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Mars Rover Update: Spirit Hunkers Down, Opportunity on the Move (Next stop, Victoria crater)
Space.com on Yahoo ^ | 5/19/06 | Leonard Davis

Posted on 05/19/2006 9:50:02 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

Those "never say die" robots on Mars-- NASA's Spirit and Opportunity--continue to chalk up science at their respective exploration sites.

Looming large for the Opportunity rover at Meridiani Planum is Victoria Crater--a grand bit of territory that's roughly half a mile (800 meters) in diameter. That's about six times wider than Endurance Crater, a feature that the rover previously surveyed for several months in 2004, gathering data on rock layers there that were affected by water of long, long ago.

"We are closing in ... we've got only about a kilometer to go now," said Steve Squyres, lead scientist at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York for the dual Mars exploration rovers.

"Feel free to work out your own guess at an estimated time of arrival based on our recent progress...but I'm not making any predictions! Mars has fooled us too many times before," Squyres told SPACE.com.

Lay of the land

Pushing across Meridiani Planum has not been easy for Opportunity. The landscape is one of rolling ripples of sand and splashes of outcrop rock.

"We're pushing as hard as we can with a very old rover," Squyres added. "We'll get there when and if we get there."

Once there, Squyres said that the plan is to approach that feature much as they did Endurance Crater.

"[We'll] start by taking images from several points along the rim to get the lay of the land...and then see if there's a place where we can enter the crater safely," Squyres said. "There's no guarantee that we'll be able to get in, of course, but we're not driving all this way just for the view."

Rim shots

Also anxiously awaiting Opportunity's hoped for wheeling up to Victoria Crater is William Farrand, a research scientist at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colorado. He is a member of the Mars Exploration Rover science team.

"The rover has been making good progress towards Victoria Crater. So--knock on wood--it should get there perhaps as early as late July," Farrand told SPACE.com. "We will be getting just amazing images when we get to the rim of Victoria Crater."

Farrand said the views at that feature are sure to be spectacular. But the real payoff, he added, is to check out the exposures of outcrop that the science team is expecting to see on the inner walls of Victoria Crater.

"Opportunity's mission has been all about reading the story contained within the layered rocks that lie just below the surface of Meridiani Planum," Farrand advised. "We got about 40 to 50 centimeters of outcrop at Eagle Crater [at the start of its roving] and then 7 meters at Endurance Crater."

However, at Victoria, it looks like there's a deeper story there.

Images taken from Mars orbit suggest there might be something like 65 feet (20 meters) of outcrop exposed within the walls of Victoria Crater, Farrand stated.

It is still not clear whether rover scientists will be able to get into the crater to do the type of detailed, on-the-spot analysis that they were able to do within the inner rim of Endurance Crater.

But Farrand said that by utilizing Opportunity's Panoramic Camera and Mini-Thermal Emission Spectrometer, researchers should be able to do some tremendous remote sensing at that locale.

Spirit: making it through winter

And on the other side of Mars within Gusev crater, sistership Spirit is devotedly engaged in gathering science data too. It's in need of a little dental work, however.

The robot's grinding teeth have worn away on its arm-mounted rock abrasion tool--but only after exposing interiors of five time more rock targets than its design goal of three rocks. The tool still has useful wire bristles for brushing targets.

"Spirit has been very busy lately, taking an enormous panorama that we call the McMurdo Pan," Squyres reported. The robot is doing lots of work with its robot arm--officially labeled, in mechanical jargon, as the Instrument Deployment Device, or IDD.

Spirit has been positioned in such a way that its solar panels can help the machine endure several months of Martian winter.

The power on Spirit is good, Squyres noted. Projections of the rover's overall health, he said, suggest the robot will make it through the martian winter and be able to keep doing science the whole time.

"One thing about staying in one place for a long time is that it enables lots of interesting science that just isn't possible when you're always moving. We're taking advantage of that now with Spirit," Squyres explained.

The "eyes" have it

Both Spirit and Opportunity are churning out travelogue-like photos of their respective treks over Mars. The eyes of the robots - their camera systems - are capturing a wide range of scenery along the way.

"All of the cameras continue to work remarkably well and are continuing to acquire beautiful images," said astronomer Jim Bell, the Panoramic camera (Pancam) payload element lead for the Mars exploration rovers at Cornell University. "They have proven to be extremely robust to the extreme conditions on the martian surface...large temperature swings, fine dust everywhere, large cosmic ray flux," he told SPACE.com.

Since the twin rovers independently landed on Mars in January 2004, Spirit's cameras have taken about 82,000 pictures. Opportunity has taken about 71,500 pictures - for a total down-linked image data volume of about 19 gigabytes. Of these, 54,400 and 49,500 are the high-resolution Pancam images, respectively, Bell said.

"At Meridiani, once we get to Victoria Crater in June or July we are obviously looking forward to remarkable views of the interior," Bell said, and to help identify possible routes to explore even deeper exposures of sedimentary outcrop rocks.

