NASA TRAPPED MARS ROVER
FINDS EVIDENCE OF SUBSURFACE WATER
From NASA
Oct. 28, 2010
PASADENA, Calif. -- The
ground where NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit became stuck last year holds
evidence that water, perhaps as snow melt, trickled into the subsurface fairly
recently and on a continuing basis. Stratified soil layers with different
compositions close to the surface led the rover science team to propose that
thin films of water may have entered the ground from frost or snow. The seepage
could have happened during cyclical climate changes during periods when Mars
tilted farther on its axis. The water may have moved down into the sand,
carrying soluble minerals deeper than less-soluble ones. Spin-axis tilt varies
over timescales of hundreds of thousands of years.
The relatively insoluble
minerals near the surface include what is thought to be hematite, silica and
gypsum. Ferric sulfates, which are more soluble, appear to have been dissolved
and carried down by water. None of these minerals is exposed at the surface,
which is covered by wind-blown sand and dust. "The lack of exposures at
the surface indicates the preferential dissolution of ferric sulfates must be a
relatively recent and ongoing process since wind has been systematically
stripping soil and altering landscapes in the region Spirit has been
examining," said Ray Arvidson of Washington
University in St.
Louis , deputy principal investigator for the twin rovers Spirit and
Opportunity .
Analysis of these findings
appears in a report in the Journal of Geophysical Research published by
Arvidson and 36 co-authors about Spirit's operations from late 2007 until just
before the rover stopped communicating in March. The twin Mars rovers finished
their three-month prime missions in April 2004, then kept exploring in bonus
missions. One of Spirit's six wheels quit working in 2006.
In April 2009, Spirit's left
wheels broke through a crust at a site called "Troy " and churned into soft sand. A
second wheel stopped working seven months later. Spirit could not obtain a
position slanting its solar panels toward the sun for the winter, as it had for
previous winters. Engineers anticipated it would enter a low-power, silent
hibernation mode, and the rover stopped communicating March 22. Spring begins
next month at Spirit's site, and NASA is using the Deep Space Network and the
Mars Odyssey orbiter to listen if the rover reawakens.
Researchers took advantage
of Spirit's months at Troy
last year to examine in great detail soil layers the wheels had exposed, and also
neighboring surfaces. Spirit made 13 inches of progress in its last 10 backward
drives before energy levels fell too low for further driving in February. Those
drives exposed a new area of soil for possible examination if Spirit does
awaken and its robotic arm is still usable. "With insufficient solar
energy during the winter, Spirit goes into a deep-sleep hibernation mode where
all rover systems are turned off, including the radio and survival
heaters," said John Callas, project manager for Spirit and Opportunity at
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in Pasadena ,
Calif. "All available solar
array energy goes into charging the batteries and keeping the mission clock
running."
The rover is expected to
have experienced temperatures colder than it has ever before, and it may not
survive. If Spirit does get back to work, the top priority is a multi-month
study that can be done without driving the rover. The study would measure the
rotation of Mars through the Doppler signature of the stationary rover's radio
signal with enough precision to gain new information about the planet's core.
The rover Opportunity has been making steady
progress toward a large crater, Endeavour, which is now approximately 5 miles
away.
Spirit, Opportunity, and
other NASA Mars missions have found evidence of wet Martian environments
billions of years ago that were possibly favorable for life. The Phoenix Mars
Lander in 2008 and observations by orbiters since 2002 have identified buried
layers of water ice at high and middle latitudes and frozen water in polar ice
caps. These newest Spirit findings contribute to an accumulating set of clues
that Mars may still have small amounts of liquid water at some periods during
ongoing climate cycles.
[…and where there’s water…..
there might still be life living under the surface protected from the freezing
temperatures and UV light. Eventually I suppose that we’ll move beyond probes –
no matter how sophisticated they become – and get ‘boots on the ground’ which
will allow us to dig deeper into Mar’s many mysteries. Hopefully sooner rather
than later…..]
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