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Pop star Britney Spears is more than a music diva. She's also, apparently, a Mars rover fan.
The singer gave a Twitter shout-out this week to NASA's newest robot on the Red Planet, the Mars rover Curiosity, which landed on Aug. 5.
"So @MarsCuriosity … does Mars look the same as it did in 2000?" Spears, 30, asked the Curiosity rover on Tuesday via her Twitter account, @britneyspears. She also posted a link to her 2000 music video "Oops! … I Did It Again."
The memorable video features Spears, clad in body-hugging red latex, dancing on a fictional Mars (where she's the Martian) with a visiting astronaut, who ultimate presents her with a shiny jewel-studded necklace.
According to the Curiosity rover, Mars is still a happening place, even without Spears' dance moves.
"Hey Brit Brit. Mars is still looking good," the rover's Twitter feed answered back. "Maybe someday an astronaut will bring me a gift, too. Drill bits crossed ;)."
To be clear, the Curiosity rover's Twitter messages don't come from Mars. (Its human handlers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., take care of that.) But the rover is definitely a social media juggernaut.
As of Friday evening, the rover has 1,034,505 followers on Twitter. That's a giant leap over the rover's Facebook fan base, which currently rates at 286,495 "likes." But the rover still has a way to go if it wants to catch up with Spears' Twitter tally of 19.6 million followers.
When Curiosity landed on Mars, NASA organized a social media blitz to reach out to the public, with Twitter events at major space centers across the country, as well as at museums and other participating centers.
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The $2.5 billion Mars rover is expected to spend two years exploring the Red Planet's Gale Crater to determine if the region could have once supported primitive microbial life. The car-size Curiosity weighs a ton and is the largest rover ever sent to another world.
Today, rover mission scientists announced the first driving destination for Curiosity, a spot called Glenelg, which is about a one- or two-month drive away. The science team also picked the first rock target for Curiosity's laser, a stone dubbed N165. The rover will blast N165 sometime in the next few days to test out the laser, which allows Curiosity to determine a rock's chemical makeup by analyzing its vaporized bits.
You can follow Space.com managing editor Tariq Malik on Twitter@tariqjmalik and Space.com on Twitter @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebook and Google+. This report was supplemented by NBCNews.com.
- 1st Photos of Mars by Curiosity Rover (Gallery)
- Curiosity Team Spoofed In Hilarious Viral Video
- Photos: NASA's Mars Rover Curiosity on Red Planet (Week 2)
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