
|
|
Planetary News: Mars (2006)
Mars Exploration Rovers Update:
Spirit Heads to Home Plate as Opportunity Finally Roves On
By A.J.S. Rayl
January 31, 2006
A bird's eye view of Spirit
This bird's-eye view combines a self-portrait of Spirit's deck and a
panoramic mosaic of the Martian surface as viewed by the rover. The rover's
solar panels are still gleaming in the sunlight, having acquired only
a thin veneer of dust two years after the rover landed and commenced exploring
the red planet. Spirit captured this 360-degree panorama on the summit
of Husband Hill inside Mars' Gusev Crater. During the period from Spirit's
Martian days, or sols, 583 to 586 (Aug. 24 to 27, 2005), the rover's panoramic
camera acquired the hundreds of individual frames for this largest panorama
ever photographed by Spirit. This image is an approximately true-color
rendering presented with geometric seam correction.
Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Cornell |
As the Mars Exploration Rover mission presses onward into
its third Earth year -- and second Mars year -- the twin robot field geologists
are moving to new destinations.
Spirit continued her hike down Husband Hill toward Home Plate and the Inner
Basin of Gusev Crater this month, checking out bedrock, interesting soil patches,
and rippled sand dunes along the way. She spent the New Year’s weekend
finishing work on the rippled dune field dubbed El Dorado, with plans to “sprint” for
the rest of the month into the Inner Basin to a target known as Home Plate,
as lead rover scientist Steve Squyres put it. Along the way, however, she
churned up one of the mission’s most interesting finds -- intriguing
white soil at a target called Arad -- and had to stop to investigate. The
spot turned out to be the saltiest place found to date on Mars and another
clue to the existence of past water at Gusev.
On the other side of the planet, Opportunity finally got back to moving after
suffering a “broken arm” late in November that left her at a standstill
at the Olympia outcrop in Meridiani Planum until about a week and a half ago.
Since then, she has been repositioning herself to take microscopic images
of various targets in the layered rocks of Olympia that feature “festoons,” distinctive
centimeter-sized, smile-shaped features that are a sign of past water. The
rover also spent time conducting atmospheric and mini thermal emission spectrometer
(mini-TES) observations as engineers continued to test and evaluate the best
place for the rover to put her arm so she could resume driving. Once Opportunity
was given the green light to begin moving again, she immediately repositioned
herself in front of a rock festoon-rich rock dubbed Overgaard, where she has
been examining several chosen spots up close.
Both Spirit and Opportunity are in good health now, but winter is coming
on and the power is beginning to drop. The rovers have already survived
one Martian winter, so the team is prepared. But they also know the rovers
cannot go on forever. “We’re living day to day at this point,” Squyres
told The Planetary Society in an interview. “We think we’ve got
a fighting chance to get both rovers through the winter, but it’s going
to be hard work, just like it was last year. We have two rovers that are
getting very old and we have no basis for knowing how long they will survive.
We continue to generate plans for them that extend into the distant future,
but each day we try to drive them like no tomorrow.”
Spirit from Gusev Crater
As the calendar flipped over to 2006, Spirit welcomed the New Year by taking
a striking panorama of the El Dorado dune field and completing “a very
quick, very aggressive, very successful” IDD campaign there, said Squyres.
During the holiday weekend, the rover used all three of her spectrometers
plus the microscopic imager (MI) and the panorama camera (PanCam) to check
out a target there called Edgar, and to acquire spectral data and compositional
and mineralogical information about these large, rippled sand deposits.
Spirit descends Husband Hill
In late November, while descending Husband Hill, Spirit took this image while
stopped at Seminole, one in a series of bedrock-laden terraces. It is the
most detailed panorama so far of the Inner Basin, which she must cross to
get to McCool Hill, her next major destination. The rover acquired the 405
individual images that make up this 360-degree view of the surrounding terrain
using five different filters on the PanCam from Sols 672 to 677 (November
23 to 28), the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. This image is an approximately
true-color rendering using camera's 750-, 530-, and 430-nanometer filters.
