Suggested Searches

2 min read

Sol 687 Update on Curiosity from USGS Scientist Ryan Anderson: Soliday

Today we received data from sol 685, showing that we drove 60.4


Today we received data from sol 685, showing that we drove 60.4 meters, and the rover is busy doing

its sol 686 activities right now. Today we are planning sols 687 and 688 to cover the weekend (Sunday is

a soliday , which is a day without planning to allow Earth and Mars schedules to sync back up). We’re

trying something special in the sol 687 plan: MAHLI is going to capture a picture of the plasma plume

generated when ChemCam zaps a rock! Because of the low atmospheric pressure on Mars, the spark of

plasma generated when ChemCam’s laser zaps a rock is larger and brighter than it would be on Earth.

This is a complicated activity that has required lots of pre-planning but hopefully it will show a nice

bright spark. After ChemCam zaps the rock (dubbed Nova ), and MAHLI catches it in the act, we will

take advantage of the fact that the rover’s arm is already out and place the APXS on the rock to do an

overnight integration. Then, on sol 688, we will do another drive.


Meanwhile, most of the Mars scientists on the team are getting ready to head to the 8th International Conference on Mars next week (it’s actually in Pasadena, California, not on Mars). The rover will be

doing rapid traverse sols next week so the plans will be light on science and focused on driving. Your

blogging team will also be in Pasadena, so we won’t be able to do our daily Curiosity updates here, but

we will try to put up a few brief posts about some of the interesting Mars science at the conference!

Dates of planned rover activities described in these reports are subject to change due to a variety of factors related to the Martian environment, communication relays and rover status.

Written by Ryan Anderson, Planetary Geologist at USGS Astrogeology Science Center

Share

Details

Last Updated
Oct 30, 2024

Related Terms