http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/mars_meteor_050219.html

Mars Rovers Solve One Mystery, Find Another 
By Tariq Malik
Staff Writer
posted: 19 February 2005
09:03 am ET
 

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- A rock that careened through the Martian sky and bounced to 
a stop on the red
planetâs surface is most definitely not an alien meteorite, the principal 
investigator of NASAâs
Mars rover mission said Friday.

The rock, dubbed "Russet" after a type of potato, is apparently a chunk of Mars 
ejected in the past
from a crater impact, said Steven Squyres, science team leader for NASAâs 
rovers Spirit and
Opportunity currently

Opportunity came upon Russet on the plains of Meridiani Planum while driving 
towards its current
destination Vostok. A small crater nearby hinted that Russet fell from the sky, 
but whether it was
truly alien to Mars - like Opportunityâs recent meteorite find Heat Shield 
Rock â or simply crater
ejecta was unknown.

"The [Opportunity] rover found that this was sulfate-rich, and not a 
meteorite," Squyres told an
audience of scientists and reporters here during a plenary lecture at the 2005 
meeting of the
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). "So that 
mysteryâs solved."

But Russetâs homely nature does not quell all of the current questions posed 
by the two Mars rovers.

An accidental discovery by Spirit has Mars researchers scratching their heads 
over an odd patch of
soil full of sulfur-rich salts, or sulfates. The rover made the find by chance, 
when a wheel churned
up the bright sulfate material during a failed attempt to climb a Columbia Hill 
slope at Gusev
Crater.

"This is a completely serendipitous discovery, a complete surprise," Squyres 
said during a press
briefing earlier Friday. "This is a very rich concentration of salts, and 
weâll learn more about
what it means in the next few days."

Squyres said that one possible explanation could be that past water may have 
percolated up to the
surface, bringing up minerals along for the ride, then evaporated, leaving 
behind a salty crust. But
additional measurements using the multiple science instruments attached to 
Spiritâs robot arm should
yield a better picture, he added.

A tiring task

This week, the Mars rover mission passed the 400-day mark, a far cry from its 
original three-month
plan, and the human strain is showing, Squyres said.

"The whole team is deeply fatigued," he said, adding that his best hope at the 
missionâs outset was
a 180-day run on Mars. "These vehicles were designed for 90 days of operations."

Despite that nominal mission, Squyres had hoped that Spirit and Opportunity 
would last 180 sols, or
Martian days. But with two mission extensions behind them, rover scientists 
have streamlined how
they control Spirit and Opportunity, and now work on a more manageable time 
schedule that straddles
Earth and Mars time.

"Itâs very demanding, itâs excitingâitâs exhausting," Squyres said of 
the extended mission. "I think
when this is over weâre all going to take a very long rest, but for now we 
have a responsibility to
get every bit of science out of these vehicles." 

 

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