Seams between individual frames have been eliminated from the sky portion of
the mosaic to better simulate the vista a person standing on Mars would see.
Credit: NASA / JPL / Cornell
|
Following her study of El Dorado, driving became the primary objective on
Spirit’s agenda. The team wants Spirit to get to Home Plate, a conspicuous
circular feature visible from space and from the summit of Husband Hill, and
then rove on to McCool Hill where she can position herself for the best possible
sunlight exposure on the north-facing slopes during the Martian winter. Therefore,
the team planned major roves during the first week of January in an effort
to maximize driving, because on Sol 715 (January 6), the rover went into restricted
sols, and that meant she would not be able to drive every day for the ensuing
week or so. (Restricted sols occur when the timing of the communications pass
from the Mars Odyssey orbiter is too late in the day for team members to gather
vital location and health information about the rover after it executed recent
commands, so they must wait until the next sol to find out where and how the
rover is.)
On Sol 711 (January 2), Spirit roved for 56 meters (184 feet) toward Home
Plate, using both blind driving and autonomous navigation. The autonomous-navigation
portion of the drive, however, terminated early because the rover could not
find a safe path, so she did what she was supposed to do and stopped the drive.
Spirit did not resume driving until Sol 713 (January 4), but on that sol she
managed to log 80 meters (263 feet) even though she received stall warnings
on the left front steer motor on hard left turns, and on the following sol
she roved another 62 meters (203 feet). The rover handlers performed a steering
test of the left front steering actuator because of the prior stall warnings,
but preliminary results showed no more stall warnings. Spirit, meanwhile,
had put 198 meters (650 feet) behind her during the first week of the month.
By Sol 717 (January 8), Spirit had roved another 55.4 meters (about 181 feet)
closer to Home Plate using a combination of commanded and autonomous navigation,
but quickly found herself on slippery terrain, experiencing slippage of 80
percent as the wheels were turning. After a day of untargeted remote sensing,
the rover journeyed on, driving 9.3 meters (30.5 feet) on Sol 719 (January
10), but then stopped because the slip rate of her wheels once again exceeded
80 percent in the sandy, unfamiliar terrain. As the rover team viewed the
new images and data the rover sent home, Spirit conducted more untargeted
remote sensing and atmospheric studies.
“Our intention after leaving El Dorado was to sprint to Home Plate
and not stop for anything unless something really wonderful turned up -- and
then something really wonderful turned up,” said Squyres. “We
were driving along minding our own business when we hit a patch where the
rover was slipping and sliding a little bit, and then slipping a lot. In the
process of doing all that slipping, the rover churned up some soil. It wasn’t
enough churning to make us seriously worry about getting stuck, but it was
enough for the rover to decide -- ‘Hey I’m slipping too much.
I better just stop and let the guys on the ground figure it out.’ And
when we looked at the pictures, we saw that the soil we turned up was very
bright, almost white in appearance, very similar to what happened at Paso
Robles, a target just below Larry’s Lookout,” he said.
Arad
The white material in this image of the target dubbed Arad, is brighter than
any Spirit has previously seen. It has a powdery and cloddy texture and exhibits
a high abundance of salts, similar in some ways to bright soil deposits seen
back at the Paso Robles site that the rover encountered on Sol 431 (March
20, 2005) while roving down the northern flank of Husband Hill. Scientists have
since confirmed that these materials have a salty chemistry dominated by
iron-bearing sulfates, which may record the past presence of water, as sulfates
are most easily mobilized and concentrated in liquid solution. This view is
an approximately true-color composite combining images taken with the PanCam's
600-nanometer, 530-nanometer and 480-nanometer filters on Sol 721 (January 12,
2006).
Credit: NASA/JPL/Cornell
| The team decided this weird white stuff was worth stopping for, so on Sol
721 (January 13), Spirit adjusted her position to place the IDD instruments
on the target and settled in for several days of observations, using all her
instruments to conduct a campaign of this soil target the team christened
Arad. “This was just too good to pass up,” said Squyres. “It
had been hundreds of sols and hundreds of meters and we’re at lower
elevation than we were at Paso Robles. This clearly had the potential to be
something very interesting.”