"At Gusev, we are hunkered down for the winter now, obtaining detailed chemical measurements on reachable rocks and soils and acquiring the gigantic 360? McMurdo panorama with little or no compression in all [camera] filters from our winter haven parking spot," Bell said.

Up there on Mars, Bell concluded, "the missions just keep rocking on!"


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: hunkersdown; marsrover; nasa; opportunity; roveropportunity; roverspirit; spirit; victoriacrater
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To: dpwiener

Well, then you sir, kick ass! Great job!


21 posted on 05/19/2006 11:28:45 PM PDT by Spruce (Keep your mitts off my wallet)
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To: Spruce

agreed. in spades.


22 posted on 05/19/2006 11:52:12 PM PDT by steel_resolve (George Bush - America's First Mexican President)
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To: dpwiener

you should be proud


23 posted on 05/19/2006 11:53:46 PM PDT by kinoxi
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To: NormsRevenge
These robots, the entire mission are modern engineering marvels...

I'm astounded they've lasted so long and done so much. If the scientists had known the robot mechanics were so good, and the landing mechanisms so soft, they would have packed far more instrumentation. We can bet they're planning that for the "next one".

24 posted on 05/20/2006 12:13:35 AM PDT by Mariner
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To: m3d1um

Almost 2 1/2 years.....


The little rovers that can.


25 posted on 05/20/2006 2:41:50 AM PDT by PeteB570 (Guns, what real men want for Christmas)
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To: dpwiener
Thank you. I'm kind of proud of the fact that I designed some of the hardware and wrote some of the software for the inertial measurement units used in the Rovers.

Oh, I don't know that I'd go bragging about it. When our Martian overlords arrive on Earth, they're going to be looking for the people responsible for sending all these probes, landers, and rovers, and you just put yourself on the list...

:)

26 posted on 05/20/2006 2:46:58 AM PDT by Tennessee_Bob ("Those who "abjure" violence can only do so because others are committing violence on their behalf.")
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To: kinoxi
"think most of the staff has actually left (funding ran out)."

these guys are doing this for the fun of it(free)?

27 posted on 05/20/2006 3:07:00 AM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* “I love you guys”)
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To: dpwiener

way to go dpwiener! :)


28 posted on 05/20/2006 3:10:28 AM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* “I love you guys”)
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To: Steve Van Doorn

the funding ran out. try to quote me right


29 posted on 05/20/2006 3:10:30 AM PDT by kinoxi
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To: kinoxi
You said, "i think most of the staff has actually left (funding ran out)."


I quoted you the first time correctly.

I asked a follow up question. If you don't want to answer it that is fine.

I don't know you. Twice on two different threads tonight I have seen you attempting to pick fights with people that are either answering your quesiton or asking you a question.

I will ask you nicely. Please do not be rude with me.

30 posted on 05/20/2006 3:28:19 AM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* “I love you guys”)
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To: Steve Van Doorn
what other thread? i mailed an apology to gleeaikin.i was rude.
31 posted on 05/20/2006 3:34:13 AM PDT by kinoxi
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To: Steve Van Doorn

what other thread?


32 posted on 05/20/2006 3:44:00 AM PDT by kinoxi
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To: Steve Van Doorn
these guys are doing this for the fun of it(free)?

Piloting a Mars Rover. The ultimate R/C car!

33 posted on 05/20/2006 3:53:04 AM PDT by 6SJ7
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To: NormsRevenge

34 posted on 05/20/2006 3:59:41 AM PDT by Loyal Buckeye
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To: NormsRevenge

What about the wheels? I remember hearing something that the wheels on Spirit I think were doing something funky.


35 posted on 05/20/2006 4:01:09 AM PDT by djf (Bedtime story: Once upon a time, they snuck on the boat and threw the tea over. In a land far away..)
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To: Spruce
The egg-heads that designed and built these kicked-ass!

Yes, all those BattleBot shows really paid some dividends.
36 posted on 05/20/2006 5:33:08 AM PDT by wolfcreek
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To: Tennessee_Bob

I, for one, can be helpful in rounding up others to toil in their underground sugar caves.


37 posted on 05/20/2006 7:14:00 AM PDT by eddie willers
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To: 6SJ7
" Piloting a Mars Rover. The ultimate R/C car!"

cann't their toy

38 posted on 05/20/2006 10:08:37 AM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* “I love you guys”)
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To: LibWhacker

.....It also looks like it's featureless sand.....

It looks like they uncovered a basketball at the bottom of the sandhole..


39 posted on 05/20/2006 10:22:42 AM PDT by bert (K.E. N.P. Slay Pinch)
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To: dpwiener

Outstanding!!


40 posted on 05/20/2006 10:24:31 AM PDT by bert (K.E. N.P. Slay Pinch)
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