Break out the party hats – NASA’s Curiosity rover
is celebrating its second anniversary on Mars. On August 5, 2012 at
10:31 pm PDT (August 6, 05:31 GMT), the unmanned spacecraft touched down
at Bradbury Landing in Gale Crater on the start of a multi-year mission
to seek out areas where life could or may once have existed, and is now
preparing to carry on for a third year.
The nuclear-powered explorer had a very busy first year.
As the largest, most advanced rover ever built, nothing like this had
ever flown before and since the nearest garage was a hundred million
miles away, the first months that Curiosity spent on Mars involved an
array of system tests before it took it first tentative rolls across the
Martian sands on its roundabout path to Mount Sharp.
Curiosity’s main mission was to find out if there are any places on
Mars where life could have once existed – specifically, areas displaying
minerals and geology that could have been produced by water. In this,
Curiosity was very lucky. Bradbury Landing turned out to be very close
to an ancient dried lake bed in an area named Yellowknife Bay. According
to NASA, this lake bed may have been able to sustain microbial life
billions of years ago because it contained all the general
prerequisites; water, the right chemical elements, and a chemical source
of energy.
Image of tracks left by Curiosity taken the day before the second anniversary (Image: NASA)
"Before landing, we expected that we would need to drive much farther
before answering that habitability question," says Curiosity Project
Scientist John Grotzinger of the Caltech. "We were able to take
advantage of landing very close to an ancient streambed and lake. Now we
want to learn more about how environmental conditions on Mars evolved,
and we know where to go to do that."
Compared to its first year, which was marked by many firsts, such as
the first drilling operation on Mars, the first laser firing, and first
UV night scans, Curiosity's second year on the Red Planet has been more
routine. However, it hasn’t been without incident. In February, the
rover cleared a dune
that blocked its progress and in July it negotiated a detour around
rocky terrain at Zabriskie Plateau. The latter was of particular concern
because NASA has noticed that the six aluminum wheels that carry
Curiosity are wearing faster than anticipated.
NASA says that time is taking its toll on the computer systems as
well with mission control nursing Curiosity’s two computers to make sure
they both remain in proper working order. It had to switch to its B
computer after the A computer started acting up, and in July the rover
got a two-day holiday as technicians confirmed that the A computer could
still act as a backup should the need arise.
On the science side, year two has had its share of surprises. The biggest one is the total lack of methane gas
detected in the Martian atmosphere. Because methane is a key indicator
of biological activity, this was a blow to chances of finding life on
Mars today. Worse, it meant that other sources of methane are absent on
Mars as well, which poses some head-scratching questions.
On the plus side, Curiosity has been monitoring the radiation on the
Martian surface as a prelude to manned expeditions. NASA says that
though the levels are high, they are consistent with predictions.
Currently, Curiosity is making its way toward new areas of study
about 2 miles (3.2 km) from its present position. It’s next stop is a
rock outcrop called "Pahrump Hills,” which lies about 1 mile away on
Zabriskie Plateau.
source-gizmag
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