I really, really, really tried to do my own research this time without relying on all you rover-watchers here for help, but after a couple of weeks of banging my head against a wall I'm coming crawling to you for help. I need to produce (for both our website and a podcast) a simplified, big-picture view of what Spirit has accomplished on Mars over the past five years. I've basically got to summarize five years of the mission in four minutes of speaking. The operational details (the main mileposts on the drive) are very easy to figure out with the help of Tesheiner's maps and the discussions in the route map thread, so I've got that in hand. What I am having trouble with is figuring out the answers to the following science questions:
1. What is the summary story that can be told about the history of the interior of Gusev crater based on Spirit's observations? Geology is fundamentally a science devoted to telling a story about a landscape -- what's the basic story that the Gusev landscape is telling us, as revealed by Spirit?
2. What are the biggest science discoveries -- I'm talking about the top three or five stories -- that Spirit has made?
There's just so much material on Spirit that I'm having an awful time trying to see the forest for all the trees. All the journal articles that I can find are just devoted to one phase of the mission, so I can't figure out which stories are the most significant. I have all of Salley's great articles to go through, but again, they're so detail-rich that it's difficult to figure out what the big picture is; it's like looking at a Seurat painting up close.
Any help or pointers to any place where anybody has already produced some quality science summary would be greatly appreciated.
--Emily
Emily,
Two recent papers in JGR-Planets are helpful re the Spirit/Gusev status:
Arvidson et al. Spirit Mars Rover Mission to the Columbia Hills, Gusev Crater: Mission overview and selected results from the Cumberland Ridge to Home Plate.
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 113, E12S33, doi:10.1029/2008JE003183, 2008
Lewis et al. Structure and stratigraphy of Home Plate from the Spirit Mars Exploration Rover.
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 113, E12S36, doi:10.1029/2007JE003025, 2008
To quote from the first:
That Arvidson et al. paper may not cover the whole mission but 1,000 sols is the biggest chunk I've seen covered in one paper -- most helpful, thanks, I hadn't seen it yet!
--Emily
Emily, There are a lot of 'science' achievements from Spirit's mission, and to summarise these in just a few minutes will be a challenge.
I'm sure that people here will give you many thoughts and tips.
I have one thought about something you should include as an achievement aside from the science -
"The success of operating a robot explorer on an alien world, in a harsh environment, climbing 'mountains', traversing a tough rocky terrain with (just to add to the fun) sandtraps, driving on five wheels for most of the mission (backwards!), with thickening dust on its solar panels and having to keep them oriented to the Sun, surviving freezing temperatures, major and minor dust storms, partially blinded eyes, ageing instruments, travelling many, many times further than designed to do, and communicating with biological entities on a distant planet who want you to do all this great science in what was to be a 90 Sol mission which is now going on five years."
The science is fantastic, the adventure is incredible!
However, as to the science, here are some references that might help you:
Four Years on Mars - http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/videos/mer/flightdirector-20080117/
Some nice images and comments from John Callas.
The Rover's science objectives:
http://marsrover.nasa.gov/science/objectives.html
Significant Discovery of Wetter Mars:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mer/mer-20070521.html
Contributed paper to the IAU referenced here: (not sure if you can get the full paper - you may need to subscribe)
Abstract: Results of the Mars Exploration Rover mission to Mars are summarized
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?aid=1431936
Cheers
Astro0
In a way, one of Spirit's important discoveries was a non-discovery: if Gusev was a lake bottom, as seems obvious from orbital imagery, it was subsequently filled by floods of basalt. The early bits of Spirit's mission would have been terribly frustrating if not for the relief provided by Opportunity.
If you are looking for specific events, I'd say the two huge discoveries were Pot o' Gold and Tyrone.
In 4 minutes, I would take Astro's advise as a statment.
Then I'll speak of the 3 major phases (and discoveries):
+ the Plain = basalt = deception = we must move to the Hills
+ the Hills = first glimpse of water action (we went there to follow the water) + inspiring breathtaking views (first Mars mountain climber )
+ Home Plate (the promise land) = "volcanism" (pure sand...)
...and the Exploration continue.
Good luck Emily
Edit: I forget to speak about DD and cleaning events. I know, I know, no relation between them but they are 2 major "discoveries", aren't they?
Best way I know to get the science story is two lectures Steve's done.
One particularly good science one is here
http://www.open2.net/sciencetechnologynature/planetsbeyond/stevesquyreslecture.html - in depth on the science half.
The other one, to bring it a bit more up to date, is here
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=vOv4LnAt01E
This is a great topic. I'm making a new years' resolution to try to understand the science that's been done a bit more, starting with these links.
