Sols 4331-4333: Today’s Rover ABC – Aurora, Backwards Driving, and Chemistry, with a Side of Images

Earth planning date: Friday, Oct. 11, 2024

This blogger is in the United Kingdom, just north of London, where we yesterday had beautiful night skies with a red aurora that was even visible with the unaided eye, and looked stunning on photographs. That reminded me of the solar storm that made it all the way to Mars earlier this year. Here is my colleague Deborah’s blog about it: “Aurora Watch on Mars.” And, of course, that was a great opportunity to do atmospheric science and prepare for future crewed missions, to assess radiation that future astronauts might encounter. You can read about it in the article, “NASA Watches Mars Light Up During Epic Solar Storm.” But now, back from shiny red night skies north of London, and auroras on Mars six months ago, to today’s planning!

Power — always a negotiation! Today, I was the Science Operations Working Group chair, the one who has to watch for the more technical side of things, such as the question if all the activities will fit into the plan. Today there were many imaging ideas to capture the stunning landscape in detail with Mastcam and very close close-ups with the long-distance imaging capability of ChemCam (RMI). Overall, we have two long-distance RMIs in the plan to capture the details of the ridge we are investigating. You can see in the accompanying image an example from last sol of just how many stunning details we can see. I so want to go and pick up that smooth white-ish looking rock to find out if it is just the light that makes it so bright, or if the surface is different from the underside… but that’s just me, a mineralogist by training, used to wandering around a field site! Do you notice the different patterns — textures as we call them in geology — on the rocks to the left of that white-ish rock and the right of it? So much stunning detail, and we are getting two more RMI observations of 10 frames each in today’s plan! In addition there are more than 80 Mastcam frames planned. Lots of images to learn from!

Chemistry is also featuring in the plan. The rover is stable on its wheels, which means we can get the arm out and do an APXS measurement on the target “Midnight Lake,” which MAHLI also images. The LIBS investigations are seconding the APXS investigation on Midnight Lake, and add another target to the plan, “Pyramidal Pinnacle.” On the third sol there is an AEGIS, the LIBS measurement where the rover picks its own target before we here on Earth even see where it is! Power was especially tight today, because the CheMin team does some housekeeping, in particular looking at empty cells in preparation for the next drill. The atmosphere team adds many investigations to look out for dust devils and the dustiness of the atmosphere, and APXS measures the argon content of the atmosphere. This is a measure for the seasonal changes of the atmosphere, as argon is an inert gas that does not react with other components of the atmosphere. It is only controlled by the temperature in various places of the planet — mainly the poles. DAN continues to monitor water in the subsurface, and RAD — prominently featured during the solar storm I was talking about earlier — continues to collect data on the radiation environment.

Let’s close with a fun fact from planning today: During one of the meetings, the rover drivers were asked, “Are you driving backwards again?” … and the answer was yes! The reason: We need to make sure that in this rugged terrain, with its many interesting walls (interesting for the geologists!), the antenna can still see Earth when we want to send the plan. So the drive on sol 4332 is all backwards. I am glad we have hazard cameras on the front and the back of the vehicle!

Written by Susanne Schwenzer, Planetary Geologist at The Open University

Share

Details

NASA Science Editorial Team

Explore More

Keep Exploring

Discover More Topics From NASA

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
New Features To Come To Instagram Announced: A Feature As Important As Likes Is Coming, The Homepage Will Completely Change thumbnail

New Features To Come To Instagram Announced: A Feature As Important As Likes Is Coming, The Homepage Will Completely Change

Instagram'ın üzerinde çalıştığı yeni bir özellik açığa çıktı. Bu özellik, kullanıcıların profil sayfalarında yer alan gönderilerin yerlerini düzenlemesine yardımcı oluyor. Bazı kullanıcılarsa Durum Ayarla özelliğini kullanabilir oldular. Dünyanın en popüler çevrimiçi fotoğraf ve kısa video paylaşım platformu Instagram'ın yeni bir özellik üzerinde çalıştığı açığa çıktı. Mobil uygulamalarla ilgili yaptığı sızıntılarla bilinen bağımsız geliştirici Alessandro Paluzzi tarafından…
Read More
Is the AI bubble about to burst? thumbnail

Is the AI bubble about to burst?

The artificial intelligence sector is on a precipice. Already shaping as the defining technology of at least the last 20 years, generative AI and its frothy company valuations are now either booming or are a bubble about to burst, depending on who you ask.The arms race kicked off in earnest in November 2022 when OpenAI
Read More
Can New York’s new mayor put the practical in progressive? thumbnail

Can New York’s new mayor put the practical in progressive?

Don’t let the fact that New York City’s Mayor-elect Eric Adams is an outspoken vegan fool you. The Brooklyn native and former NYPD captain has cultivated a working-class coalition more likely to prefer barbecues instead of the kale smoothies he often champions.   Why We Wrote This New York, like many cities, is facing serious challenges, from…
Read More
Falcon 9 suffers upper stage engine failure thumbnail

Falcon 9 suffers upper stage engine failure

A screenshot of the July 11 Falcon 9 launch shows ice buildup on the second stage engine (right) not seen on typical launches. Credit: SpaceX webcast TOKYO — The engine on the upper stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 malfunctioned during a launch July 11, causing the potential loss of a batch of Starlink satellites
Read More
Killing Even Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria: A New Infection-Fighting Wound Spray thumbnail

Killing Even Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria: A New Infection-Fighting Wound Spray

The antibacterial material, with peptides bound to hydrogel particles, works even in contact with body fluids such as blood. It can be sprayed directly into wounds without impairing healing or applied as a coating to catheters and implants to prevent infection, and to fight even multi-resistant bacteria. Credit: Chalmers University of Technology| Anna-Lena LundqvistThe World
Read More
Index Of News