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An image from Spirit's front hazard identification camera shows the robotic arm extended to the rock called Adirondack. |
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NASA's rover page
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Healthier Spirit Gets Back to Work While Opportunity Prepares to Roll
January 29, 2004
NASA's Spirit rover on Mars has resumed taking pictures as engineers
continue work on restoring its health. Meanwhile, Spirit's twin,
Opportunity, extended its rear wheels backward to driving position
last night as part of preparations to roll off its lander, possibly
as early as overnight Saturday-to-Sunday.
Spirit shot and transmitted a picture yesterday to show the position
of its robotic arm. "The arm is exactly where we expected," said
Jennifer Trosper, mission manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. It is still extended in the same
position as when the rover developed communication and computer
problems on Jan. 22. A mineral-identifying instrument called a
Moessbauer spectrometer, at the tip of the arm, is positioned at a
rock nicknamed Adirondack.
Engineers have been carefully nursing Spirit back toward full
operations for the past week. They are sending commands today for
the rover to begin making new scientific observations again,
starting with panoramic camera images of nearby rocks. Today's
commands also tell the rover to send data stored by two instruments
since they took readings on Adirondack last week -- the Moessbauer
spectrometer and the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer, which
identifies the chemical elements in a target.
"We know we still have some engineering work to do, but we think we
understand the problem well enough to do science in parallel with
that work," Trosper said. Several attempts to get a full trace of
data related to the rover's problem have only partially succeeded.
The engineers might choose to reformat the rover's flash memory in
the next few days.
A health check of Spirit's camera mast is on the agenda for today.
Another health check, of an actuator motor for a periscope mirror of
the miniature thermal emission spectrometer, is planned for Friday.
Halfway around Mars from Spirit, Opportunity's lander platform
successfully tilted itself forward by pulling airbag material under
the rear portion of the lander then flexing its rear petal downward.
"What this did is drive our front edge lower," said JPL's Matt
Wallace, mission manager. "The tips of the egress aid (a reinforced
fabric ramp) are now in the soil. That makes egress look perfect.
It's going to be an easy ride." The rover also retracted a lift
mechanism underneath the rover, to get it out of the way for the
egress, or drive-off.
During Opportunity's sol 6, the martian day that started today at
10:26 a.m. PST, the rover will be commanded to lower the middle pair
of its six wheels and to release its robotic arm from the latch that
has held it since before launch.
Yesterday, Opportunity used its minature thermal emission
spectrometer on a portion of the landing neighborhood that includes
a rock outcrop. The instrument identifies the composition of rocks
and soils from a distance. Opportunity did not return the data from
those observations before going to sleep for the martian night, but
may later today.
The rovers' main task in coming weeks and months is to explore their
landing sites for evidence in the rocks and soil about whether the
sites' past environments were ever watery and possibly suitable for
sustaining life.
JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in
Pasadena, manages the Mars Exploration Rover project for NASA's
Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. Images and additional
information about the project are available from JPL at
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov and from Cornell University, Ithaca,
N.Y., at http://athena.cornell.edu.