PASADENA, CALIF. - Fascinated by NASA's latest Mars mission and planning to tune in?
Well, good luck understanding the space agency's lingo, which resembles a sort of Martian alphabet soup.
In the highly specialized world of spacecraft engineering, there are many moving parts and pieces -- not to mention processes. Names and descriptions are often reduced to acronyms and abbreviations, which are faster to string together in a sentence but can end up sounding downright alien.
So if you want to know if MSL will nail the EDL and what it can do on different sols, you have to learn the language.
"It's kind of our own slang," said Michael Watkins, mission manager of NASA's $2.5 billion Mars project set to land on Sunday night. "Even folks from other missions have no idea what we're talking about."
Before Curiosity
Let's start with the rover's name. In the halls of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, it's called MSL -- short for Mars Science Laboratory. Spacecraft typically have technical names before being rechristened by the public through naming contests sponsored by NASA.
For example: the twin rovers Spirit and Opportunity that landed in 2004 were known as MER-A and MER-B for the longest time (MER is shorthand for Mars Exploration Rover.)