PASADENA, California: After years of hard work and seven minutes of terror, workers of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory here let out their tears of joy.
“Touchdown confirmed,” said a member of mission control at the laboratory as the room erupted in cheers at the touchdown of their $2.5-billion Mars Science Laboratory and Curiosity rover on the surface of the Red Planet, breaking new ground in the US-led search for signs of alien life.
“We are wheels down on Mars. Oh, my God!”
Just minutes before that, a small control room packed with mission specialists had plunged into anguished silence as everyone watched images on the screens of the main control room, where all present could follow Curiosity’s progress step by step.
“Seven minutes of terror” was how NASA characterized the extremely sophisticated operation that preceded the actual landing.
An initial round of applause came when Curiosity sent its first signal before entering the Martian atmosphere. A second sigh of relief was when the ship opened its parachute.
But the most difficult part was yet to come: The vessel had to stabilize before an overhead crane, using nylon cables, gently placed Curiosity on the Martian soil — an operation that had never before been conducted. At 10:32 pm local time (0532 GMT) this was accomplished and cries of joys filled the JPL: “Hell, we did it!”
The joy was palpable in the newsroom as project managers passed around Mars chocolate bars to employees, the JPL’s “shadow army” of people who never appeared on cameras but worked doggedly for eight years to make the historic moment possible.