As NASA scientists pored over striking new photos from Mars
revealing finely layered formations of ancient bedrock, engineers
labored on Tuesday to diagnose problems with two robotic rovers on
opposite sides of the red planet.
Besides a serious malfunction that has idled the first rover,
Spirit, since last Wednesday, mission controllers at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory said they are now contending with a power
drain on Spirit's newly arrived twin, Opportunity.
Mission manager Jim Erickson told reporters that the power loss
appeared to be from one of the craft's heating units that keeps
turning itself on and running overnight without receiving commands
from NASA to do so.
While engineers do not believe the faulty thermostat will
overheat the vehicle, the long-term consequences of the glitch and
whether it can be fixed are not yet known, Erickson said.
"I'd like to have a little more information on what we're seeing
from the vehicle before we make any judgments there," he said.
Otherwise, the rover was "in pretty good shape" as a new Martian
day, its fourth, dawned over Opportunity's landing site on a wide,
flat plain known as the Meridiani Planum.
The area is of interest to scientists because it is believed to
contain large deposits of an iron-bearing crystalline mineral
called hematite, which on Earth usually forms in the presence of
liquid water.
Both Opportunity and Spirit are equipped with a mobile
laboratory of geologic tools designed to search for evidence that
the barren Martian surface was once wetter, and possibly more
hospitable to life, than it is now.
Seeing rock layers
The first three-dimensional, panoramic images beamed back from
Opportunity showed an intriguing outcrop of exposed bedrock "in
exquisite detail," said principal science investigator Steve
Squyres of Cornell University.
The nearby bedrock formation, the first ever found on Mars,
consists of fine layers, some no thicker than a finger, that are
believed to be billions of years old, Squyres said. Also visible is
a feature believed to be cross-bedding, in which the mineral layers
lie at angles to the horizontal stack, which can form from cyclical
patterns of sediments that build up, then partially erode away,
then rebuild again.
"It's going to be fascinating beyond words to get up close to
the bedrock,” he said. "We're going to drive up to this rock
outcropping and beat on it with everything we've got."
Andrew Knoll, a science team leader from Harvard University,
said the rock layers either originated from ash spewed by volcanic
activity early in Mars' history, or from sediments deposited there
by wind or water. Closer examination should answer those questions,
he said.
Opportunity's "high-gain" antenna, the one used for high-speed
communications directly with Earth, has been moved into position,
and engineers plan to lift the folded rover off its belly during
the day and stretch out its front wheels, Erickson said.
He added that Opportunity was probably still a week away from
being ready to roll off its landing platform and onto the floor of
the small, shallow crater where the spacecraft is resting. Spirit
rolled onto the Martian surface 12 days after it landed January 3
in a giant, Connecticut-sized basin known as Gusev Crater, half a
planet away.
Spirit still idle
JPL controllers say they are proceeding cautiously with
Opportunity in hopes of avoiding a repeat of the difficulties that
have left Spirit crippled since last week.
Mission manager Jennifer Trosper said engineers are exploring
several scenarios for what may have caused problems with Spirit's
onboard computer memory, including an overload from the buildup of
data files during the spacecraft's eight-month voyage to Mars.
Another possibility is a burst of charged particles from a solar
flare that could have bombarded the rover at a vulnerable point
during its communications with Earth.
Project managers have said they hope to understand and overcome
their problems with Spirit and return the rover to service in the
next few weeks.
(China Daily January 29, 2004)