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NASA
Extends Operations for Its Long-Lived Mars Rovers
Monday, October 15, 2007
As
it finished its second Martian year on Mars, NASA's Mars
Exploration Rover Spirit was beginning to examine a group of
angular rocks given informal names corresponding to peaks in
the Colorado Rockies.
Image
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
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NASA
Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity used its front
hazard-indentification camera to capture this wide-angle
view of its robotic arm extended to a rock in a bright-toned
layer inside Victoria Crater.
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Image
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
NASA is extending, for a
fifth time, the activities of the Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit
and Opportunity. The decision keeps the trailblazing mobile
robotic pioneers active on opposite sides of Mars, possibly
through 2009. This extended mission and the associated science
are dependent upon the continued productivity and operability of
the rovers.
"We are extremely happy to be able to
further the exploration of Mars. The rovers are amazing machines,
and they continue to produce amazing scientific results operating
far beyond their design life," said Alan Stern, associate
administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate, Washington.
The twin rovers landed on Mars in January 2004, 45 months
ago, on missions originally planned to last 90 days. In
September, Opportunity began descending into Victoria Crater in
Mars' Meridiani Planum region. At approximately 800 meters wide
(half a mile) and 70 meters deep (230 feet), it is the largest
crater the rover has visited. Spirit climbed onto a volcanic
plateau in a range of hills that were on the distant horizon from
its landing site.
"After more than three-and-a-half
years, Spirit and Opportunity are showing some signs of aging,
but they are in good health and capable of conducting great
science," said John Callas, rover project manager at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
The rovers
each carry a suite of sophisticated instruments to examine the
geology of Mars for information about past environmental
conditions. Opportunity has returned dramatic evidence that its
area of Mars stayed wet for an extended period of time long ago,
with conditions that could have been suitable for sustaining
microbial life. Spirit has found evidence in the region it is
exploring that water in some form has altered the mineral
composition of some soils and rocks.
To date, Spirit has
driven 7.26 kilometers (4.51 miles) and has returned more than
102,000 images. Opportunity has driven 11.57 kilometers (7.19
miles) and has returned more than 94,000 images.
Among
the rovers' many other accomplishments:
- Opportunity has
analyzed a series of exposed rock layers recording how
environmental conditions changed during the times when the layers
were deposited and later modified. Wind-blown dunes came and
went. The water table fluctuated.
- Spirit has recorded
dust devils forming and moving. The images were made into movie
clips, providing new insight into the interaction of Mars'
atmosphere and surface.
- Both rovers have found metallic
meteorites on Mars. Opportunity discovered one rock with a
composition similar to a meteorite that reached Earth from Mars.
JPL manages the rovers for NASA's Science Mission
Directorate. JPL is a division of the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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