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Mars Rovers Break Driving Records, Examine Salty Soil



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 3rd 05, 12:01 AM
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Default Mars Rovers Break Driving Records, Examine Salty Soil

MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIFORNIA 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov

Guy Webster (818) 354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.

Dolores Beasley (202) 358-1753
NASA Headquarters, Washington

News Release: 2005-038 March 2, 2005

Mars Rovers Break Driving Records, Examine Salty Soil

On three consecutive days, NASA's Mars Exploration Rover
Opportunity accomplished unprecedented feats of martian
motion, covering more total ground in that period than either
Opportunity or its twin, Spirit, did in their first 70 days
on Mars.

Spirit, meanwhile, has uncovered soil that is more than half
salt, adding to the evidence for Mars' wet past. The golf-
cart-size robots successfully completed their three-month
primary missions in April 2004 and are continuing extended
mission operations.

Opportunity set a one-day distance record for martian
driving, 177.5 meters (582 feet), on Feb. 19. That was the
first day of a three-day plan transmitted to the rover as a
combined set of weekend instructions. During the preceding
week, engineers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory had sent
Opportunity and Spirit an upgrade of the rovers' software,
onboard intelligence the rovers use for carrying out day-to-
day commands.

The new record exceeded a two-week old former best by 13
percent. As on all previous long drives by either rover, the
traverse began with "blind" driving, in which the rover
followed a route determined in advance by rover planners at
JPL using stereo images. That portion lasted an hour and
covered most of the day's distance. Then Opportunity switched
to "autonomous" driving for two and a half hours, pausing
every 2 meters (6.6 feet) to look ahead for obstacles as it
chose its own route ahead.

The next day, Opportunity used its new software to start
another drive navigating for itself. "This is the first time
either rover has picked up on a second day with continued
autonomous driving," said Dr. Mark Maimone, rover mobility
software engineer at JPL. "It's good to sit back and let the
rover do the driving for us."

Not only did Opportunity avoid obstacles for four hours of
driving, it covered more ground than a football field.
Opportunity has a favorable power situation, due to
relatively clean solar panels and increasing minutes of
daylight each day as spring approaches in Mars' southern
hemisphere. This allows several hours of operations daily.

On the third day of the three-day plan, the robotic geologist
continued navigating itself and drove even farther, 109
meters (357 feet), pushing the three-day total to 390 meters
(nearly a quarter mile). In one long weekend, Opportunity
covered a distance equivalent to more than half of the 600
meters that had been part of each rover's original mission-
success criteria during their first three months on Mars.

Opportunity has now driven 3,014 meters (1.87 miles) since
landing; Spirit even farther, 4,157 meters (2.58 miles).
Opportunity is heading south toward a rugged landscape called
"etched terrain," where it might find exposures of deeper
layers of bedrock than it has seen so far. Spirit is
climbing "Husband Hill," with a pause on a ridge overlooking
a valley north of the summit to see whether any potential
targets below warrant a side trip.

As Spirit struggled up the slope approaching the ridgeline,
the rover's wheels churned up soil that grabbed scientists'
attention. "This was an absolutely serendipitous discovery,"
said Dr. Steve Squyres of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.,
principal investigator for the rovers' science instruments.
"We said, 'My gosh, that soil looks very bright. Before we go
away, we should at least take a taste."

The bright patch of disturbed soil, dubbed "Paso Robles," has
the highest salt concentration of any rock or soil ever
examined on Mars. Combined information gained from inspecting
it with Spirit's three spectrometers and panoramic camera
suggests its main ingredient is an iron sulfate salt with
water molecules bound into the mineral. The soil patch is
also rich in phosphorus, but not otherwise like a high-
phosphorus rock, called "Wishstone," that Spirit examined in
December. "We're still trying to work out what this means,
but clearly, with this much salt around, water had a hand
here," Squyres said.

Meanwhile, scientists are re-calibrating data from both
rovers' alpha particle X-ray spectrometers. These instruments
are used to assess targets' elemental composition. The sensor
heads for the two instruments were switched before launch.
Therefore, data that Opportunity's spectrometer has collected
have been analyzed using calibration files for Spirit's, and
vice-versa. Fortunately, because the sensor heads are nearly
identical, the effect on the elemental abundances determined
by the instruments was very small. The scientists have taken
this opportunity to go back and review the results for the
mission so far and re-compute using correct calibration
files. "The effect in all cases was less than the
uncertainties in results, so none of our science conclusions
are affected," Squyres said.

JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, has managed NASA's Mars Exploration Rover project
since it began in 2000. Images and additional information
about the rovers and their discoveries are available on the
Internet at
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/.../mer_main.html
and http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov .

-end-

  #3  
Old March 3rd 05, 07:54 AM
Carsten Troelsgaard
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skrev i en meddelelse
ups.com...


As Spirit struggled up the slope approaching the ridgeline,
the rover's wheels churned up soil that grabbed scientists'
attention. "This was an absolutely serendipitous discovery,"
said Dr. Steve Squyres of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.,
principal investigator for the rovers' science instruments.
"We said, 'My gosh, that soil looks very bright. Before we go
away, we should at least take a taste."