Emily,
I regret that this observation is not emphasized more by NASA or SS, but to me one of Spirit's most exciting discoveries was that everything off the landing plain appears to be layered and fragmental - coarse rock fragments with generally crude layering in the Columbia Hills, and fine salty sand with fine layering in Home Plate and vicinity. Except for what may be a single included ballistic rock fragment, the Home Plate layering greatly resembles that in Meridiani, especially the pervasive low angle cross beds (with some at higher angles). Other similarities include the underlying distinctive spherule-rich bed (reportedly with crystalline hematite), and the ferric acid sulfates, locally even richer at Gusev (up to 40%) than at Meridiani (up to 30%). Despite these obvious similarities, two completely different (but fundamentally Earth-like) causes have been inferred for the two sets of layered rocks, sulfate minerals, and spherules- volcanic (pyroclastic) surge from a vanished or hidden volcano (with vanished fumaroles and accretionary lapilli) for one, and an exceedingly complex set of events involving salt evaporation from vanished or hidden muddy acid playa lakes, silicate/salt transport and deposition by the wind, and alteration and redeposition by standing and flowing acid liquid water for the other.
A fragmental silica-rich bed, stratigraphically between the spherule-rich bed and the beds of Home Plate proper, so far appears to be unique to Gusev, and therefore probably ranks as Spirit's single most interesting discovery.
-- HDP Don
The close pictures on dust devil are the plus and unique of mission of Spirit. During the summer time, when Spirit was at the top of Hill Columbia, took an original activity: Astronomy taking some sky pictures when she had plenty of energy reserve to disipel. The other important Spirit's discovery was when she was heading toward Home Plate, trying to overcome a slope, her wheels have scratched the surface and found lots of sulfate....Indication of wathering of surface.
Finally, Spirit took lots of time on the highest point of Columbia hill taking the most complete picture around the Gusev!!!
And much more from others who can recall her stories...
Thanks for all these replies, guys. My Internet access has been limited over the holiday but I'm reading everything and plan to get some writing done early next week. It's possible I may get a chance to ask SS what he thinks the biggest science stories are -- I'm glad for those Arvidson et al papers, which I printed out for some holiday reading -- they're giving me a good review! SS wrote a companion Oppy one to the 2006 paper, but there doesn't seem to be one in press yet for 2008, which would cover the subsequent 1,000 sols. I wonder if he has a draft in preparation...
--Emily
I thought this was pretty cool: http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/090109-mars-rocks.html
I'd been wondering why the rock spacing on Mars looked like it was kinda plopped around rather than all bunched together. This article explains tries to explain why.
If the wind is undercutting the sand under the rocks as deflation proceeds, it could pitch each rock slowly forward over the eons and space them apart.
Neat explanation.
-Mike
Hello!
Sorry for taking this old thread up, but ... I am writing for the german wikipedia, and I am also looking for the scientific findings of the rovers. I am searching for some public accessible documents, which summarize the findings as a whole.
Some of the diverse questions which I have:
- What is the history of gusev? Was it filled with water?
- How the layering in the rocks of columbia hills or home plate was built?
- At which time does the dust devils show up? Why are they building only in gusev, and not in meridiani?
- Were the Columbia Hills vulcans? Or what kind of vulcanic activities were here?
- How was the layering of victoria built? Is there a cross section profile?
- What where the results of analysing the Cape Verde?
- What are the result of the athmospheric observations?
- What is the history of meridiani planum? Was the whole meridiani planum under water? Was the water flowing? And flowing to which position? Meridiani is flat.
- The layering has changed inside endurance crater, if we go deeper, due to ground water. Has this also happend in Victoria crater?
- Is water the only process to built the blueberries? Is there a map for the distribution of the blueberries?
- How old is Victoria or Endurance?
- Are there geological annotated maps about the structure and chemistry of Meridiani Planum and Gusev/Columbia Hills?
So many rocks, so many analyses ...
The videos of Steve Squyres are really cool! I whished I would have the PDF for this lectures ...
Thanks a lot...
Thanks a lot for this link. I already have seen it, but it is totally outdated. And also it references some "science mag" articles i can't access
The Spirit Wiki article isn't great - but it's actually reasonably comprehensive and up to date.
Maybe a job for some intrepid UMSF'er?
Ok, I think I have a good start point. As Emily stated in another thread, the abstract of the LPSC conferences are giving a good overview of what the scientist found out. They are really short, and mostly there is a short conclusion of what the findings do tell us.
I just downloaded 200 of them about the rovers and try to understand this stuff.
