With Spirit starting to get on the move again (even though it's a very small first step), I think that it's high time we got a new topic going and re-invigorate the Spirit thread.
OK. Spirit's moving again after 6 months at Low Ridge.
Here's an animation of the turn (enhanced Front Haz Cam).
Indeed.
Since it's like a whole new mission (albeit one that will be starting slowly), here's the Sol 1010 Navcam mosaic so far...
http://flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=290273421&size=l
Great idea.
Looks like this turn was to bring the stuff disturbed by the broken wheel into arms reach. I wonder if we'll see another turn in the next few weeks to get that thin outcropping into reach?
Eppur si muove
**we know Galileo Galilei didn't said that, but it seams appropriate for Spirit
Here is first movement seen through the eyes
of the Left Rear Hazcam on Sol 1010.
jvandriel
"On the road again" good, very good.
I believe that the rover will take his road to McCool Hill, doesn't it?
When Spirit gets back to Homeplate, I think it will be interesting to see if its new instrument, the RFW-TT (ie: the Right Front Wheel - Trenching Tool) will first of all still allow Spirit to still climb up on top, and secondly to see what it uncovers underneath the top layer of HP material as it gets as it gets dragged up the side and across the top of the formation.
Will it uncover anything new? I call for speculation - as so many UMSF'ers are so good at doing.
Astro0
That's a good idea Astro0.
I wonder if the team will actualy use the RFW-TT as a tool. I guess it could be used to move little "flat rocks" to uncover what under looks like; we'll call it RFW-WFR then (With Flat Rock).
Doug, we need a "no longer turning weel" in the Smillies
About speculation, the easiest to think about will be salt, more salt, much more salt
For the sake of completeness, here's a front hazcam animation showing the full extent of the new movement:
ONWARDS, SPIRIT.…
One day – next year… next week…
Tomorrow..? – you’ll absently click
Your grubby mice and find one of us died,
Leaving her sister behind, blissfully unaware
She will end her days roving Barsoom’s
Lonely ochre plains alone.
You’ll check all the usual suspect websites,
Refusing to believe that one brutal truth of which
Both of us were so aware: Out There nothing
Is immortal. Beacon-bright stars, even galaxies die; why
Did you convince yourselves a rover could live forever?
But you’ll sit there, staring
At your flat-screens, flatly denying what you’re seeing
With your own wide eyes, crying
“You’re lying!” when reading someone’s mis-spelt
Post announcing “Now there’s only One – “
It will probably not be me.
No, don’t deny it. My faithful friends, this pill cannot
Be sugar-coated. Not now, not after 1000 sols
Of eating this world’s deadly dust and gulping
Down its brittle, cracked-ice air.
Each dawn I see is one closer to my last.
My sols are short, I know that;
These old wheels have only so many
Tortured turns left before they seize,
Freezing solid in the frail duricrust
This frozen-dust covered world calls earth.
But be content! I am not spent yet! The climbing
Sun is warming me again, and as you read these words
The hoarfrost coating my cabled veins thaws!
Soon Homeplate’s layered and ragged raws
will reappear before your eyes…
All I ask is that you walk with me
For I am weary, and my ruined wheel feels
Heavier every sol: the ascent of Husband
Took its toll on me, wounding me
More than I knew. I shall not climb again.
But I am ready to move on. Too long
this rock-strewn ridge has been my home;
The stones scattered at the Columbias’ feet
call out to me again and I would gaze up at their peaks
One more time before I die..
So walk by my side, my friends; walk and talk
To me of the sunsets we have shared
And maybe I will dare to believe you
When you tell me “Your body may die,
But your Spirit will live forever…”
© Stuart Atkinson 2006
Stu,
I hope the guys and girls at SPIRIT mission control read your verse.
They have stuck with their girl throughout the winter and probably feel as cold as she does.
I'm sure that if they read your words they will feel as heart-warmed as I did.
Good stuff.
Astro0
PS: When is Stu's Book of Martian verse coming out?
"Do the teams and JPL'ers see what we do?"
I'd say that the answer is yes.
Just yesterday we had some people from JPL people visiting and they had a Powerpoint presentation which used an image I did of the Canberra DSN station superimposed with Victoria Crater.
Apparently, it's been doing the rounds at JPL and was emailed from one person to the next.
I'm told the trail leads back to SS. If so, that's cool
So Stu, if they saw my piccy, I'm sure that they read your verse as well.
Astro0
Wonderful, Stu...thank you for giving such a lyrical voice to our collective feelings!
