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2004 News Releases
NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity drove down a reinforced
fabric ramp at the front of its lander platform and onto the soil of
Mars' Meridiani Planum this morning.
Also, new science results from the rover indicate that the site does
indeed have a type of mineral, crystalline hematite, that was the
principal reason the site was selected for exploration.
Controllers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory received
confirmation of the successful drive at 3:01 a.m. Pacific Standard
Time via a relay from the Mars Odyssey orbiter and Earth reception
by the Deep Space Network. Cheers erupted a minute later when
Opportunity sent a picture looking back at the now-empty lander and
showing wheel tracks in the martian soil.
For the first time in history, two mobile robots are exploring the
surface of another planet at the same time. Opportunity's twin,
Spirit, started making wheel tracks halfway around Mars from
Meridiani on Jan. 15.
"We're two for two! One dozen wheels on the soil." JPL's Chris
Lewicki, flight director, announced to the control room.
Matt Wallace, mission manager at JPL, told a subsequent news
briefing, "We knew it was going to be a good day. The rover woke up
fit and healthy to Bruce Springsteen's 'Born to Run,' and it turned
out to be a good choice."
The flight team needed only seven days since Opportunity's landing
to get the rover off its lander, compared with 12 days for Spirit
earlier this month. "We're getting practice at it," said JPLs Joel
Krajewski, activity lead for the procedure. Also, the configuration
of the deflated airbags and lander presented no trouble for
Opportunity, while some of the extra time needed for Spirit was due
to airbags at the front of the lander presenting a potential
obstacle.
Looking at a photo from Opportunity showing wheel tracks between the
empty lander and the rear of the rover about one meter or three feet
away, JPL's Kevin Burke, lead mechanical engineer for getting the
rover off the lander, said "We're glad to be seeing soil behind our
rover."
JPL's Chris Salvo, flight director, reported that Opportunity will
be preparing over the next couple days to reach out with it robotic
arm for a close inspection of the soil.
Gray granules covering most of the crater floor surrounding
Opportunity contain hematite, said Dr. Phil Christensen, lead
scientist for both rovers' miniature thermal emission spectrometers,
which are infrared-sensing instruments used for identifying rock
types from a distance. Crystalline hematite is of special interest
because, on Earth, it usually forms under wet environmental
conditions. The main task for both Mars Exploration Rovers in
coming weeks and months is to read clues in the rocks and soil to
learn about past environmental conditions at their landing sites,
particularly about whether the areas were ever watery and possibly
suitable for sustaining life.
The concentration of hematite appears strongest in a layer of dark
material above a light-covered outcrop in the wall of the crater
where Opportunity sits, Christensen said. "As we get out of the bowl
we're in, I think we'll get onto a surface that is rich in
hematite," he said.
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.
Guy Webster (818) 354-5011
2004-47
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