Also this statement of her may help: "Googling individual authors whose LPSC abstracts indicate they do a lot of work in this field may lead you to personal websites where they post PDF copies of their published papers", I will test it
An article published yesterday in Science reports that the rock "Comanche" that Spirit visited in 2005 a lot of carbonate.
"This is one of the most significant findings by the rovers," said Steve Squyres.
"Magnesium iron carbonate makes up about one-fourth of the measured volume in Comanche. That is a tenfold higher concentration than any previously identified for carbonate in a Martian rock."
It is amazing it took them so long to get this. This mission continues to amaze.
I don't have access to the Science article; the http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-189.
Good old Comanche! I always suspected that rock was special.
It was a question about the sparkly bits visible in its MIs that motivated my first post to UMSF - wayyy back when.
Now my followup question is whether those specular reflections may have come off crystals of magnesium iron carbonate! I have seen precious few such sparkles in MIs before or since Comanche.
I love the irony that such sought-after stuff was signaling its presence in such an eye-catching manner YEARS before it would be formally recognized.
Rock hound comments?
Even to my amateur eye, Comanche was one of the most intriguing outcrops either of the rovers came across. More than any other, it made me think of outcrops in the Southwest US. I remember thinking that I wished that they could have spent more time there.
I guess I shouldn't be surprised that discoveries are coming out of observations made so long ago. I do tell students in my presentations that their children, and maybe even grandchildren, will be making discoveries from data now being collected.
Speaking of archival data, there is a lot in this forum. Here is a link to a long forgotten thread with pictures of this curious outcrop.
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=1850&view=findpost&p=32100
I guess the story here may be that carbonate minerals may be more common on Mars than our remote sensing tools have previously led us to believe. The ancient geochemistry of Mars is a bit more interesting than was initially assumed. I see the story evolving to where there is an historical geochemical dichotomy based on groundwater pH.
Indeed. The formation of carbonates is so varied that they can be indicators of many processes. In my area, B'ham, AL, look at the carbonates present in the column: Starting out with the dolomitic/cherty Cambrian Knox Group, through the Red Mountain Formation and the petroliferous biogenic Bangor Limestone, up to the Cretaceous (and later) marls and chalks.
I think that carbonates have a weak-ish spectral signature (compared to hematite and phyllosilicates) and is masked by the pervasive "limonite dust" (not totally correct, that is what I have informally called it for years) that covers everything on Mars.
It will be interesting to see how this study develops.
--Bill
Don't know how major this is, but if it's innapropriate here I'm sure the mod team will move it: http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2010-355
Arvidson et al. presented a two-page abstract on this at 2010 LPSC.
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2010/pdf/1247.pdf.
Tom
Anyone wear a Spirit costume for Halloween?
!
This isn't really the best thread for this post, but I'm not sure it needs a new thread now.
I am finishing up work on my Mars Atlas vol. 1 (up to Mars Express) and looking ahead at Vol. 2 (MER to present). All the text is done in draft form, so it's illustrations I am looking at. This is an experimental version of a map of early Spirit operations. The whole route would be mapped at larger scale (lower resolution) but sites of interest will be covered like this.
Placenames are a problem. They were for Phoenix as well. Supposedly, they are accessible via the Analyst's Notebook at PDS, but that is filled with inconsistencies, with uncertainty regarding the identity of the named feature, etc. And looking ahead, I see that later in the mission most names are omitted from the Analyst's notebook.
(Mission Ops people! Do us a favor, please keep and make available a proper record of the names you assign!)
Phil
I will submit it to the publisher at the end of this year for release late next year.
Phil
http://publish.uwo.ca/~pjstooke/marsatlas.htm
Here are the Analysts' notebooks:
http://an.rsl.wustl.edu/mer/
And here are the site maps:
http://an.rsl.wustl.edu/mer/merbrowser/browserFr.aspx?tab=map&m=MERA
Select a site, play with the map dimensions, and you get a map of named features.
You're right, I don't want every name, and I am mainly looking for names of objects like a rock or hollow, not a remote-sensing or IDD target. But it's not always easy to tell which object a name refers to.
Phil
Evidence for a Noachian-aged ephemeral lake in Gusev crater, Mars
summary: alteration of Comanche is consistent with low-temperature evaporites from near-surface water-rock solutions and equivalent to nearby Algonquin outcrops.
http://geology.gsapubs.org/content/42/4/359.abstract
Just wondering here , but if mission planners had Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter - HiRISE and CRISM data in particular available to them when they were selecting a landing site for Spirit, do you think they would have selected a different site to Gusev Crater?
That's a virtually unplayable and pointless game of what-if. The majority of the MER landing site selection process was driven by engineering anyway.
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