NASA is celebrating the Year of the Solar System! Spanning a Martian year (23 months), numerous missions will encounter their targets—the Moon and Mars, Mercury and Jupiter, and even comets and asteroids! It’s an unprecedented time in planetary sciences as we learn about new worlds and make new discoveries! Join the exploration at http://solarsystem.nasa.gov/yss/
Since those first footsteps, NASA has broadened its reach with an increasingly sophisticated series of explorers that have landed on asteroids, tasted the swirling gases of Jupiter's atmosphere, and collected the breath of the Sun. Just in the past few years, we have:
- Discovered potential liquid water on what was once thought to be a cold, dead moon of Saturn
- Gathered compelling evidence that Mars once had saltwater seas on its surface
- Listened in as the Voyager spacecrafts' daily reports sent us the sound of a solar blast wave
Our intensive investigation of Mars will continue, from orbit and on the surface. Advanced robotic missions are critical to the Vision for Space Exploration.
We will study the Kuiper Belt, and the comets that come from it, to investigate the primordial substances which evolved into the Solar System. Our Saturn orbiter launched a European probe to the thick, water-and-organics-rich atmosphere of Titan, Saturn's largest moon, and collected images of the surface of Europa, a moon of Jupiter which might have oceans of liquid water underneath an icy crust. These moons may have all of the components required for life – they may hold many clues to our own planet's development.
Our Solar System is a place of beauty and mystery, incredible diversity, extreme environments, and continuous change. Our Solar System is also a natural laboratory, on a grand scale, within which we seek to unravel the mysteries of the universe and our place within it.
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