Posted on 12/21/2004 11:31:23 AM PST by anymouse
An unexplained phenomenon akin to a space-borne car wash has boosted the performance of one of the two U.S. rovers probing the surface of Mars, New Scientist magazine said on Tuesday.
It said something -- or someone -- had regularly cleaned layers of dust from the solar panels of the Mars Opportunity vehicle while it was closed down during the Martian night.
The cleaning had boosted the panels' power output close to their maximum 900 watt-hours per day after at one stage dropping to 500 watt-hours because of the heavy Martian dirt.
By contrast, the power output of the solar panels of Mars Spirit -- on a different part of the Red Planet -- had dropped to just 400 watt-hours a day, clogged by the heavy dust.
"These exciting and unexplained cleaning events have kept Opportunity in really great shape," the magazine quoted NASA rover team leader Jim Erickson as saying.
Typical bad reporting by Rooters.
I suppose the unsigned reporter thinks that a homeless Martian assauted the Opportunity rover with a squeegy and spray bottle full of Windex? "What a maroon." :)
LOL!
God?
I always wondered what that brush thing was on Marvin the Martian's helmet was for. . .
LOL, well, it is likely that a windstorm passed over the rover and scrubbed it relatively clean.
Maybe it was global warming on Mars that caused it to rain...
"Hey mac, how's about putting another coat of wax on this jalopy." :)
It's Marvin...
space ping
Static electricity?
Opportunity Rover to Prowl its Entry Debris for Mars Secrets
By Leonard David
Senior Space Writer
posted: 21 December 2004
10:01 am ET
The Opportunity Mars rover has turned into a junkyard dog, prowling ever closer to a hunk of space litter at Meridiani Planum -- a discarded heat shield.
During its January 25 plunge toward the red planet, the Opportunity rover was encapsulated in a protective aeroshell comprised of two key parts: a heat shield and a backshell that contained essential landing gear.
After taking the brunt of atmospheric friction, the heat shield was jettisoned high above Mars. The hardware fell several miles before hitting the Meridiani Planum landscape at a smashing speed.
Double bonus
Fresh from exploring the remarkable Endurance Crater, the Opportunity rover is now rolling toward the beat up heat shield thats been sitting on Mars for nearly 11 months.
Steve Squyres, scientific Principal Investigator for the Mars Exploration Rover effort from Cornell University, said the Opportunity assessment of the heat shield offers a double-bonus.
For the scientists, it may be a chance to look at the deepest fresh hole in the ground that we'll ever see on Mars. For the engineers, it's an unprecedented chance to see how a heat shield performed during entry through the martian atmosphere. There's something for everybody, Squyres told SPACE.com.
As the robot wheels across the martian ponderosa that is Meridiani Planum, its Panoramic Camera (Pancam) has begun snapping clearer and clearer images of the distant heat shield. The Pancam is a high-resolution color stereo pair of CCD cameras located on a camera bar that sits on top of the mast of the rover.
Furthermore, there is discussion about making more than a drive-by camera shooting of the refuse -- perhaps using the robots microscopic imager (MI) to examine the spent heat shield up-close and personal.
We'll definitely do a lot of careful imaging with Pancam. We will use the MI only if we find that it's safe and productive to do so. Stay tuned, Squyres added.
What happened during entry and impact?
Both en route to and wheel stop at the spacecraft part, theres good science ahead, saidRay Arvidson, an Earth and planetary sciences expert at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, and deputy principal investigator for the Mars Exploration Rover instruments.
The heat shield campaign is focused on an inventory of the heat shield and its components, including analyses of what happened during entry and impact, Arvidson told SPACE.com.
Arvidson said that along the way to and by the shield, Opportunity scientists will be conducting observations aimed at understanding the mechanical properties of the surface, based on excavations during the impact.
We are also interested in looking at the soils and rocks exposed during impact and making imaging and other measurements of these materials. This latter set of experiments will allow us to probe subsurface characteristics, Arvidson explained.
First-ever inspection
Spacecraft engineers are keen on making the first-ever inspection of a heat shield that penetrated Mars atmosphere.
Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Denver, Colorado designed and built the Mars Exploration Rover aeroshell structure and thermal protection system.
The blunt-nosed cone of a heat shield was covered with a layer of phenolic honeycomb. A phenolic compound is made from benzene and is typically used in various plastics, disinfectants, and pharmaceuticals. This phenolic honeycomb is filled with an ablative material -- also called an ablator -- which dissipates heat generated by atmospheric friction.
The ablator itself is a unique blend of cork wood, binder and many tiny silica glass spheres. The heat shield has a thick, one-half inch (12.7 millimeter) layer of the ablator.
Images taken by Opportunity might reveal how well the protective shield withstood the atmospheric fireworks it encountered in slicing through Mars atmosphere, as well as yield data leading to better heat shield designs.
LOL
It's incredible that the rovers are still operating at all. The engineers really got this project right.
Every report/article/press release must alude, hint, speculate, or declare life on Mars, this is the fundamental mission. If I recall just minutes after the toy landed they were announcing water on Mars (and we all know that if you have a cup of water you can easilly make life spring from it, they've already done the legwork on that notion)
That's real easy to do when it's just sitting on a sound stage in Southern California, right? ;o)
space ping
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.