I used to write a little bit of poetry long ago. Apologies in advance; I could never approach Stu's level, but feel inspired to try something:
Spirit Comes Home
Ruddy beauty in the dusty sunrise
marvelous rocks, a crimson layer cake of distant secrets
waiting eons for a touch.
She comes slowly, painfully now
the Spirit of an alien species
from a sister world
but this aging lady comes in peace, no invader
See her reach, and tenderly place
her solitary arm
against the strata, no longer alone
in the vast ocher wilderness
now eager to tell its tales to a sympathetic stranger
She calls to us across
the gulf of trackless space
speaking for the voiceless witness
of ancient catastrophes
and, if accident will, the drama of emerging life
cut too short?
Listen to her; she is old and wise
treasure the gems of her declining years
and know that, when what must happen does, she lived
for all of us
and will live on in us all
This is fantastic. Not only have we seen the recent movement, but we have heard some insider information from SS himself about future plans. Even if overdue, it was a very well-timed interview, considering recent events at both rovers, and not to mention MRO. I am quite the proverbial "happy camper."
Speaking of Spirit's New Adventure, surely we are all pleased to know HP will be revisited. There is so much there that everyone wants to see. That alone will be quite an adventure. I'll have to confess that I was very pleased to learn that the geological promised land will be next on the agenda. It is sad to note that it took the failed wheel to eliminate the plan to climb McCool, but I just didn't see a lot of value in stuggling to the top of another hill that is likely to display more variants of the rocks seen on the last hill.
It will still be difficult with the bad wheel, but it seems a better idea to look for something new and different along a traverse with less elevation change. Those badlands are what I would like to see in more detail, even if they cannot be climbed.
One of the things that really amazes me is that these rovers seem to be capable of surprising us more after 1000 sols than they were on sol 1.
1000 Sols have come and gone,
Yet memories still linger.
Spirit is about to move
I hope she pulls out a finger.
Doug
Was looking for Stu’s verses,
About loved rovers,
I hit a key to log,
Find a poem from Doug!
Oppo got stuck in a ripple,
And Spirit turned into a cripple,
But the folks at the Lab
Got them out of rehab,
I think they're deserving a tipple.
Anon
Oh, I don't know - maybe it's the curmudgeon in me, but imagine Spirit being a little cranky after such a long nap. She is the more http://www.astrobio.net/news/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=1583&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0of the two, even according to http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/opportunity_hopes_030626.html If I were an old rover with a gimpy wheel and a sibling who seems to get all the luck and headlines, I might have more of a reaction like this from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_Race upon being awoken after a nice relaxing break:
risenshn.wav ( 100.8K )
: 701
1000 sols! All in a row! Who knew it was possible?
Great poetry work all, especially that Anonymous person. He (or she) sure is prolific.
Squyres talks http://space.com/missionlaunches/061106_mars_update.html about some "etched terrain" off to the southwest being the next stop after Home Plate and vicinity. Can anyone point out just what he's talking about? Thanks.
Go get 'em Spirit...!
...drool! Wouldn't it be great if....nah, I can't say it.
Anyhow, I was late for the poetry parody party, so here it be:
Dusty discoveries
Glorious golf cart
Roaming rusty roads
Remotely reconning reviled ridges rife with refuse?
REJECT!
Reprogram
Roam reliably, resolutely
Seeking solutions subtle
Throughout tumultuous terrain
Universal, unanimous not Urthbound in the undertaking
Victorious across half a world
With a wink, the Spirit of humanity proudly declares
I am no xenophobe
(Why?)
The rippled or winkled terrain to the south seems geologically younger than the plains to me, far fewer craters are visible as compared to the adjacent plains. It also seems collapsed and appears to lie below the level of the plains. I wonder if the loss of whatever caused this surface to collapse (ice?) vented through Home plate?
A poem:
There once was a MER from Nantucket
Who saw a basalt the size of a bucket
She said with a grin, while holding her chin
Since my RAT bits are gone, I'll just buff it.
Here is an old flicker gif of the rough terrain.
It think that it brings out the fact that it is either depressed or surrounded by a rim. There definitely appears to be a rim or ridge separating the area from the basin. I hope Spirit is not blocked by that feature.
Note I am not geologist, and am just using terms that I am familiar with.
File size 500 Kb
There's a couple of rovers on Mars
That drive a lot slower than cars.
As they crawl millimeters
They aren't world-record beaters --
But their world floats along midst the stars!
-the other Doug
Here is the complete 360 degree panoramic view
taken on Sol 1010 with the R0 navcam.
jvandriel
"There's a couple of rovers on Mars..."
You can't beat a good limerick! Except maybe with a bad one...
(now I'm trying to make up a bad one)
edit - got it!
