11.22.11
Kathy Barnstorff
NASA Langley Research Center
757-864-9886/344-8510
Kathy.barnstorff@nasa.gov
Megan Steele or Toni Williams
Virginia Air & Space Center
757-727-0900, ext. 730 or 705
msteele@vasc.org or twilliams@vasc.orgRELEASE: 11-100
PUBLIC INVITED TO CELEBRATE NASA MARS LAUNCH AT VA. AIR & SPACE CENTER
HAMPTON, Va. -- NASA Langley Research Center's official visitors
center is offering an out- of-this-world alternative to shopping on
the Saturday after Thanksgiving.
The Virginia Air & Space Center (VASC) in downtown Hampton will
celebrate the scheduled launch of Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) and
its Curiosity rover with a special Mars Family Day, November 26, from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visitors, including a number of NASA Langley
employees, will be able to view the MSL lift-off, enjoy hands-on
activities and participate in a live question and answer session with
Mars experts at the Kennedy Space Center.
WHO:Open to the public
WHAT:Mars Family Day -- celebrating the launch of Mars Science
Laboratory (MSL) and its Curiosity rover.
WHEN:Saturday, November 26, 2011– 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
WHERE:Virginia Air & Space Center, 600 Settlers Landing Road, downtown
Hampton.
HOW:Launch viewing and Mars Family Day activities are included in
regular exhibit admission. Members always receive free admission.
More than 100 researchers and technicians at NASA Langley have worked
on the MSL mission. Mars Family Day participants will be able to:
learn more about MSL and Langley's role in it; create an "egg" Mars
lander; go on a MarsQuest scavenger hunt to win the chance for a free
VASC Summer Science Camp; test their Martian skills with rover races;
become an engineer for the day to help work on the challenges of
landing on the Red Planet; see how much they weigh on Mars and other
planets; and see a Mars meteorite and Viking lander, Viking orbiter
and Mars rover models.
During the day, Air & Space Center visitors will also be able to
participate in a free live, interactive video broadcast about the MSL
launch from Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida. NASA is partnering
with the National Institute of Aerospace, also in Hampton; the Denver
Museum of Nature & Science (DMNS); and VASC to host livestream web
coverage.
The public is invited to view and participate in the live webcasts
online at:
www.livestream.com/marsrover
Dr. Steve Lee, the Denver Museum of Nature & Science's curator of
planetary science, will host the live broadcasts from the KSC Visitor
Complex, interviewing a variety of scientists, engineers, educators,
and NASA officials who will answer questions from visitors at DMNS
and VASC as well as from a live audience and Internet participants.
Members of NASA's Museum Alliance (several hundred museums, science
centers, and planetariums across the country) will also take part in
the event.
Scheduled times for the free online broadcast are Wednesday, Nov. 23
from 1 - 5 p.m. (EST); Friday, Nov. 25 from 1 - 5 p.m.; and Saturday,
Nov. 26 from 8:30 a.m. to launch and again from 1 - 5 p.m.
Friday's launch will mark the start of Mars Science Laboratory's
eight-month journey to Mars. Curiosity, which is about the size of a
small car, is NASA's most advanced mobile robotic laboratory. It has
10 science instruments to search for evidence about whether Mars had
environments favorable for microbial life, including the chemical
ingredients for life.
To learn more about the Mars Science Laboratory mission, visit the
mission home page at:
www.nasa.gov/msl
For more information about NASA's Langley Research Center, please go
to:
www.nasa.gov/langley
To learn more about NASA Langley's official visitors center, the
Virginia Air & Space Center, please go to:
www.vasc.org
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