What should be the nation's goals and priorities for exploring Mars in the 2013 to 2022 timeframe? To help answer this question, Mars scientists from the United States and around the world will gather Sept. 9 to 11 at the Faculty Club on ASU's Tempe campus. Most of the discussions will be open to the public, in person and by webcast.

The meeting is sponsored by the National Academy of Sciences as part of its efforts to prepare a "Planetary Decadal Survey."

The survey is not limited to just Mars but will cover all aspects of solar system exploration. It will broadly canvas planetary scientists to determine current knowledge and then identify the most important scientific questions they will face in the years 2013-2022.

The Mars Panel for the Decadal Survey is chaired by ASU professor Philip Christensen, Regents' Professor of geological sciences in the School of Earth and Space Exploration. He is director of the Mars Space Flight Facility and also the principal investigator for several scientific instruments currently operating on NASA spacecraft at Mars.

ASU presenters at the meeting will include Meenakshi Wadhwa, director of the Center for Meteorite Studies, who will speak on the importance of acquiring Martian rock samples, and astrobiology researcher Jack Farmer, who has written a White Paper on the astrobiological aspects of Mars exploration.

The Decadal Survey's final report, due by March 2011, will be used by Congress and the administration in Washington to determine which solar system exploration projects and missions should get highest priority in the 2010s.

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