The data Spirit returned indicate that Arad has a salty chemistry dominated
by iron-bearing sulfates, a composition that was indeed similar to that of
the more silica-rich target Paso Robles encountered earlier in the rover's
journey through the Columbia Hills. The presence of salt of course can be
considered another clue to the existence of past water on Mars. “It
turns out to be astoundingly rich in ferric sulfate salts, and now holds the
record for the highest concentration of salt found on Mars,” informed
Squyres. “Interestingly though it does not seem to have the phosphates
that Paso Robles did. We’re still working out exactly what it means.”
Once her work was done at Arad, Spirit continued on toward Home Plate, but
not without a bit of difficulty driving out of the sandy area near the salty
soil target. Rover instruments recorded slip rates as high as 92 percent on
the wheels before Spirit's drivers designed a command strategy that took the
rover away from the sand dunes on Sol 728 (January 20). “Since leaving
Arad, we have just been driving basically as fast as we can given the ruggedness
of the terrain,” said Squyres.
As Earth approached the Chinese New Year (The Year of the Dog), which rang
in Sunday January 29, the MER team members working with Spirit decided to
pay homage to the home country of several members of the MER team and assign
Chinese names of gods, warriors, inventors, and scientists, as well as rivers,
lakes, and mountains, to the latest series of the rock targets Spirit came
across.
“In fact, this has been followed very closely and avidly by the news
media in China,” Squyres noted. “Alian Wang [a member of the MER
science team from the University of Washington, St Louis] has become something
of a media star in China by being interviewed every evening US time / morning
Chinese time on national television there. She’s been reporting on the
daily activities of Spirit and what rocks we have named and showing pictures
of the rocks with the Chinese names, and [her appearances] have become very
popular there.”
During the last week or so, Spirit has been maneuvering along the edge of
an arc-shaped feature called Lorre Ridge and has passed by some classic examples
of basaltic rocks with striking textures. This rover first encountered basalts
at her landing site two years ago on a vast plain covered with solidified
lava that appeared to have flowed across Gusev Crater. Later, as Spirit climbed
Husband Hill, basaltic rocks became rare.
The basaltic rocks that Spirit is now seeing are intriguing because they
exhibit many small holes or vesicles or voids, similar to some kinds of volcanic
rocks on Earth. Vesicular rocks form when gas bubbles are trapped in lava
flows and the rock solidifies around the bubbles. When the gas escapes, it
leaves holes in the rock. The quantity of gas bubbles in rocks on Husband
Hill varies considerably; some rocks have none and a few have some, and some,
such as the rock FuYi, are downright "frothy," as Squyres described
them. [In ancient Chinese myth, FuYi was the first great emperor and lived
in the east. He explained the theory of "Yin" and "Yang" to
his people, invented the net to catch fish, was the first to use fire to cook
food, and invented a musical instrument known as the "Se" to accompany
his peoples' songs and dances.]
“We’ve been resisting the temptation to actually stop at one
those rocks, because we really want to get to Home Plate, but we got lucky
a few days ago and had one pop up just by chance in front of us,” Squyres
said of the rock they dubbed GongGong. As Spirit’s luck would have it,
GongGong was quite a specimen, featuring lots of voids and wind erosion. [GongGong
was the king of water from the north who knocked down Mount BuZhou with his
head.] “We whipped out the IDD and took what have to be some of
the coolest MI images of the whole mission.”
The change in textures and the location of the basalts may be signs that
Spirit is driving along the edge of a lava flow, which may or may not be the
same as the basalt blanketing the plains near her landing site. The large
size and "frothy" nature of the boulders around Lorre Ridge might
indicate that eruptions once took place at the edge of the lava flow, where
the lava interacted with the rocks of the basin floor. Scientists hope to
learn more as Spirit continues to investigate these rocks.
On Sol 733 (last Wednesday) Spirit experienced a dynamic brake error in the
left front and right rear steering actuators and engineers halted the drive.
