Planetary News: Mars (2005)
Mars Exploration Rovers Update:
Spirit Revels in Science at Husband Hill
Summit as Opportunity Closes in on Erebus Crater
By A.J.S. Rayl
22 September 2005
Spirit took this image of Mars' moons Phobos and Deimos in August 2005
Taking advantage of extra solar energy collected during the day, Spirit settled in for an evening of stargazing, photographing the two moons of Mars with her PanCam as they crossed the night sky on Sol 585/Aug. 26. Phobos is the brighter object on the right; Deimos is on the left. Scientists will use these enhanced-brightness images to better map the moons' orbital positions, learn more about their composition, and monitor the presence of nighttime clouds or haze.
Credit: NASA / JPL / Cornell / Texas A&M
|
Despite a few unexpected bumps and curves in their explorations
at Gusev Crater and Meridiani Planum, the Mars Exploration Rovers have
been working away and both Spirit and Opportunity have put in a very productive
month's worth of work on the Red Planet.
Spirit has been checking out the
summit of Husband Hill since arriving there late last month. "Spirit
is perched as we speak right on the lip of Tennessee Valley - the very
top of Tennessee Valley looking down into it from the summit," rover
lead scientist Steve Squyres told The Planetary Society yesterday. In the
midst of her studies of the summit and Tennessee Valley, the rover has
been taking in the moons of Mars, producing an ever-growing picture collection
of Phobos and Deimos.
On the other side of the planet, Opportunity is back
on track after a sudden, unexpected shutdown toward the end of August,
and no apparent worse for the wear -- even though the MER engineers don't
know what happened. "It's
an unresolved issue," said Joy Crisp, MER project scientist, of the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), where the rovers were designed and built. "But," she
added, "we haven't had any problems since then." In recent days,
Opportunity has been tooling down the Erebus Highway and is now, at long
last, closing in on Eerbus Crater.
Both rovers are in good health and power positive, with Spirit boasting 885
watt hours, and Opportunity 630. While it may seem that Opportunity is a bit
sluggish, "it's plenty enough for us to do a lot," said Crisp in
an interview yesterday. "This rover hasn't had a good cleaning event
in a while, and it's looking a little dirtier."
As the winds have come and swept away layers of accumulated dust on the rovers'
solar arrays, and the power levels have risen and dipped, the seasons have
come and gone. And the once-daring hope that maybe the rovers could survive
another year has almost turned into an assumption. The mission is now funded
through September 2006. "The rovers could even go beyond that," mused
Crisp. "We don't see anything [on the rovers] where we say - 'Here's
the end of life.'" Even the Mössbauer spectrometer theoretically
could keep going for another year, she noted. "With radioactive source
life decaying, we would have to really pick our targets and spend a lot more
time taking the measurements, but we should be able to get a reading." Still,
as everyone in this business of space knows -- anything could happen anytime.
For Squyres it's simple: "I never make promises."
Disclaimer stated, so far, for the rovers on Mars -- it's still all good.
Spirit from Gusev Crater
Spirit image taken atop Husband Hill in September 2005
Spirit took the images that went into this mosaic from the top of Husband Hill on Sol 603/Sept. 13. The picture shows undulating bands of dark and light sand, and sloping dunes. Scattered cobbles form an apron around a ridge of light-colored rock that stands in bold relief against distant plains. Spirit is looking north-northeast en route to examining more of the local geology of the Columbia Hills in Gusev Crater. The largest light-colored rock in the foreground is nicknamed Whittaker. The cliff beyond it and slightly to the left is called Tenzing. The highest rock on the ridge ahead has been dubbed Hillary. Science team members selected the nicknames in honor of the earliest climbers to scale Mount Everest on Earth.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/NMMNH
|
Since arriving at summit #1 during the final days of August, Spirit has been
checking out targets around the highest of the two summits at Husband Hill,
and of the surroundings beyond.
During the last several weeks, this robot field geologist has been taking
a lot of pictures. Spirit completed the full 360-degree color panorama from
the summit looking into Tennessee Valley early this month, and since then
has conducted another stereo imaging campaign from a different vantage point.
Spirit has also been checking out a target called Irvine, as well as moving
to other areas to look at interesting soil and drift targets with her microscopic
imager. In addition to all that, the rover is taking a series of images that
will be pulled together to produce a self-portrait.
On Sol 598/September 9, Spirit returned to Irvine. The science team decided
the rover should further examine an area there dubbed Putative Dike, which
may be a crack-like cut that often forms when magma from a volcano travels
through or over another rock. So the rover checked it out and did some scuffs
and turns and took a look at what she'd uncovered.
Spirit has also been "sprinkling in" some nighttime picture taking
sessions of Martian moons, Crisp said, and is building quite a scrapbook of
images of Phobos and Deimos. And throughout the month, the rover kept an eye
on the dust accumulation among other things, and used her MI to take pictures
of the capture and filter magnets (you can't see our little robot right now)
and took readings with the APXS and Mössbauer on the capture magnet.
Around mid-month, Spirit slowed down a bit because she was put on restricted
sols. These down days occur when the timing of the communications pass from
the Odyssey orbiter is too late in the Earth day to gather vital location
and health information about the rover after it executed recent commands;
therefore, the team back on Earth must wait until the next day to make sure
the rover is where she's supposed to be.
Nevertheless, by the end of Sol 605/Sept. 15, Spirit added a new accomplishment
to her list of roving achievements by passing the 3-mile mark or 4,935 meters
on her odometer.
Beyond her science research, Spirit successfully carried out some communication
and engineering tests. In its orbit around the Sun, Mars comes in close to
Earth for a few months once every two years, and this month Mars has been
close enough that one-way communication travel time -- from the spacecraft
at the planet to the Deep Space Network antennas on Earth -- is only about
5 minutes at lightspeed. This shorter communication travel time means that
the rover team has plenty of communication-link margin to support a higher
uplink rate, so early in the month, the telecom team changed the rover's uplink
rate from 1000 bits per second to 2000 bits per second and Spirit was able
to send small deluges of data.