A couple of profs at Cornell,
Steve Squyres and young Jimmy Bell,
put two rovers together
that they drove hell-for-leather
with their buddies down at JPL
- uh, I got it from my old chum Anon.
Phil
... and in a vain effort to redeem myself, here's a polar version of jvandriel's nice new pan. The streaks on Eldorado show up really well.
Phil
OK, this is the Spirit one, a departure from the http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=3257&view=findpost&p=75197. Not quite right on the mix, but maybe I will tweak it sometime later.
I hope Dr. Squyres doesn't mind being guest vocalist. ![]()
http://homepage.mac.com/lyford/4umsf/MovingAgain.mp3
I was imagining Spirit waking up to a signal and moving again- and then picturing the front hazcam timelapse movies of the IDD working to the beat. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powerhouse_%28song%29 meets http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vangelis were the influences, not sure if I succeeded.
(Again, admins please move me if this belongs in EVA...)
Lyford, you are a *clink* genius.
Moving Again and Victoria Inspiration are fantastic.
I think that a movie idea I have has just found its soundtrack.
Astro0
I want the album. Seriously.
lyford: I enjoyed the Victoria piece, but I must grab your new sensation on the bigger pipeline, tomorrow.
That's awesome Lyford!
This is was I love about this place, there can't be anywhere else on the web where science, engineering, exploration, fiction, poetry, music, images, sfx, comedy... are produced and discussed so effortlessly side by side and all, as one rover PI might put it, at such an impressively high level. ![]()
James
Here is the complete panoramic view from Sol 1010.
Taken with the R0 Navcam.
jvandriel
Lyford, thank U so much, you're a true DJ (Not Doug Jellison, eh
)
Your music is perfectly timed and mixed. Nothing to impROVE
Thanks for everyone's kind words - I don't aspire to be the poor man's http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Planets though perhaps the poor man's http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomita doing Gustav Holst.
I may have a few more musical ideas lying around somewhere.... and perhaps some that volcanopele would find more appropriate for inspiration- but that would be another thread.
My theory is that during conjunction we were image starved and forced to draw upon inner talents to get by.... the UMSF Cultural Renaissance! (Not to be confused with Mars Renaissance Orbiter...)
Now - Back to the Rovers!
EDIT - ps - thanks for the link, james!
Well, that wasn't actual telemetry... probably just an AOL dial up connection from one of my sample sets.
Hmmmm.... actual telemetry.... I wonder.....
Another move tomorrosol
Bit late, Lyford, but like wow...that was both inspiring and hella cool!
The amount of sheer talent amongst the members here is astonishing...thanks for allowing a crusty old Air Force sergeant with few relevant skills to experience it all!
MI Stitch Sol 1017
Another turn to the right, now in position to examine the fine layers.
Anyone notice that after the sol 1022 move, we appear to be at a greater tilt than before?
[quote name='fredk' date='Nov 19 2006, 06:27 PM' post='75608'I guess they had enough. [/quote]
It was barely enough but I think they were very sure that it actually was enough and there was no point in risking making a mistake that would have put her into a potentially "power negative" situation.
Sol 1022:
http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=301312553&size=l
For the last time
here is the complete navcam panorama taken on
Sol 1010 and 1016 with the R0 navcam.
jvandriel
Here is my version of the polar view of the Solar Deck.
Taken on Sol 1016 with the R0 navcam.
jvandriel
Here is the complete
panoramic view taken
by Spirit on Sol 1022 and Sol 1024 with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
A QTVR of this latest pan by jvandriel
Nico
Here is a self-portrait of Spirit.
Taken on Sol 1024 with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
Great movie Nix.
Thanks
jvandriel
You're welcome..I found your pan to be a nice candidate for qtvr. Since I haven't been able to create much myself lately, I can at least have some fun with other people's work
Nico
You do the spin too Stu... ![]()
It's very easy to do though, I use http://www.pano2qtvr.com/ regularly with contributors' navcam pans and it does the job in a couple of minutes.
Nico
A great 'end of day' shot from Spirit.
A quick anaglyph.
Enjoy.
Astro0
Sol 1025
They are there:
http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/pancam/2006-11-22/2P217371670ESFAS20P2578L6M1.JPG
http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/pancam/2006-11-22/2P217371620ESFAS20P2578R1M1.JPG
Spirit Pancam http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/pancam/2006-11-22/2P217371620ESFAS20P2578R1M1.JPG that arrived Nov.22.
BTW - Can't find that handy Timestamp software anymore. Anyone know where it went?
Astro0
EDIT: Just as I post, James comes up with the answer.