On the surface, this appeared to be similar to dynamic brake anomalies experienced
on Sols 265 (October 1, 2004) and 277 (October 13, 2004), which involved the
right front and left rear steering motors. Analysis and testing at the time
indicated that the problem was consistent with a delayed contact on the status
relay. The rover engineering team sent a command to ignore the relay status,
and the rover completed an autonomous drive of approximately 40 meters (131
feet). In the meantime, however, the team determined that it was safe for
the rover to continue driving, but without using the left front and right
rear steering motors.
Spirit is currently near the north end of Mitcheltree Ridge, the most significant
topographic feature between the rover and Home Plate. It was named in honor
of the late Bob Mitcheltree, “one of the real intellectual leaders of
Entry, Descent, and Landing team that got our rovers safely down to the surface
of Mars,” as Squyres affectionately identified him. “We should
get our first close-up look at Home Plate soon.”
From there, the plan is all about McCool Hill. “So, after we get done
with Home Plate we’ll be heading out of this Inner Basin and toward
McCool Hill on the other side,” explained Joy Crisp, MER project scientist
at JPL. “Winter basically means that we will have less energy for science.
Beyond the fact that there is less sunlight to power the rovers, Spirit and
Opportunity require more energy to stay warm at night. Winter is less of threat
for Opportunity, but for Spirit, which is at 15 degrees south, it’s
more of an urgent thing to get on north-facing slopes. There’s a fairly
large area we can roam around on and it looks interesting,” she added. “We
can see brighter patches of rock on the edge of that hill, so there will be
lots of things for us to study on those north-facing slopes.”
Opportunity from Meridiani Planum
As 2005 gave way to 2006, Opportunity was working away at Olympia, using
her Mössbauer spectrometer for a long integration on a target there dubbed
Hunt. On Sol 691 (January 2), the rover took her RAT and for 11 minutes brushed
Ted, another nearby rock she had been checking out, then reexamined it with
the MI and spectrometers. During the rest of the week, the rover continued
the Mössbauer spectrometer integration on Ted, took some more images
for the Erebus panorama.

Erebus Crater
Opportunity acquired the images for this panorama of the Erebus Crater
on Sols 652 to 663 (November 23 to December 5, 2005 ) while exploring
sand dunes and outcrop rocks in Meridiani Planum. Since the time this
panorama was acquired, and while engineers have been tending to Opportunity's
broken "arm," the panorama
has been expanded to include more than 1,300 images of this terrain through
all of the PanCam multispectral filters, making it the largest panorama
acquired by either rover during the mission, and one that provides
the team's highest resolution view yet of the finely-layered outcrop
rocks, wind ripples, and small cobbles and grains along the rim of
the wide but shallow Erebus Crater. The panorama shown here is an approximate
true-color rendering and is presented here as a cylindrical projection.
Image-to-image seams have been eliminated from the sky portion of the
mosaic to better simulate the vista a person standing on Mars would
see.
Credit:
NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell |
As January wore on, Opportunity did some camera calibrations, mini-TES readings,
and also took some sunset pictures, as well as some high-resolution images
of the rocks featuring festooned cross-bedding, making the most of her extended
visit at the Olympia site. The rover also conducted a calibration of her IDD
by putting it into various positions and photographing it with her front hazard-avoidance
camera, a calibration activity that the team dubbed Martian T’ai Chi.
During this activity, the arm is commanded to a few different positions and
the front hazard-avoidance camera takes images at each position. The arm location
as reported by the spacecraft is then compared to the location shown in the
images so the arm model and camera model can be calibrated against each other.
Normally the team would have stowed the robotic arm since the rover’s
IDD work at this location was done, but because the engineers had not yet
determined the best stow position, they simply had Opportunity return her
arm to the ready position. “We had full confidence that the rover could
go on, but we also recognized that this is an inevitable sign of aging,” Crisp
told The Planetary Society. “It is a sobering indicator that they won’t
keep going and going forever. And that is an additional reason the team wants
to try and get to Victoria Crater sooner rather than later.”