Subsequently, Spirit performed two tests to validate the team's ability to
send commands to the rover via the Mars Odyssey orbiter through the rover's
ultra-high frequency (UHF) radio. Downlink through the Odyssey UHF relay has
been the principal means for getting data from Spirit, but these tests were
to experiment with communicating the other direction: sending commands to
Spirit via Odyssey UHF relay. Indeed, it worked. The test was positive.
After her second investigation at Irvine, Spirit drove across the summit
to the other side of the summit plateau and up to a target the team has dubbed
Cliffhanger, "a beautiful drift," Squyres described. The science
team will be looking closely at the images Spirit has returned from Cliffhanger,
down to the grains they can see in the MI pictures, to try and better understand
how the wind moves stuff around on this alien planet.
"Cliffhanger is really right at the lip of the summit plateau," Squyres
said. "If you went just over Cliffhanger - 'Boom, you're down at Tennessee
Valley,'" he continued. "So it was a well-chosen name. We've just
finished doing a scuff of Cliffhanger with the wheels and then doing lots
of IDD [instrument deployment device] measurements."
All in all, it's been a good month for Spirit, a month of basking in the
glory of her ascension to the top of Husband Hill. From her current perch
overlooking Tennessee Valley, the rover is collecting "long baseline
stereo imaging," said Squyres, "taking images from several different
positions to really try and nail the geometry of the interior of the valley.
We're making a really good topographic map, so we will know where all the
outcrops are with good geometry."
The plan now calls for Spirit to spend a little more time at the summit. "We'll
hang around here for awhile longer, because there are a lot of interesting
things up here," Crisp said. "We're expecting we might want to do
some more robotic arm work, but it depends on what other targets we see up
here."
In coming days, the rover is probably going to head toward the true summit, "which
is a little outcrop that is actual highest point on the entire summit plateau," Squyres
said. "Not to bag the summit, but because there are some good rock outcrops
over there," he elaborated. "After that, we're going to head south." Where
and how exactly have yet to be determined.
Down here on Earth, the MER team members will get together today for a planning
meeting "to look at the slope maps and determine the interesting science
things the team wants to hit," said Crisp. As always, "it's a matter
of where it is okay to drive, what looks interesting, and what's a sensible
path to take to hit things along the way."
Opportunity from Meridiani Planum
Opportunity cruising on the Erebus Highway
Opportunity is currently traveling southward over a pavement of outcrop dubbed the Erebus Highway. The rover's next target, Erebus Crater, lies less than 328 feet/100 meters south of its current position. This view is a mosaic produced from frames the rover took with her navigation camera On Sol 582/Sept. 13. It shows fractured blocks of ancient sedimentary rock separated by recent sand dunes.
Credit: Image: NASA/JPL
|
Opportunity's recovery from the unexpected
'power-off' event on her Sol 563/August 24, appears complete, although
the MER engineers still have no idea what caused the rover to suddenly just
shut down.
"We proceeded very carefully, because we weren't sure what happened," explained
Crisp. "We came back slowly. One day at a time we added functionality
back, and each command we gave the rover executed beautifully."
By sol 570/Aug. 31, the rover had successfully performed observations with
the panoramic camera (PanCam), navigation camera, and miniature thermal emission
spectrometer (mini-TES) and had completed a short APXS integration, with the
robotic arm stowed, and a 21-foot/6.5-meter blind drive.
The team took additional precautions with each sol's plan, including shutting
down after the morning uplink, to save the high-gain antenna position, thus
preventing an X-band fault in case of another anomaly, and waiting 15 minutes
after wakeup to start any science activities. The rover responded as expected
in all case. "Opportunity is okay," reported Crisp.
Once she was back in the saddle, Opportunity continued her journey east to
the Erebus Highway. It was slow going at first because the rover team commanded
the operations with post-anomaly restrictions in place, and because the rover
has also been in restricted sol mode. And along the way, the rover, as has
always been the plan, has stopped to take pictures with the PanCam and navigation
camera, as well as remote sending with her mini-TES.
The week of September 11, Opportunity resumed normal operations, and began
making significant progress toward Erebus Crater. In fact, that next sol,
Monday, Sept. 12, the rovercompleted a 98-foot /30-meter drive that put her
on the Erebus Highway‚ an outcrop-rich area that extends south toward
the crater and provides the rover with a better surface to traverse. The rover's
been heading south since then. "We are proceeding south toward Erebus
Crater, and we've gotten to the point where we can see good outcrops exposed
on both the western and southeastern rims of Erebus Crater," Squyres
confirmed yesterday. The team has christened the patch of rocks on the southeast
side of the crater, Vermillion Cliffs, and those on the southwest side they
callthe Mogollon Rim.
Currently, "the rover is on the highway and just about at the rim," Squyres
said. But Opportunity is going to stop and check out "a really beautiful
exposure of bedrock that we named South Shetland," he said. "It's
not quite on the actual lip of the crater, but it's very close. Most likely,
we'll spend this weekend at South Shetland."
In coming days, Opportunity will continue her investigation of Erebus Crater.
"The inside looks like it's filled with sand-ripple dune things," Crisp
noted. Just the kind of things that make the hair on the rover engineers'
arms stand on end.
For now, the science team is waiting to get "closer images" to
decide, Crisp added, "if we're going to go left around Erebus or right
around Erebus, and that depends on what we see in terms of rock and what's
drivable."
Down at mission control, the Sol 563 anomaly is still under investigation.
But for Opportunity up on Mars, all's well that ends well.
|