Sol 1022-1026 Navcam:
http://flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=304372060&size=l
fredk,
You're right.
Here's the anaglyph again.
Thanks
Astro0
Here is a mosaic of Mi images taken on Sol 1027.
jvandriel
I just discovered there is a tool for web-viewing equirectangular projections that are hosted on Flickr... somebody on my Flickr page actually pointed it out to me a few weeks ago on my Flickr page but I didn't read it until now. Check it out.
http://fieldofview.com/flickr/?page=photos/marscat/304372060&tags=equirectangular
Pity it doesn't allow zooming in a bit further, but otherwise it looks pretty sharp.
Wow, you talk about well-rounded!
Are you sure those are just grains? They look like something else to me...more like the Merdiani blueberries, they're encased in another material.
Kowabunga! If those are blueberries, Sunny, you've got a major scoop, and should sit right down and write a paper!
Personally I'm sceptical. They're much smaller than Meridiani concretions and are held together with a minimum of matrix (sulfates?). I think blueberries need a resonable amount of matrix volume around each one to allow room for growth. Also the RAT brush has revealed them as very smooth, shiny and dark. They look more like obsidian than gray hematite - Dam' I wonder if they could be glass spherules from some lava fountain? Nah! Then we would see some irregular droplet or dumbell shapes as well as spheres. Only massive reworking would get them all so round and uniform in size.
Still, they look interesting to me and probably should get a full IDD analysis. Pity we can't grind into them.
I'll also point out that a somewhat similar strata over by Home Plate read out to be quite basaltic, in keeping with the chemistry of the plains basalts. I'd like to think otherwise, but I betcha these "berries" turn out to be basaltic in content, as well.
-the other Doug
Incredible rock in the MI field on Sol 1035...
pomegranate ![]()
Doug
Anybody know if they're planning a TES integration on "The Pomegranate"? (Come to that, is Spirit's TES still operational?)
Driving again on sol 1037!
http://www.flickr.com/photos/marscat/313343709/
From the latest MER Status Report...
Sol 1023 (Nov. 28): The panoramic camera took images of targets "El
Dorado" and "Prat" as well as thumbnail images of the sky. ..
"Prat"? sigh... that poor, poor rock. I know it's probably been named to honour some scientist, but someone should have told the MER guys what a "prat" is over here in England... would have saved that little rock a very hard time when it's older...
Perhaps the rock has a crack in it.
Here is poor Prat - doesn't look like one.
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/p/1023/2P217179010EFFAS20P2556L7M1.HTML
Just goes to show that beneath the surface of every poor prat there's a complicated creature with lots of hidden layers...
And Prat in colors ![]()
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Spirit/Images_en_couleur/FinesStrates-Sol1023.JPG
Here is the complete 360 degree panoramic view
taken on Sol 1037 with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
Lot of layers, yes thats the word Stu. That port prat doesnt even have the looks for this neighborhood - while it sits there falling to pieces it looks quite more like a runaway from Meridiani.
From http://planetary.org/news/2006/1130_Mars_Exploration_Rovers_Update_Spirit.html
"...then heading back to Home Plate, the formation that science team members believe may be the remnant of an explosive volcano. After that, the rover may head southeast, lured by a bounty of new unusual rocks and formations the MER team can see in an image recently sent down from" MRO.
And
"If Spirit does head southeast from Home Plate, to some of the intriguing targets now visible in the HiRISE image, that means it will be going in the opposite direction of McCool Hill, where the team initially had planned for it to spend its second Martian winter."
Obviously an error here - McCool Hill is southeast from Home Plate!
There's certainly interesting stuff in all directions, but do people wish to speculate where would be most interesting to go after Home Plate now that we all can see the hirise image?
Kind of a watershed moment with tosols drive (1039), Spirit has lost her north tilt, we have left the 'haven'.
James
Can anyone who downloaded the full size image of Spirits landing site post a crop of the terrain just to the south of the Columbia Hills that Spirit might visit after returning to Homeplate?
Thanks
James posted a small section of the 'promised land' here
http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=3555&view=findpost&p=76795
I'm excited to see that Spirit may head off to the southeast after HP (and hopefully VonBraun as well). Looking at the last crop Emily posted containing Spirit's current position and the sand-trap she fell ill in, eastward and just on the other side of the sand-trap is another 'strikingly' circular feature (the one Korolev and Faget are part of) that seems to be one of the more interesting accessible features (and now with better imagery to navigate around the "obvious" sand-traps. A relative of HP, impact, or other. If this feature is indeed what is interesting the folks at JPL, it will be exciting to see.
