The Most Epic Curiosity Countdown Clock

If you can’t get to a Mars Science Lab landing party, one website aims to bring the party to you.

Explore Mars, a not-for-profit, has joined up with several space-faring organizations and firms to create Get Curious. It’s a one-stop shop for all things concerning Curiosity, the centerpiece of MSL.

“Curiosity will rock the world” proclaims an all-caps banner at the top of the website as an animated picture of Curiosity dangles beneath a jetting shell.

Below the banner sits a large clock, counting down the seconds until Curiosity’s wheels touch Martian ground.

You can simulate the touchdown on this website simply by scrolling down – the animated Curiosity picture slowly lowers to a picture of what looks to be Martian rocks and soil. (The animation actually falls past the surface instead of touching down, but you get the idea.)

Explore Mars’ aim is to drum up interest for its Human-to-Mars Summit next year. Delegates, including several senior NASA scientists involved with MSL, will gather in Washington, D.C. April 6-8, 2013 to discuss how to get humans on the Red Planet by 2030. The George Washington University Space Policy Institute is a co-sponsor of the conference.

“The mission of Explore Mars is to make humans a multi-planet species,” the Get Curious website states.

“Our programs are aimed at making that happen within the next 20 years, while being safe, well-planned and relatively comfortable for the humans we send to Mars. To accomplish this, Explore Mars runs technical challenges to stimulate the development and/or improvement of technologies that will make human Mars missions more efficient and feasible.”

Included on Get Curious is a list of MSL landing parties (compiled with help from Yuri’s Night), a summary of Curiosity’s objectives, and pictures and videos of the mission.

Additionally, several cities – such as Detroit, Houston and Atlanta – agreed to display gigantic simulated Mars rocks between July 26 and Aug. 9 (dates vary by city) to promote Explore Mars and the website.

The list of participating entities in Get Curious includes Aerojet, Explore Mars, National Geographic, Phillips & Co., United Launch Alliance and Yuri’s Night.

The car-sized Curiosity is expected to reach Mars Aug. 6. It will dig for signs of habitable conditions in Gale Crater.

Lead image caption: A screenshot from Get Curious website.

Elizabeth Howell (M.Sc. Space Studies ’12) is a contributing editor for SpaceRef and award-winning space freelance journalist living in Ottawa, Canada. Her work has appeared in publications such as SPACE.com, Air & Space Smithsonian, Physics Today, the Globe and Mail, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.,  CTV and the Ottawa Business Journal.

Elizabeth Howell

Elizabeth Howell is the senior writer at Universe Today. She also works for Space.com, Space Exploration Network, the NASA Lunar Science Institute, NASA Astrobiology Magazine and LiveScience, among others. Career highlights include watching three shuttle launches, and going on a two-week simulated Mars expedition in rural Utah. You can follow her on Twitter @howellspace or contact her at her website.

Recent Posts

Webb Confirms a Longstanding Galaxy Model

The spectra of distant galaxies shows that dying sun-like stars, not supernovae, enrich galaxies the…

4 hours ago

The Aftermath of a Neutron Star Collision Resembles the Conditions in the Early Universe

Neutron stars are extraordinarily dense objects, the densest in the Universe. They pack a lot…

4 hours ago

New View of Venus Reveals Previously Hidden Impact Craters

Think of the Moon and most people will imagine a barren world pockmarked with craters.…

7 hours ago

Multimode Propulsion Could Revolutionize How We Launch Things to Space

In a few years, as part of the Artemis Program, NASA will send the "first…

18 hours ago

China Trains Next Batch of Taikonauts

China has a fabulously rich history when it comes to space travel and was among…

19 hours ago

NASA Focusses in on Artemis III Landing Sites.

It was 1969 that humans first set foot on the Moon. Back then, the Apollo…

20 hours ago