| Spirit Hits
the Sweet Spot NASA's Mars rover Spirit has landed in Gusev Crater, and it is beaming pictures back to Earth. |
"My hat is off to the navigation team because they did a fantastic job of getting us right where we wanted to be," says Steve Squyres of Cornell University, principal investigator for the science payload. "We hit the sweet spot. We wanted someplace where the wind had cleared [the dust] off the rocks for us--and this is it." Right: Distant hills, photographed by Spirit's navigation camera on Jan. 3, 2004. The region around Spirit's landing site appears to be criss-crossed by the trails of dust devils, which have carried away dust and left gravel behind. Dust-free rocks are good, because they're easier for the rover's geology instruments to penetrate and analyze.
To the delight of researchers, Spirit's first pictures of its surroundings resemble dried up lake beds on Earth. The terrain is flat and peppered with small rocks. No one knows if the resemblance is more than superficial. Spirit will use its geology tools to find out. "What we're seeing is a surface that is remarkably devoid of big boulders, at least in our immediate vicinity, and that's good news because big boulders are something we would have trouble driving over," Squyres said. "We see a rock population that is different from anything we've seen elsewhere on Mars, and it comes out very much in our favor." The flatland is well suited for roving. At the moment, the rover remains perched on its lander platform, and the next nine days or more will be spent preparing for egress, or rolling off, onto the martian surface. The platform is tilted by only two degrees, and the front deck is only about 37 cm off the ground. With no large rocks blocking the way, the rover is in good position for egress. Above: The Mars rover Spirit sits atop its landing platform in Gusev Crater. This is a mosaic of images taken by the rover's overhead navigation camera. The rover's initial images have excited scientists about the prospects of exploring the region after the roll-off. "This is our new neighborhood," says Squyres. And for the next three months, if all goes well, Spirit will explore it, searching the rocks and soil for clues to the mystery of Mars water, and maybe, martian life. Spirit's twin Mars Exploration Rover, Opportunity, will reach its landing site on the opposite side of Mars on Jan. 25th to begin a similar examination of a site called Meridiani Planum. Stay tuned to Science@NASA for more about that in the weeks ahead. |
| Credits &
Contacts |
Production Editor: Dr. Tony Phillips |
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The Science and Technology Directorate at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center sponsors the Science@NASA web sites. The mission of Science@NASA is to help the public understand how exciting NASA research is and to help NASA scientists fulfill their outreach responsibilities. |
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| Web Links |
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Mars Exploration -- (JPL) NASA's home page for exploration of the red planet Carbonated Mars -- (Science@NASA) Here on Earth the only way to make carbonate rocks is with the aid of liquid water. Finding such rocks on Mars might prove, once and for all, that the barren Red Planet was once warm and wet. The Case of the Missing Mars Water -- (Science@NASA) Plenty of clues suggest that liquid water once flowed on Mars --raising hopes that life could have arisen there-- but the evidence remains inconclusive and sometimes contradictory Making a Splash on Mars -- (Science@NASA) On a planet that's colder than Antarctica and where water boils at ten degrees above freezing, how could liquid water ever exist? Scientists say a dash of salt might help. Sedimentary Mars -- (Science@NASA) Mars Global Surveyor images reveal sedimentary rock layers on the Red Planet that may have formed underwater in the distant martian past. Layers
of Mars -- (Science@NASA) Mars Global Surveyor has spotted
terrains on Mars that look like sedimentary rock deposits. If
the mysterious layers formed underwater, as some scientists
suspect, they may be a good place to hunt for Martian fossils. |
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