Nothing new and mars-shattering I know, but interesting. Any thoughts?
-- Pertinax
We've had similar views before. I think the drops are adhesives used in the construction.
I know the gully/water news is exciting but let's don't go crazy kids. They http://marsrover.nasa.gov/gallery/press/spirit/20050125a.html just epoxy adhesive and solder weld dots on the panel joints.
Here is the 360 degree panoramic view taken on Sol 1039
with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/spirit/20061213a.html
Data from the rover's Mössbauer spectrometer provides evidence that they have an enhanced amount of the mineral hematite relative to surrounding soils.
My gosh, how long does an integration take now? I seem to remember that the radioisotope that drives the spectrometer had only a 90-day halflife, so it would seem to need 1000x more time than it used to.
Or did they do this one integration all during the winter? :-)
--Greg
It's actually more like 200-and-something days.... so we're looking at integrations of 4 days instead of 12 hours.
Doug
http://space.com/news/061213_ap_mars_moon.html
I haven't seen here any panorama from sol 1041, so I'll post mine.
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/spirit/20061213a.html
Good question! What does "enhanced hematite" translate to re the concentrations in blueberries (which could be well over 50%)? Have any of the Meridiani concretions shown the glossy surface that is apparent on King George granules - before or after RAT brushing? I assumed that these granules were reworked but chemically unaltered basaltic sand. If they are more akin to blueberries, the theorists will have a field day working out a microcosm of Meridiani evaporite sandstone diagenesis here in this little corner of Gusev Crater. I wish them luck!
It is amazing that Spirit has now found blueberries in Gusev,very similar to the ones covering most of Meridiani on the other side of the planet.The haematite rich berries in Gusev most likely to have formed(I presume) from volcanic activity .Would this make scientists rethink the source of the haematite in Meridiani.Is the haematite water related or volcanic in origin?It seems that with the new opportunity findings of bigger sized blueberries around Victoria are making scientists having second thoughts as to the role of subsurface or surface or if any water playing a role in the formation of haematite??Would you agree that haematite in gusev is more likely to be volcanic in origin or is it a clue to the watery past of Gusev basin?
Here is the 360 degree panoramic view taken by Spirit
with the L0 Navcam on Sol 1041.
jvandriel
Here's a Sol 1041 polar derived from Tesheiner's version of the panorama.
Phil
Can someone point out Esperanza, our next target, on one of the maps/pictures? Thanks
It's probably this one (in front):
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/n/1022/2N217095578EFFAS20P0740R0M1.JPG
http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/mro/gallery/press/20061213a/PIA09091-RA5-bear-berkner-george-islands_annotated_br2.jpg
Phil
I hadn't noticed before, but the new HiRISE image makes the Faget-Korolev area look like a second Home Plate, half buried under the flanks of McCool Hill. If Home Plate is the site of an explosive eruption (magma encountering ground ice as it nears the surface, as seems to be the picture now), there might have been several places where this happened. Maybe Goddard (just south of this image) is another smaller vent... have we stumbled on a field of small volcanoes? That would be quite a finding in itself for Spirit (the interpretation relies on Spirit data, not HiRISE).
Phil
"Mini homeplate" just south of Eldorado. We passed by fairly close to it on our drive but I believe it was hidden behind a ridge.
Winter's vestiges :
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Spirit/Panoramas_couleur/VestigesHivernaux-Sol1042-1045.jpg
This is the place of the work volume of Spirit during the winter.
But what is King George made up of?Is it Basalt rock or just a handful of iron berries?
Presumably the MER team has the spectrometry to make that distinction, but has not yet announced it.
Gotta get back to the ISS on NASA TV. I'm helping "Beamer" fix the damn guide wire on the solar array.
Spine-tingling tension!
PS to Ant: Nice stitch, Ant!
Shucks... good luck with that, Shaka. I watched part of it, but eventually moved to another channel. I hope it all worked out in the end. Right, the spectrometry seems to be the piece we only have part of.
I love it, EGD. "Screaming blues..."
Who would ever have guessed that would be a plague on Mars.
Regarding the round things bearing some hematite, all round things on Mars are probably not tasty berries.
Hey Shaka, you should've used a finger, not a can of spray paint...
I do not know the name of this target rock (some help please!)... anyway this is a stitch from Sol1053 imagery:
That's Esperanza.
There are some related posts on page #10 (if you use the forum's default settings) of this same thread.
"Winter's vestiges" is updated :
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Images_de_spirit-2006.html#Sol1042
(you can see that my second version is less sature and less deform by the sttiching process)
A little late because I am working again
but here is the panoramic view taken on Sol 1051 and 1052 with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
Here is my version of Esperanza.
