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Mars Rover 'Opportunity' Nears Rim Of Martian Crater 'Endeavour'

Mars Rover Opportunity

ALICIA CHANG   08/ 8/11 07:04 PM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES — Months after the death of the Mars rover Spirit, its surviving twin is poised to reach the rim of a vast crater to begin a fresh round of exploration.

Driving commands sent up to Opportunity directed the six-wheel rover to make the final push toward Endeavour crater, a 14-mile-wide depression near the Martian equator that likely could be its final destination.

At its current pace and barring any hiccups, Opportunity should roll up to the crater's edge on Tuesday. The finish line was a spot along a ridge that the rover team nicknamed "Spirit Point" in honor of Opportunity's lost twin.

"I'm totally pumped. We've been driving for so long," said Ray Arvidson of Washington University in St. Louis who is part of the team.

The milestone injects a sense of adventure back into a mission that wowed the public with color portraits of the landscape and the unmistakable geologic discoveries of a warm and wetter past.

The NASA rovers parachuted to opposite sides of Mars in 2004 for what was a planned three-month mission, but both have operated beyond their factory warranty.

Spirit's journey ended in May after NASA ceased trying to contact it. It had been trapped in sand and unheard from for more than a year.

Opportunity has been on a driving spree since 2008 after it crawled out of a much smaller crater and trundled south toward Endeavour, stopping occasionally to sightsee and examine rock outcrops.

Unlike the early days of the mission when the public tracked Opportunity's every move, the march to Endeavour has been largely low-key.

In early 2009, Opportunity caught its first peek of the uplifted rim on the horizon. At the time, scientists were unsure if the rover would make it all the way.

The roughly seven-mile journey took longer than the estimated two years to fulfill. Opportunity, driving backward to prevent its right front wheel from wearing out, could not travel as the crow flies because of dangerous obstacles. So it took a circuitous route and ended up driving twice the distance.

Project manager John Callas of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory said Endeavour crater is arguably the most important science target since landing.

Craters are carved by asteroids or comets impacting into the Martian surface and exposing geological layers from different points in history. Endeavour is the fourth crater that Opportunity will explore and offers the oldest deposits yet.

Opportunity, which logged more than 20 miles since landing, will spend several months imaging the rim and interior, which has been partially filled in by rocks and sediments.

There are no plans to drive across the crater for fear of getting stuck, Callas said. Instead, it will traverse south along the rim in search of clay minerals thought to form under wet conditions.

While these clay minerals have been extensively studied by orbiting spacecraft, Opportunity will be the first to examine them on the ground.

"We will likely spend years at this location," Callas said. "What a destination. It's not just one spot. There's kilometers of interesting geology to explore."

___

Online:

Mars rovers: http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/home/index.html

___

Follow Alicia Chang's coverage at: http://twitter.com/SciWriAlicia

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LOS ANGELES — Months after the death of the Mars rover Spirit, its surviving twin is poised to reach the rim of a vast crater to begin a fresh round of exploration. Driving commands sent up to ...
LOS ANGELES — Months after the death of the Mars rover Spirit, its surviving twin is poised to reach the rim of a vast crater to begin a fresh round of exploration. Driving commands sent up to ...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:58 AM on 08/09/2011
Bravo! A wonderfully successful space mission, that is not over yet.
06:24 AM on 08/09/2011
Even the ones that are not are. Ive never felt we wasted money on one of these.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
12:33 AM on 08/09/2011
The rover missions were such a stunning success. I've been a fan since the beginning. A couple months ago, NASA's Pasadena JPL facility had an open house. I was there with a lady friend. We visited the Deep Space Network building and watched as technicians monitored the rovers in dim light with huge flat-panel displays on the walls. Great work, NASA!
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heymack
Following the herd is a sure way to mediocrity.
03:51 PM on 08/08/2011
Theses rovers are running Linux as the control OS with apps written in Java (and C) on board.  It was only supposed to last 3-4 months and here we are years later. Amazing.
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bryanzth
Honest to Goodness USA Patriot!
04:31 PM on 08/08/2011
I never knew that! Linux on the rovers? And what about for other planetary probes? Intersesting.

But what's the weakest link, when you have Linux? Sensors? Actuators? Wheels?

I'm impressed.

