NASA's Mars rover Curiosity is sizing up its next scientific target —
the first rocks the car-size robot will reach out and touch in more than
a month.
On Monday (Oct. 28), the 1-ton Curiosity rover
took some scouting photos of a rocky outcrop called "Cooperstown" from
about 262 feet (80 meters) away. Mission researchers plan to investigate
Cooperstown with Curiosity's arm-mounted instruments soon, putting this
science gear to such use for the first time since Sept. 22.
Curiosity has been making tracks over the last month or so, chewing up
ground as it heads from a spot near its landing site called Yellowknife
Bay to the rover's main science destination, a 3.4-mile-high (5.5
kilometers) massif called Mount Sharp. [Amazing Mars Rover Curiosity's Martian Views (Latest Photos)]
"What interests us about this site is an intriguing outcrop of layered
material visible in the orbital images," Kevin Lewis of Princeton
University, a mission participating scientist who has helped lead
planning for the Cooperstown activities, said in a statement. "We want
to see how the local layered outcrop at Cooperstown may help us relate
the geology of Yellowknife Bay to the geology of Mount Sharp."
Curiosity touched down inside Mars' huge Gale Crater in August 2012,
kicking off a planned two-year surface mission to determine if the Red
Planet could ever have supported microbial life. The rover team has
already checked off this milestone, determining in March that
Yellowknife Bay was indeed habitable billions of years ago.
But Curiosity's work is far from done. The robot's handlers are eager
to reach Mount Sharp, whose many layers record a history of Mars'
changing environmental conditions over time. They want Curiosity to read
those layers like a book as it climbs up through Mount Sharp's lower
reaches.
The rover won't dawdle at Cooperstown, which lies about one-third of
the way along the 5.3-mile (8.6 km) route from Yellowknife Bay to Mount
Sharp. Mission scientists plan to study the outcrop for just a single
day, compared with four days at the previous substantial science stop
(an outcrop dubbed "Darwin," which Curiosity left on Sept. 22).
Curiosity has also begun picking up its driving pace. It reached the
Cooperstown-viewing vantage point Monday, for example, after completing
its first-ever two-day autonomous drive. (In autonomous mode, the rover
charts its own course by analyzing photos it takes along the way, rather
than waiting for direct commands from its handlers on Earth.)
Rover drivers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.
directed Curiosity on a 180-foot (55 m) trek on Sunday (Oct. 27). Later
that day, however, the six-wheeled robot drove itself for 125 feet (38
m); it then cruised autonomously for another 105 feet (32 m) after
waking up on Monday.
The Curiosity team is also preparing to upload a software update to the
rover next week. The update — which will be the third Curiosity has
received since landing on Mars
— will provide several upgrades, including an expanded ability to use
the rover's robotic arm while parked on slopes. This capability will
likely be crucial during Curiosity's time exploring Mount Sharp, NASA
officials said.
Written By : Mike. Follow Mike Wall on Twitter @michaeldwall
Source : LiveScienceCom









0 comments:
Post a Comment