NASA’s rover Curiosity on Mars is back to conducting contact science after a slight delay in the original plan. The rover, currently located along the western edge of Gediz Vallis, has successfully completed contact science activities on two targets named “Mount Brewer” and “Reef Lake,” despite one of its wheels being perched on a rock. This demonstrates the resilience and adaptability of the rover in fulfilling its mission objectives.
In addition to contact science, Curiosity has three sols to fill with remote imaging. The first two sols will focus on targeted science, capturing specific targets in the rover’s current workspace. The final sol will be dedicated to untargeted science, allowing for more flexibility in the environmental team’s activities. This approach ensures a comprehensive exploration of the Martian terrain while maximizing the scientific output of the mission.
The weekend plan for Curiosity includes a variety of activities, ranging from dust devil and cloud movies to ChemCam and Mastcam observations of geological features like Reef Lake and “Poison Meadow.” The rover will also conduct environmental monitoring, such as assessing dust levels in the crater and monitoring any dust movement on the rover deck due to driving or wind. These activities highlight the multidisciplinary approach of the mission, integrating geology, environmental science, and atmospheric studies to gather a holistic understanding of Mars.
As Curiosity prepares to drive away from its current location, it will continue its scientific investigations with a further drive of about 25 meters. The weekend will culminate in a ChemCam special, where the rover’s autonomous targeting system will choose a target for imaging, followed by a passive sky observation to analyze atmospheric gases. This comprehensive approach to data collection underscores the importance of studying the Martian atmosphere for understanding the planet’s past and potential for life.
Overall, Curiosity’s latest activities demonstrate the rover’s ongoing commitment to scientific exploration on Mars. By leveraging its advanced instruments and capabilities, Curiosity continues to unravel the mysteries of the Red Planet and pave the way for future missions to Mars.
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Sols 4345-4347: Contact Science is Back on the Table
NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity acquired this image using its Right Navigation Camera on sol 4343 — Martian day 4,343 of the Mars Science Laboratory mission — on Oct. 24, 2024 at 15:26:28 UTC.
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Earth planning date: Friday, Oct. 25, 2024
The changes to the plan Wednesday, moving the drive a sol earlier, meant that we started off planning this morning about 18 meters (about 59 feet) farther along the western edge of Gediz Vallis and with all the data we needed for planning. This included the knowledge that once again one of Curiosity’s wheels was perched on a rock. Luckily, unlike on Wednesday, it was determined that it was safe to still go ahead with full contact science for this weekend. This consisted of two targets “Mount Brewer” and “Reef Lake,” two targets on the top and side of the same block.
Aside from the contact science, Curiosity has three sols to fill with remote imaging. The first two sols include “targeted science,” which means all the imaging of specific targets in our current workspace. Then, after we drive away on the second sol, we fill the final sol of the plan with “untargeted science,” where we care less about knowing exactly where the rover is ahead of time. A lot of the environmental team’s (or ENV) activities fall under this umbrella, which is why our dedicated “ENV Science Block” (about 30 minutes of environmental activities one morning every weekend) tends to fall at the end of a weekend plan.
But that’s getting ahead of myself. The weekend plan starts off with two ENV activities — a dust devil movie and a suprahorizon cloud movie. While cloud movies are almost always pointed in the same direction, our dust devil movie has to be specifically targeted. Recently we’ve been looking southeast toward a more sandy area (which you can see above), to see if we can catch dust lifting there. After those movies we hand the reins back over to the geology team (or GEO) for ChemCam observations of Reef Lake and “Poison Meadow.” Mastcam will follow this up with its own observations of Reef Lake and the AEGIS target from Wednesday’s plan. The rover gets some well-deserved rest before waking up for the contact science I talked about above, followed by a late evening Mastcam mosaic of “Fascination Turret,” a part of Gediz Vallis ridge that we’ve seen before.
We’re driving away on the second sol, but before that we have about another hour of science. ChemCam and Mastcam both have observations of “Heaven Lake” and the upper Gediz Vallis ridge, and ENV has a line-of-sight observation, to see how much dust is in the crater, and a pre-drive deck monitoring image to see if any dust moves around on the rover deck due to either driving or wind. Curiosity gets a short nap before a further drive of about 25 meters (about 82 feet).
The last sol of the weekend is a ChemCam special. AEGIS will autonomously choose a target for imaging, and then ChemCam has a passive sky observation to examine changing amounts of atmospheric gases. The weekend doesn’t end at midnight, though — we wake up in the morning for the promised morning ENV block, which we’ve filled with two cloud movies, another line-of-sight, and a tau observation to see how dusty the atmosphere is.
Written by Alex Innanen, Atmospheric Scientist at York University
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Oct 28, 2024
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