Getting to Mars required engineering genius, scientific strategy, and
the drive to persevere in the face of failure.
Although the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, has
become synonymous with the United States' planetary exploration during
the past half century, its most recent focus has been on Mars. Beginning
in the 1990s and continuing through the Mars Phoenix mission of 2007,
JPL led the way in engineering an impressive, rapidly evolving
succession of Mars orbiters and landers, including roving robotic
vehicles whose successful deployment onto the Martian surface posed some
of the most complicated technical problems in space flight history.
In Exploration and Engineering, Erik M. Conway reveals how JPL
engineers' creative technological feats led to major breakthroughs in
Mars exploration. He takes readers into the heart of the lab's
problem-solving approach and management structure, where talented
scientists grappled with technical challenges while also coping, not
always successfully, with funding shortfalls, unrealistic schedules, and
managerial turmoil.
Conway, JPL's historian, offers an insider's perspective into the
changing goals of Mars exploration, the ways in which sophisticated
computer simulations drove the design process, and the remarkable
evolution of landing technologies over a thirty-year period.