BZ.
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heymack
Following the herd is a sure way to mediocrity.
04:38 PM on 08/08/2011
What ever it is one of them is still running.  This is fodder in the iPhone vs Droid btw ;)  Droids running Linux and Java vs the proprietary Apple stuff.  I don't think Appl has ever run a space vehicle before.

http://www.linux.com/archive/feed/39256
10:55 PM on 08/08/2011
The weakest link is the power system, although the lack of real-time communications is also a serious limitation which contributed to allowing Spirit to become terminally stuck in the regolith.

Solar power only works during the daytime and during the "summer" half of the Martian year (sol) -- and only near the Martian equator. During the nighttime, the rovers draw electricity from lithium-ion batteries which degrade with each charge-discharge cycle. During the winter, the rovers shut down entirely, except for a small radioactive heater and a timer that will (hopefully) wake it up in the spring.

The new rover, Curiosity, carries a relatively powerful nuclear battery fueled with enough plutonium to last 14 years. It will be able to gather samples during the day when driving around is less difficult and process those samples through its sophisticated science instruments during the night. It won't have to stop exploring during the winters, either.

Curiosity is 5 times the mass of Opportunity and carries 10 times the mass of science instruments. It's about the size of a Mini Cooper. Curiosity is launching this November.

The remaining difficulty is the 20-minute communications lag in each direction between the rovers on Mars and the controllers on Earth, plus the requirement that the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter be passing over the rovers in order to relay communications. The controllers can't see the rovers move in anything close to real time.

The movements have to be planned ahead of time, and the rovers have to be programmed with their own logic for aborting movements in progress. If the logic is too conservative, the rovers stop for non-problems and controllers have to wait for the next MRO pass to retry the command. If the logic isn't sophisticated enough, the rover might get itself badly stuck before controllers have a chance to react.

This is why having humans on the surface of Mars is extremely valuable, even if most of the actually exploration is done robotically. Humans on Mars can control the rovers in real time with no communications lag or intermittent satellite links. The humans would be able to go out in spacesuits to perform especially complex tasks including rover maintenance, but for the most part, they would stay inside their base or mobile lab where they have a much more robust life-support system.
10:30 PM on 08/08/2011
Spirit and Opportunity run Wind River VxWorks, not Linux. Some of the software is Java, but other components were compiled from C, C++, or Ada.
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02:30 PM on 08/08/2011
Another one for that "government can't do anything right" crowd to ignore. What privateer produces a product designed to work for 3 months and is still functioning well after 88 months in extreme conditions after a 225 M K trip through space before it could go to work (they also designed the cartage vehicle and have stayed in touch w/ the product over all these years, w/o any trips back to the shop). A colossal achievement w/ hundreds of spin off technologies for a willing private enterprise to explore.

Rachel Maddow is quite correct when she states that there are big projects ONLY our government can design. produce, operate. We should be a proud and enthusiastic public but we can't because half of us live in fear and hostility toward any well functioning Federal Agency. NASA's abilities only suggest to them the need for assault rifles and a frantic desire to cripple the Feds before they send the rovers into THEIR backyards.

Sometimes I feel like its the hominids against the neanderthals -- deja vu all over again.
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11:59 PM on 08/08/2011
NASA is subject to budgetary whims and political pressure. Of course we need to see "the big picture." How many of the government leaders can do that? How much of the electorate appreciate the advances space science have produced? Yes, America is on the wrong track.
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01:44 PM on 08/08/2011
Looks like Opportunity will have to do a little bit of uphill driving at Endeavor Crater,to get to the spot where the clay mineral deposits that have been detected on Mars surface from the orbiting spacecraft. Then examine them..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jennielake
Intellect is Learned... Wisdom Already Knows
10:55 AM on 08/08/2011
Hugs from my dog named Spirit - to the rover named Spirit...

... may you rest in peace.

woof
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crayola 08b
i'm just a little crayon in a big box.
10:44 AM on 08/08/2011
that little guy is the gift that keeps on giving. money well spent if you ask me. too bad the current political situation is dragging the U.S. into a new dark age.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
12:35 AM on 08/09/2011
Republicans operate best in the dark, so they're looking forward to a new dark age.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MilesLong
Livin' the Dream
10:26 AM on 08/08/2011
Science rocks!

Miles "Luddites Suck" Long
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12:02 AM on 08/09/2011
Luddites do, indeed, suck. They suck the substance of creativity, innovation and support from those who have it, they digest it and produce --- well, you know what comes out.