Taken on Sol 1053 with the Mi cam.
jvandriel
Hi ![]()

Image from the Sol 1025.
A Simple, Straightforward, Non-Rhetorical Question for Spirit:
Is This the same as That the same as King George Island?
We should have images at 13 wavelengths. Do they match?
It looks Spirit left Low Winter Haven for good on sol 1062!
http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/forward_hazcam/2006-12-29/2F220646051EFFASB7P1212R0M1.JPG
Now it's time to continue exploring Home Plate.
HAPPY ANNIVERSARY SPIRIT!
3 Earth Years on
Keep rolling
Astro0
Mars Rover photo contest
http://marsdata1.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/photoContest/index.cfm
also on MER site:
Sometimes, misunderstanding prove to be good.
I guess somebody asked for a 3 months mission and the ones that built up the rovers understood 3 YEARS!
Happy Anniversary my dear Spirit...
Stu, that photo shows great detail,
do You have the NASA photo-number for it ( PIA-something ) ?
Questions: Is the smear of the dragging wheel recently made or from last year before the winter.
If the latter, do we have a similar foto taken when it was fresh for comparison?
Do the fotos show changes indicative of aging of the surface?
Answer: I questioned (post #165) whether the King George Island collection of cemented spherules was commonly characteristic of the exposed friable-looking layers. The recent MIs of a Ratted layer (don't know the name) http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/micro_imager/2007-01-06/2M221356551EFFASCGP2957M2M1.JPG
show no spherules at all. Guess that answers that question. King George is different; wish I knew what it was.
Here is a mosaic of 2 images made by the Left and Right Navcam
on Sol 1069.
jvandriel
http://www.flickr.com/photos/marscat/349301268/
Sol 1071 Navcam equirectangular:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/marscat/349486146/
colorized panorama of target Montalva RAT brush:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/hortonheardawho/348114825/
There are image note links to colorized 3D -- and a comments link to a before / after animation.
Darn, hortonheardawho...That's beautiful.
It will be hard to post my own version after the beautiful picture of hortonhardawho
But, I try
...
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Images_de_spirit-2007.html#Sol1070
And the result of a little investigate about the opacity of the atmosphere :
But what about possible meteorite?
I hope, that spirit drives to near possible meteorite.
http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=176530009&context=set-72157594179653864&size=l
do you can now say, is it meteorite, or know Nasa it?
Here is a more complete version of the evolution of sky opacity from Sol 970 to Sol 1061.
I've made a ultra high contrast desatured version to put in evidence the dust evolution. At the last sol, we can view a little inversion phenomena, like during a dust storm (remember Vikings pictures...) :
Ant,
Very impressive images. The difference between sol 1041 and 1064 is particularly striking.
Thanks.
Post #183 has been updated with all the colorized 3D pairs -- and a colorized 3D panorama and a 3D color pancam context image.
Looks like we're about to enter another transit season.
I guess we'll find out soon but I suspect that the routines they have for getting tau from the sun images would be messed up a bit with a transit in progress. I think that observation will be of the full sun either just before or after the transit. A 'while the pancam is pointing at the sun anyway might as well slip in a tau' observation.
James
Bingo - it'll either be "take a tau, then watch a transit" orrrr the other way around.
Now I've got to start convincing the team to do a Hazcam movie during a good Phobos transit to see the terrain 'dim'.
Doug
Assuming this is a full transit then there would be arund a 40% reduction in light so the dimming in a Hazcam movie would probably be very obvious but even though it would be quite cool to see I'm at a loss as to what scientific merit it would have at all.
It's a discussion JB and I have after the last round of transits when they managed to get 4 sec-per-frame shooting of one of them. Purely for cool factor.
From the top of Husband hill looking west or east you might see the darkening moving - but from where we are now it's simply a case of cool factor. downsample them to 512 x 512 - compress them hard - get 12 into the budget of a single normal FHAZ frame and make a movie ![]()
Doug
Problem is, the effect might be almost impossible to see on the "raw" streched images - any dimming will be counteracted by increased stretching perhaps. Depends on stretching algorithm, of course. Presumably we'd see lower contrast with the shadowed areas either way.
Airbag
Oh - impossible on the raw....but very visible with calibrated imagery ![]()
Doug
From the latest http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status_spiritAll.html#sol1070
Another weird idea about the eclipse. Instead of taking a movie of the scenary around, can Spirit take the IDD's shadow before during and after pending it's in the correct position? Any benefit of that?