On Sol 699 (January 10), Opportunity made some photometry observations with
the navigation camera, and began acquiring a high-resolution, blue stereo
panorama of the surrounding outcrop, which has been dubbed the Fenway panorama.
In the ensuing days, the rover also used her mini-TES to observe the atmosphere
and several outcrop targets, and continued her photometry observations. By
Sol 701 (January 12), she had completed the Fenway panorama and the photometric
observations, and move on to use her PanCam to make thirteen-filter images
of a festoon-rich rock called Overgaard.
Opportunity attempted to stow her arm on Sol 704 (January 15), but was not
successful, because the shoulder-joint motor stalled once again. Undaunted,
the rover moved on to the next task -- using her mini-TES to make some atmospheric
observations coordinated with an overflight by the European Space Agency’s
Mars Express. Later in the month, the rover successfully conducted more coordinated
observations with Mars Express using her PanCam, and also took images of a
transit across the Sun by Mars’ moons, Phobos and Deimos.
By mid-January Opportunity had done just about every a rover could do at
Olympia. “We did everything we could practically, including some low
light angle imaging,” Crisp confirmed. “The rocks we were standing
on were just stunning, and we saw more of the festoons, the signs of flowing
water, which were clearly represented in the layered bedrock of Olympia, so
we took lots of images of those, including many high-resolution images. We
also took a lot of images at low Sun angles with the MI and were able to see
this incredible texture there – it just brought out the laminations
in the rock much nicer.”

Festoon Patterns in Meridiani Outcrop
Opportunity took this image of a rock called Overgaard with the
PanCam at the edge of Erebus Crater on Sol 690 (January 2, 2006).
It shows the best examples yet seen in Meridiani Planum outcrop rocks
of well-preserved, fine-scale layering and what geologists call "cross-lamination." The
uppermost part of the rock, just above the center of the image and
in the enlargement at top, shows distinctive centimeter-sized, smile-shaped
features that sedimentary geologists call "festoons." The
detailed geometric patterns of such nested sets of concave-upward
layers in sedimentary rocks imply the presence of small, sinuous sand
ripples that form only in water on Earth. Similar festoon cross-lamination
and other distinctive sedimentary layer patterns are also visible
in other rocks near the rim of Erebus. Essentially, these features
are the preserved remnants of tiny (centimeter-sized) underwater sand
dunes formed long ago by waves in shallow water Mars' surface.
Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / Cornell |
On Sol 707 (January 19), Opportunity resumed driving, roving 2.4 meters (7.9
feet) to approach Overgaard, which was chosen for close examination because
of its remarkable cross-lamination texture. “We have figured out what
the IDD issue was and have worked around it, so that problem has been solved
for the time being and Opportunity is back to doing good science again with
the IDD,” Squyres said. “We’ve found a way to drive
short distances with the IDD deployed, and we used it successfully to get
to the lower part of Overgaard,” he added.
Overgaard is a rock that features many interesting sedimentary structures,
including “the best current ripples we’ve seen on the whole mission,” Squyres
said. “We are shooting some fairly substantial MI mosaics on Overgaard,
which is a big enough rock that we actually have to do these mosaics from
two different positions. We’re covering enough ground with the MI on
this one that we have to do part of the rock and then move the whole rover
and do another piece. The MI imaging there has gone beautifully, and we’ve
made a move to the upper part of Overgaard, where the festoons are. It might
be the most extensive MI coverage we’ve ever done.”
Once Opportunity has imaged all the festoons on Upper Overgaard, the team
plans to have the rover check out a couple of other alluring nearby targets
at Olympia, including rocks named Bellemont and Roosevelt. “And once
that’s done, we’re going to hit the road to the south again to
go to the Mogollon Rim,” Squyres said. “We’re not exactly
sure how we’re going to attack that site yet, but overall we’re
less interested in spending time at the Mogollon Rim than we were previously.
The reason being that we’ve done so well at Olympia – all the
things we were hoping we’d find at Mogollon we have found already at
Olympia. These current ripples are better than anything we have found at Eagle
or Endurance or anywhere else, so we feel we’re already reaped our benefit
of our visit to Eerebus. There might be something wonderful at Payson [a primary
target at the Mogollon Rim] and we’ll see when we get there. A balance
is necessary, but our hoped-for drive strategy is a pretty aggressive one,
and the team is very anxious to head southward at a brisk pace now to get
to Victoria Crater.”