The bright patch of disturbed soil, dubbed "Paso Robles," has
the highest salt concentration of any rock or soil ever
examined on Mars. Combined information gained from inspecting
it with Spirit's three spectrometers and panoramic camera
suggests its main ingredient is an iron sulfate salt with
water molecules bound into the mineral. The soil patch is
also rich in phosphorus, but not otherwise like a high-
phosphorus rock, called "Wishstone," that Spirit examined in
December. "We're still trying to work out what this means,
but clearly, with this much salt around, water had a hand
here," Squyres said.


Anyone that finds pictures of of the salt-patch are welcome to post it here.

Carsten


  #4  
Old March 3rd 05, 09:55 AM
Hud Nordin
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In article ,
Carsten Troelsgaard wrote:
Anyone that finds pictures of of the salt-patch are welcome to post it here.


I'll guess sol 404:

http://origin.mars5.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/p/404/2P162233695EFFA618P2559L7M1.HTML
--
Hud Nordin Silicon Valley
  #5  
Old March 3rd 05, 12:06 PM
Carsten Troelsgaard
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"Hud Nordin" skrev i en meddelelse
...
In article ,
Carsten Troelsgaard wrote:
Anyone that finds pictures of of the salt-patch are welcome to post it
here.


I'll guess sol 404:

http://origin.mars5.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/p/404/2P162233695EFFA618P2559L7M1.HTML
--
Hud Nordin Silicon Valley


Thanks.

The reasonable assumption that it is an in-situ developement puts general
sedimentary processes in some perspective.

Carsten


  #7  
Old March 3rd 05, 02:36 PM
Jan Panteltje
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On a sunny day (Thu, 03 Mar 2005 08:35:26 +0100) it happened Carla Schneider
wrote in :

wrote:


Not only did Opportunity avoid obstacles for four hours of
driving, it covered more ground than a football field.
Opportunity has a favorable power situation, due to
relatively clean solar panels and increasing minutes of
daylight each day as spring approaches in Mars' southern
hemisphere.

But the Opportunitiy site is almost at the equator, so the length
of the day is not changing considerably.
What changes is the angle of the sun, and the distance Mars - Sun.
They are telling us the same bull**** as last year.
If they are not willing to provide correct information on such
simple matters how can we believe the rest of the story where
we are not able to verify the truth ?

And they never went to the moon either ;-(
Can't wait for the 2005 'Mars Rover Races'.
  #9  
Old March 3rd 05, 05:04 PM
randyj
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"Carla Schneider" wrote in message
...
randyj wrote:

"Carla Schneider" wrote in message
...
wrote:


Not only did Opportunity avoid obstacles for four hours of
driving, it covered more ground than a football field.
Opportunity has a favorable power situation, due to
relatively clean solar panels and increasing minutes of
daylight each day as spring approaches in Mars' southern
hemisphere.
But the Opportunitiy site is almost at the equator, so the length
of the day is not changing considerably.
What changes is the angle of the sun, and the distance Mars - Sun.
They are telling us the same bull**** as last year.
If they are not willing to provide correct information on such
simple matters how can we believe the rest of the story where
we are not able to verify the truth ?


He didn't say it was changing considerably. He said it was by increasing
"minutes." That could be just 2. If the sun is at a higher angle,

couldn't
it
be above the horizon for 2 or more minutes each day?


May be, but that would not change the energy output of the solar
cells substancially.
I thought that he meant it was increasing minutes each day such as
it is on Earth north of 45° latitude now. That would change something,
but this cannot happen at opportunity site.


He never said the output of the solar cells changed "substancially."
He simply said Opportunity "has a favorable power situation"

Your characterization of bs is way off the mark.

rj


  #10  
Old March 3rd 05, 06:12 PM
Carla Schneider
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Default

randyj wrote:

"Carla Schneider" wrote in message
...
randyj wrote:

"Carla Schneider" wrote in message
...
wrote:


Not only did Opportunity avoid obstacles for four hours of
driving, it covered more ground than a football field.
Opportunity has a favorable power situation, due to
relatively clean solar panels and increasing minutes of
daylight each day as spring approaches in Mars' southern
hemisphere.
But the Opportunitiy site is almost at the equator, so the length
of the day is not changing considerably.
What changes is the angle of the sun, and the distance Mars - Sun.
They are telling us the same bull**** as last year.
If they are not willing to provide correct information on such
simple matters how can we believe the rest of the story where
we are not able to verify the truth ?

He didn't say it was changing considerably. He said it was by increasing
"minutes." That could be just 2. If the sun is at a higher angle,

couldn't
it
be above the horizon for 2 or more minutes each day?


May be, but that would not change the energy output of the solar
cells substancially.
I thought that he meant it was increasing minutes each day such as
it is on Earth north of 45° latitude now. That would change something,
but this cannot happen at opportunity site.


He never said the output of the solar cells changed "substancially."
He simply said Opportunity "has a favorable power situation"


He clearly attributes the favorable power situation to increasing
minutes of daylight, and that is bs:
".. due to ... and increasing minutes of daylight..."


--
http://www.geocities.com/carla_sch/index.html
 




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