its solar arrays still folded, will spring free of the Centaur stage in about six minutes.
Centaur Main Engine Start-2
Centaur’s RL-10 engine has ignited! This burn will last 5 1/2 minutes and put MAVEN on its final trajectory to Mars.
3 Minutes to Second Centaur Burn
We are 3 minutes out from the re-ignition of the RL-10 engine on the Centaur upper stage that will push MAVEN onto its trajectory to Mars.
Martian Magnetic Fields
Scientists think that Mars was enjoyed a thick atmosphere 4 billion years ago that was rich with the same chemical elements familiar to Earth’s own air. What happened since, though, is a mystery. The prevailing theory is that the Martian core of molten metal solidified and the magnetic field generated by the swirling core all but disappeared. Without a magnetic field protecting it from the sun’s solar winds, Mars lost its liquid water to either evaporation or freezing on the ground. Whatever happened, it left Mars a barren desert. MAVEN’s designers included instruments the spacecraft can use to detect the power of the solar wind at Mars along with the trace elements of the planet’s ancient atmosphere that still remain.
You can find out more details about the processes and theories in the MAVEN press kit available at: https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/files/MAVEN_PressKit_Final.pdf