NASA's priorities, as we all agreed to in a meeting in my office just a few months ago, were, number one, the JWST.
Editor's note · Context
Hutchison reiterates previously agreed priorities for NASA, highlighting JWST.
Share & report
More from Kay Hutchison
How fast--you are talking about an area bigger than Connecticut. How fast can the Curiosity move so that it can cover the amount of land that you are trying to cover in the time that you have?
Do we know from what we have up there, whether it's something orbiting Mars or the rover, that the atmosphere will not be dangerous for a human--obviously in a space suit?
Just to follow up, we always hear that the most important thing that we could find is that there might be evidence of water, which then might lead to some thought that there was some kind of life.
Will you be able to tell how long ago it became extinct or the water went away?





