@NASAJPL
  @NASAJPL
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory | JPL and the Space Age: The Breaking Point @NASAJPL | Uploaded 1 year ago | Updated 2 days ago
The Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s success in landing the low-cost Mars Pathfinder mission in 1997 was viewed as proof that spacecraft could be built more often and for far less money — a radical cultural change NASA termed “Faster, Better, Cheaper.”

This era also coincided with the discovery of a Mars rock that hinted at the possibility of microbial life elsewhere in the solar system. NASA’s reaction was to envision a steady stream of missions to Mars — all done at cut-rate costs. In fact, the next challenge taken on by JPL was to fly two missions to Mars for the price of the single Pathfinder mission. Mars Climate Orbiter and the Mars Polar Lander both made it to the launch pad, on time and on budget, but were lost upon arrival at Mars, resulting in one of the most difficult periods in the history of JPL.

“The Breaking Point” tells the story of the demise of these two missions and the abrupt end of NASA’s “Faster, Better, Cheaper” era.

Documentary length: 1 hour 47 minutes
JPL and the Space Age: The Breaking PointLive From the Clean Room - Building Europa ClipperCuriosity – A Decade on Mars (Live Public Talk)Cold Atom Lab: Celebrating Four Years of Quantum Science in Space (Live Public Talk)How Scientists Study Wind on Mars (NASA Mars News Report June 22, 2022)NASA InSight’s End of Mission: What the Lander’s Data Can Still Teach Us About Mars (Expert Q&A)NEOWISE: Revealing Changes in the UniverseOcean Worlds Life Surveyor (OWLS) (Live Public Talk)Mission Makers: Marc Simard, Scientist on the SWOT Water-Tracking MissionHow to Bring Mars Sample Tubes Safely to Earth (Mars News Report)Perseverance Explores the Jezero Crater DeltaCosmic Dust Rings Spotted by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope

JPL and the Space Age: The Breaking Point @NASAJPL