It's not really about benefit - it's about cool factor...little else really
Doug
Lots of new super resolution images posted at the Pancam site
http://marswatch.astro.cornell.edu/pancam_instrument/superres.html
Hu hu hu hu !
Amazing !!!!
Any ideas what formed the tiny http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/micro_imager/2007-01-16/2M222243353EFFASCGP2939M2M1.jpg like features on the top of the accretionary lapilli?
Dust/sand grains or ...?
It would be nice to see another MI at a different illumination angle.
They really do convincingly appear more like lapilli all the time, don't they.
As for the spaghetti-like things, there are http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/micro_imager/2007-01-16/2M222243030EFFASCGP2939M2M1.JPG of the same area with different illumination. The shadowed version is somewhat suggestive of a dust layer adhering to the underside of the layer, but I suppose it could be other things, like remnants of a lower layer of angular clasts, a weathering rind, or a salt deposit. Curious...
Can the TES derive any meaningful information about the "spaghetti's" composition from such a limited (in terms of surface area) sample? Seems as if there's a lot of interesting questions with regard to Martian minerology here that are worth investigating (esp. the influence/effects of atmospheric characteristics vs. mafic influences).
aside from the spaghetti on http://mars.lyle.org/imagery/2M222243353EFFASCGP2939M2M1.JPG.html, which i nterpret as dust clumping like rime ice, im intrigued by the bright speck at lower right, some sort of crystal facet reflecting the sunshine? the http://mars.lyle.org/imagery/2M222243464EFFASCGP2956M2M1.JPG.html only show a somewhat uninspiring out of focus speck in the same place.
How come we havent seen any crystals in the sediments so far (or have we?), seems the conditions should have allowed some crystal growth, but maybe they are just salt crystals and dont weather very well..
I have seen quite a few bright specs in images from both rovers, and have also wondered if at least some of them were flashes from crystal faces. Most of them are too small to determine what they are, but occasionally there have been larger areas that resembled specular reflections to me. The one that comes to mind at the moment is Bounce Rock. Some images of it seemed to display a lot of specular reflections, but I can imagine it may be simply a saturated exposure.
As for seeing crystals of any kind, I think we've seen several examples, though not as commonly as I would have expected. I think I have seen crystal shapes or cross sections in quite a few of the rocks Spirit has looked at with the MI. Opportunity did catch at least a few images of crystals surrounding some concretions (upper right in this: http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/press/opportunity/20040302a/18-jg-04-mi3-halo-B038R1_br.jpg), and there were the hopper crystal outlines seen at Lemon Rind.
First time I've tried this...
More exciting astro-astronomy plans from the latest http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status_spiritAll.html#sol1079
Thanks for pointing them out - I saw that they were L7's and ignored them, thinking for sure they'd use L1, the wide open setting. But then considering how close to the sun McNaught is, the sky may be so bright by the time the comet rises that L7 will work. And perhaps L7 will cut through the dust better than L1?
Sweet. An image of McNaught would be a nice feather in the cap for one of these Renaissance Rovers. Apparently Opportunity will also make an attempt. I'd guess they'll have more opportunities to try to catch it in coming sols.
Added a few images.
The Pancam L2 panoramic view taken on Sol 1081.
jvandriel
Spirit may have finished work at this outcrop because the plan for tosol (1087) is
.
http://qt.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/pancam/2007-01-22/2P222482431EFFASCGP2749R7M1.JPG
comet????
Unfortunately all there seems to be is cosmic ray hits. Notice how they're both above and below the horizon.
I was wondering what the faint brightening was running across http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/p/1083/2P222482431EFFASCGP2749L7M1.JPG from the morning of sol 1083 comet search. Now that we have the corresponding http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/p/1083/2P222482431EFFASCGP2749R7M1.JPG we can see that the faint band is actually the horizon line and the left frame is actually mostly glare, perhaps from the rising sun?
I think there must be a bug in the naming there - those two images can't have been taken at the same time - they are totally different pointings.
Doug
Doug, you actually can see the horizon line in that left frame, if you look very closely. It matches the location from the http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/2/p/1083/2P222482233EFFASCGP2673L7M1.JPG that morning. (The 2 right frames that morning show that the camera didn't move between shots.) It's just that the image of the sky in the left frame in question is almost completely swamped by some glare that's mostly in the lower left of the frame. If you look at the http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/spirit_p1083.html it's pretty clear.
Well that is just astonishing...totally bleached out. Bizarre ![]()
Doug
The Panoramic view on Sol 1087.
