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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page discussion of the Mars exploration program. Emphasizes the reasons behind our obsession with Mars exploration and traces the revised plans for that exploration which have been fabricated since the loss of two U.S. spacecraft in 1999. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPmarsB.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Files\MSWorks\Documents\PPmarsB.wps Mars: Our Future in Space by -- 15 May 2000 --
properly! Mars has intrigued mankind since
it was first viewed through a primitive telescope and discovered to be another world. Since the beginning of telescopic observations, Mars has been believed to harbor life forms.
With the advent of larger and better telescopes this was found not to be the case. The National Aeronautical and Space Administration (NASA) has an exciting program of exploration
of Mars which was developed after a Martian meteorite was discovered which contained fossils of possible life forms (Lawler PG). The U.S. space program has allowed robotic landings on
Mars and answered some of our burning questions regarding Mars. In many cases, however, the Space Program has created more questions than it has answered.
Mars is the fourth planet from the sun and is the next planet beyond Earth. Mars has an elliptical orbit of the sun
at a mean distance of 141,700,000 miles and makes one orbit in 687 Earth days. Mars has a rotation period, the length of one day, of twenty four hours
and thirty seven minutes. Mars is slightly smaller than one-half the size of the Earth with a diameter of four thousand two hundred miles. It has a mass one
tenth of the Earth thus making its gravity about three eighths that of Earths. The density of Mars is roughly four fifths that of the Earth.
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