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Peter_X.jpg
Flight Engineering Team Members Enjoy the Launch
Roy_TK.jpg
Roy Gladden and TK Revel in Launch Success
Moriba_Jah.jpg
Moriba Jah Awaits Navigation Information
Dan_Johnston.jpg
Todd Bayer and Dan Johnston Rejoice During Launch
Bryan_Tracy_Stan.jpg
Team Tracks Spacecraft After Launch
Onlookers_3_ed.jpg
Next Stop, Mars!
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is Off to Mars!
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter is Off to Mars!
With the Atlantic Ocean as a backdrop, an Atlas V launch vehicle, 19 stories tall, with a two-ton Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter on top, roars away from Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 7:43 a.m. EDT on Aug. 12, 2005.
Mars Reconnassaince Orbiter Lift-Off
MRO_fairing_1.jpg
Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter Launch Postponed
ATLO_high-gain_pre-launch.jpg
Preparations at Kennedy Space Center
PHSF_pre-launch.jpg
Preparations at Kennedy Space Center
ASOCwide_pre-launch.jpg
Launch Rehearsal
Loading-in-C17_pre-launch.jpg
Big Move
MRO_in_LMA_pre-launch.jpg
Assembly, Test and Launch Operations Phase
CRISM_pre-launch.jpg
Preparing Instruments
KSC_05PD_1810.jpg
Countdown Nears: Final Tests
wet_dress_1.jpg
'Wet Dress Rehearsal' for Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter
KSC-MRO-wet-rehersal.jpg
Practice, Practice, Practice: 'Wet Dress Rehearsal'
KSC-MRO_Encapsulation.jpg
Spacecraft Shrouded: Encapsulation
MRO_data.jpg
34 Terabits of Data
mars_orbiters.jpg
Spacecraft Comparison
07292005_Art_Exploration.jpg
The Art of Exploration
MRO_thumbs_up.jpg
Last Stop: Launch Pad
This Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) image shows a 1.5 meters per pixel (~5 ft/pixel) view of three aligned meteor impact craters on the floor of a much larger crater in the Noachis Terra region. The craters may have formed together from a single event in which the impactor (the meteor) was broken into three pieces.
Triple Impact
MRO_Orb_Up_7_19.jpg
Fueled for Flight
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