Friday, December 4, 2009

Spirit Rover Makes Big Discovery




There is nothing like grinding a wheel back and forth to rip up soils.  This bit of serendipity has put them smack on the edge of a crater and has stranded them forcing them to optimize the experience.  They could hardly have chosen better.

The possibility of a hydrothermal vent suggests that we still have plenty of heat in Mar’s core and that some form of water cycle is at work.  Most of it is likely quite deep. Actually I cannot think of a more important single discovery than to see clear evidence of hydrothermal activity.  This is suddenly not necessarily a dead planet geologically however it has looked from on high.  Hydrothermal activity needs both heat and water saturated rock.

This is not terribly obvious, but scattered wet zones are swiftly dehydrated upon the approach of hot rock.

To have significant hydrothermal activity it is necessary to have fully saturated masses of rock for the magma to pass through. That hydrothermal activity is plausibly common means that the deep rocks are likely water saturated sooner or later.

We already had indications of water on Mars.  It is simply no longer right on the surface.

Maybe next time they will send a device with a plow attached and plenty of torque.

12.02.2009 


Sandtrapped Rover Makes a Big Discovery


December 2, 2009: Homer's Iliad tells the story of Troy, a city besieged by the Greeks in the Trojan War. Today, a lone robot sits besieged in the sands of Troy while engineers and scientists plot its escape.


Welcome to "Troy" – Mars style. NASA's robotic rover Spirit is bogged down on the Red Planet in a place the rover team named after the ancient city.


So why aren't scientists lamenting?


"The rover's spinning wheels have broken through a crust, and we've found something supremely interesting in the disturbed soil," says Ray Arvidson of the Washington University in St. Louis.


Spirit, like its twin rover Opportunity, has roamed the Red Planet for nearly 6 years. During that time, the rover has had some close calls and come out fighting from each. In fact, it's been driving backwards since one of its wheels jammed in 2006.


From the beginning, the rovers' motto has been "follow the water." Both rovers have been searching Mars for minerals formed in the presence of H2O. Mars appears dry today, but minerals can provide clues that water was once there.


"It's been easy for Opportunity to find such minerals," explains Arvidson. "Opportunity landed in an ancient lake bed. Spirit has had to work much harder. Spirit landed in basaltic plains formed by lava flows chewed up by repeated meteoroid impacts. There's been little evidence of anything that was ever very wet."


But when Spirit reached an area of Mars called the "Columbia Hills," the whole complexion of the mission changed. "Spirit came across iron hydroxide, a mineral that forms in the presence of water. That alerted us to the change. We started coming across more and more rocks formed in the presence of water."


Then Spirit got stuck in a patch of loose soil on the edge of a small crater. Heavy sigh. Stuck again.
But wait!


"Spirit had to get stuck to make its next discovery," says Arvidson.


As the rover tried to break free, its wheels began to churn up the soil, uncovering sulfates underneath.
"Sulfates are minerals just beneath the surface that shout to us that they were formed in steam vents, since steam has sulfur in it. Steam is associated with hydrothermal activity – evidence of water-charged explosive volcanism. Such areas could have once supported life."


"And most amazingly, the boundary between the sulfate-rich soil and the soil with just the generic concentration of sulfates runs right down the middle of the stranded rover. Spirit is lodged on the edge of a crater -- sitting astride the boundary!"


"Also, the robot found that the top of the sulfate material is crusty. Ancient sulfates probably formed this crust as they were processed by variations in climate associated with changes in Mars' orbit over millions of years."


Here's what the scientists think: When a Martian pole faces the sun in Martian summer, it gets warmer at that pole and the water ice shifts to the equator. It even snows there! Warm dark soil under the snow causes the bottom layer of snow to melt. The water trickles into the sulfates, dissolving the water-soluble iron sulfates and forming a crust with the calcium sulfates remaining.


"By being stuck at Troy, Spirit has been able to teach us about the modern water cycle on Mars."


 Indeed, Spirit's saga at Troy has given scientists material evidence of past water on Mars on two time scales: ancient volcanic times, and cycles ongoing to the present day.


"We've sat here for more than 6 months. That's a long time to take measurements. We've learned a lot. Troy is a good place to be under siege, but we’re ready to leave."


Will Spirit break free to continue its incredible journey? Tune in to Science@NASA to find out if the escape plan works.


Author: Dauna Coulter

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