In other MER News . . .
Even as Spirit and Opportunity continued their explorations at their respective
regions on Mars, they were starring in a short documentary down here on Earth,
as Roving Mars hit the really big screens in IMAX theaters in two
dozen cities across the country Friday, January 27. The 40-minute film tells
the story of the journey of the rovers as well as the journey of the MER team.
Directed by George Butler and produced by Frank Marshall, the movie chronicles
the rovers' early development to their treks across Gusev Crater and Meridiani
Planum.
Equipping the rovers with IMAX-quality cameras was a priority for the MER
mission from the beginning. "We set for ourselves the goal of making
two robot field geologists," said Squyres. Jim Bell, leader of the PanCam
team for the mission, noted that meant giving the rover cameras 20/20 stereo
vision, making MER "the first time we've had human resolution on Mars."
Documenting the mission for a film, though, was not originally in NASA's
plans. That idea came together in part thanks to Squyres' younger brother,
Tim, an Academy Award-nominated film editor. The younger Squyres pitched the
idea to Butler and Marshall, who then did their own share of pitching to the
space agency before NASA finally granted them access for filming. The pivotal
point occurred just before Spirit's launch in June 2003, when tension was
at its peak and the team couldn’t afford to be slowed down by a camera
crew. So Butler rented the IMAX theater at Cape Canaveral to show the MER
team his last movie -- a documentary about the journey of Antarctic explorer
Sir Ernest Shackleton. "You could feel this chill go through the room," Squyres
remembered. From that moment, Butler's film crews had full access.
Still, neither Butler's crews nor the rovers' cameras on Mars could capture
images of the rovers themselves once they were in orbit. So Dan Maas -- creator
of Emmy-nominated Maas Digital in Ithaca, New York, and the animated video
of the Mars Exploration Rovers arriving, landing, and roving around Mars --
rendered the magic. For Roving Mars, Maas delivered brilliantly,
said Squyres -- creating a seamless transition between actual footage and
12 minutes of lifelike animation that is true to the mission data. It's all
meticulously "real," he noted, from the placement of rocks on the
surface of Mars to the way the rovers bounced down on opposite sides of the
planet in January 2004 ensconced in big balloon-like airbags.
The film, which is sponsored by Lockheed Martin and distributed by the Walt
Disney Company, is not heavy on the science, but it does make for a rover
ride that captures the spirit of exploration and the opportunity before humankind
to go where no human has gone before.
“It was a thrill,” Squyres said after seeing the film’s
premiere. “Whenever you‘re the subject of a documentary you approach
it with a little bit of trepidation when you see it for the first time, but
I thought they did a wonderful job with it. This story is a very visual, almost
a cinematic story at its heart anyway, so IMAX is actually a very good medium
for telling this story. One of the high points for me of course is that they
acquired some spectacular footage of the rovers during final assembly and
testing at Cape Canaveral, so you see these beautiful IMAX shots of the two
rovers in the high bay at the Cape, just glorious looking stuff. There’s
a wonderful launch sequence, then the landings animated by Dan Maas -- this
is Dan Maas working at IMAX resolution and it is absolutely spectacular.”
As a scientist, Squyres said the best part of the film was seeing the PanCam
images on the really big screen. “I’ve know for more than 15 years
that once we finally somehow got PanCam to Mars it was going to deliver IMAX
quality images,” he said. “Knowing that intellectually and having
the equations to prove it is one thing, but to actually see an IMAX image
from Mars on a screen in front of you entirely, well . . . it was a very moving
thing for me to see our pictures in that format.”
From the audience perspective, if viewers -- especially the youngest ones
-- get inspired to do some exploration of their own, Squyres said, the movie
will have served its purpose. "What I would most like is if some kid
watches this movie and says, 'I want to go there.’ And then actually
does it."
|
|