The Mars rover Curiosity was due to wrap up an exhaustive, weeks-long
instrument check on Thursday, clearing the way for its first lengthy
drive to determine whether the Red Planet has ever been hospitable to
life, NASA officials said.
The six-wheeled, nuclear-powered rover landed five weeks ago inside a
giant impact basin called Gale Crater, near the Martian equator, to
conduct NASA's first astrobiology mission since the 1970s-era Viking
probes.
For its final equipment check, Curiosity will maneuver its robot arm
so its close-up camera touches the tray where processed rock and soil
samples will be analyzed.
The rover, equipped with an array of the most elaborate laboratory
instruments ever sent to a distant world, also has a bit of sightseeing
on its agenda. Scientists want to obtain video footage of the Martian
moon Phobos passing by the sun.
Starting Friday evening, the plan is to "drive, drive, drive" until
scientists find a suitable rock for the rover's first robotic "hands-on"
analysis, mission manager Jennifer Trosper told reporters during a
conference call on Wednesday.
It will stop when scientists find suitable soil to scoop up and run through Curiosity's onboard chemistry lab.
All the while, the rover will be heading toward a site scientists
have labeled "Glenelg," where three different types of rock intersect.
Glenelg, which lies about 1,312 feet away from Curiosity's current
position, was named by mission geologists after a rock formation in
northern Canada.
The overall purpose of the $2.5 billion Mars Science Lab mission is
to search for places where microbial organisms could have evolved and
been preserved. In addition to ferreting out the chemical and geologic
footprints of water, Curiosity will hunt for organic compounds and other
ingredients believed to be necessary for life.
Curiosity, which is designed to last two years, will venture about
4.3 miles from its landing site to climb a 3-mile-high mound of layered
rock rising from the floor of Gale Crater. Dubbed Mount Sharp, it is
believed to be the remains of sediment that once filled the 96-mile wide
(154-meter) basin.
The rover has racked up 358 feet on its odometer during test drives.
Before setting out for Mount Sharp, scientists expect to drive Curiosity
about 131 feet a day during its planned trek to Glenelg, with several
stops for science observations.
No comments:
Post a Comment