“The Initial tests stage is nearing finished, NASA's
Curiosity Mars rover is ready to resume its trek toward nearby rock formations,
and on the lookout for suitable targets,” engineers say.
Before resuming a slow trek toward a nearby rock
formation, the Curiosity Mars rovers are wrapping up a series of robot arm
calibration and motion tests this weekend, on the lookout for a suitable stone
to reach out and touch in an initial round of "contact science,"
officials said today.
The goal is to make sure the arm can precisely
position a sensitive camera and an X-ray spectrometer as required for
"hands on" geological observations, including eventual operations
with a sample scoop and a compact drill. With the tests nearly complete, the
arm has performed in near flawless fashion.
A camera mounted on Curiosity's robot arm captured
this view of the rover's undercarriage and its three right-side wheels with
Mount Sharp rising in the distance.
"It's sol 37 on Curiosity on Mars and she is
currently sleeping but is very healthy and preparing to complete her absolute
final day of characterization activity," mission manager Jennifer Trosper
told reporters this afternoon.
"We've been talking about these characterization
activities since we landed. These are early mission checkouts we use to
incrementally test out the capabilities of the rover and that checkout period
is for the purpose of fully commissioning Curiosity for the science mission.
The success so far of these activities has been outstanding. Throughout every
phase of the checkouts, Curiosity has performed almost flawlessly."
Curiosity landed on the floor of Gale Crater on August
6. Engineers spent the first 16 days of the mission deploying various
appendages, testing the rover's communications systems, updating its operating
system software and checking out its instruments and updated motor control
software.
Curiosity then began remotely inspecting rocks at its
landing site before beginning a short, but time-consuming, drive to an area
known as Glenelg where three different types of rocks come together. After
covering the length of a football field or so, the rover paused last week for a
series of robot arm tests. If the final checks go well, commands will be
uplinked to resume the 1,300-foot trip to Glenelg.
A 1909 penny is one of the calibration targets used by
Curiosity's Mars Hand Lens Imager -- MAHLI -- camera.
"Over the last week, we have essentially
completed all but one of the robotic arm checkout activities," Trosper
said. "From an engineering perspective, we were able to confirm our
ability to move the arm to all our calibration targets as well as... key
locations on the rover where we need to move the arm in order to perform
operations, particularly sampling."
Assuming a final test tomorrow goes well, the plan
Friday is to "drive, drive, drive until the science team finds the desired
rock where we want to perform the first contact science observations with MAHLI
and the APXS instrument," she said, referring to the Mars Hand Lens Imager
and the Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer, both mounted in a turret on the end
of the robot arm.
Engineers initially predicted it would take 25 sols to
complete the initial checkouts "and it's taken us 26," Trosper said.
"So, not bad."
Compared to earlier rovers, Curiosity initial progress
is especially promising. For the Pathfinder mission, engineers typically lost
about one in three sols where "we wouldn't accomplish what we intended to
for some reason or another," Trosper said. "On Spirit and
Opportunity, during the prime mission our loss-of-sol rate was about one in 10
sols.
In this close-up view of the penny, tiny dust grains
can be seen below Lincoln's ear and the date that were blown up onto Curiosity
by its landing rockets.
"Now on (Curiosity), we're doing even better than
that, being only one sol behind our original plan after 36 sols of
operations," Trosper said. "So, I think this is a great indication of
the enormous amount of science exploration this rover's going to be able to do
over the course of its two-year lifetime."
NASA unveiled striking new photographs Wednesday,
including a panorama shot by the MAHLI camera at near ground level showing the
undercarriage of the rover with its eventual target -- Mount Sharp -- rising in
the background. Other photos showed covers opening and closing on the rover's
upper deck exposing inlets where soil samples eventually will be deposited into
a sophisticated analytical instrument.
Even an extreme close-up view of a 1909 penny is
captured by the MAHLI camera, which serves as a calibration target. It is
clearly visible that tiny dust grains blown up onto the spacecraft by its
landing rockets. The resolution of the close-up image is 25 microns per pixel.
If the camera can be positioned close enough to a potential target, which
resolution could improve to 14 microns per pixel.
With the robot arm tests virtually complete,
"we're headed towards Glenelg and we're trying to get to a location where
we would find a rock to do contact science on," Trosper said. "So we
will drive until the science team finds that rock, then we will stop and
position the rover to do the contract science with APXS and MAHLI.
"Then we will continue to drive to another
location, hopefully a sandy location where we can begin to scoop. That would be
a few weeks after we get to the location for contact science and that's kind of
our first sampling experience."
After initial scoop tests and sample collection runs,
the final remaining hurdle will be to check out Curiosity's arm-mounted rock
drill, which will be used to collect samples from the interiors of targeted
rocks.
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