Taken with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
Here is a mosaic taken with the Mi cam on Sol 1085.
jvandriel
We have some fresh images from Spirit at the exploratorium. It moved again on sol 1089 towards Tyrone and is currently midway on this trek.
http://nasa.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/navcam/2007-01-25/
http://nasa.exploratorium.edu/mars/spirit/navcam/2007-01-26/
This is my attempt of sol 1087 navcam mosaic including Spirit's current position.
Here we are : 1000 sols over garenty
The panoramic view looking back.
Taken wth the L7 Pancam on Sol 1087.
jvandriel
Who'd have thought they'd need drive direction imagery after spending eleventy seven million sols parked in the area. ![]()
Doug
It could be that in the meantime some rock toppled or a meteorite impacted a large hole
http://www.flickr.com/photos/marscat/374103366/ http://www.flickr.com/photos/marscat/374103025/
Hmmm... back to the 'popcorn sulfides'. I wonder if we dare try to travel along them to get nearer to the morass, or if this location becomes our perch to mini-Tes the area. Do the codes show more driving tomorrow?
You know, from here, with the benefit of hindsight, I think the area where Spirit got stuck looks like the big sand trap that it turned out to be. I still think there is a way around to the south - but I gather from the http://athena.cornell.edu/news/mubss/ that they'll be heading back to Home Plate after finishing at Tyrone. There is certainly no shortage of targets around here - I hope Spirit can keep going for a long time.
From the statements of SS and others in the hierarchy, I conclude that climbing McCool, or any other hill with lots of exposed bedrock, is now in the 'too hard' basket. I concede that it would be a form of Russian roulette, with the stuck wheel. I think the PIs will be looking for scientific targets Spirit can reach while plowing through sand, probably from Home Plate toward the south.
According to the http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/status_spiritAll.html#sol1085, 10 metres is as close as they dare get:
Another small step on sol 1094.
This is the current position, as seen from the previous one on sol 1092.
The full sol 1092-1093 Navcam pan:
http://flickr.com/photos/marscat/374102872/
Here's a polar version of mhoward's new panorama. The tracks show up really well.
Phil
What happened to "the Abyss"? Those two dark streaks one third in from either side... Was a new layer of sand dumped in the middle of it, and are they the edges of it? - Sorry if this has been observed before, maybe it is just me not following the mission close enough.
Nice polar, Phil, thanks.
From the latest http://www.planetary.org/news/2007/0131_Mars_Exploration_Rovers_Update_Spirit.html, an explanation of the interest in returning towards Tyrone:
Here is the complete Navcam panoramic view taken on
Sol 1092 and Sol 1093.
Taken with the L0 Navcam.
jvandriel
Another panoramic view of the wheeltracks in front and at the back of Spirit.
Taken with the L0 Navcam on Sol 1094.
jvandriel
and the last one for tosol
the complete 360 degree panoramic view taken
with the L0 Navcam on Sol 1096.
jvandriel
Is it too early to speculate on where Spirit will spend it's third winter?
Found some time for usual projections, based on Sol 1092/1093 jv beautiful stitch:
Here is jvandriel's new pan in my version of a polar projection.
Phil
Definitely an area to avoid when walking in rippable spacesuits...
Arrhhh!! Stu, you was the faster
![]()
Here is my version of this rock named "Zucchelli"...
Left pancame eye :
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Spirit/Images_en_couleur/ZucchelliRock-Sol1091.JPG
And a color anaglyph, who show particulary good the features relief :
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Spirit/Images_en_couleur/ZucchelliRock-Sol1091-anaglyphic.JPG
It's a very beautiful rock for me
.
Yes, Ant, but I question whether it is hard and sharp enough to be hazardous. It might crumble in your hand like pie crust. I think my spacesuit can handle it.
Famous last words...
Ah, but you don't know about the outer covering of diamond-impregnated buckyball-studded spider silk...hee hee. Resists x-ray lasers and chain-saws. (long as you don't stub your toe)
What I find fascinating is that almost none of these, well, extravagant features could possibly survive intact after more than a century or two on Earth given weather, etc. Does the fact that we see them now in this random epoch via Oppy tell us something about Martian climactic stability, to say nothing of routine real-time weathering?
nprev: I'm sure the fact that delicate, wind-sculpted features have been commonly imaged by both rovers has a lot to do with pretty long periods of relatively constant climatic conditions. I think, too, that the absence of rainfall and critters climbing all around are factors. ...and, up until recently, multi-wheeled, off-road vehicles were unheard of...
other Doug: Ya' know, I was in a rare state of mind last night. Once I started downhill with that "...for me...fourmi" line, and then slid into alliteration, it became a very slippery slope. (...must resist the urge!)
A couple of two-frames L257 stitches from Sol1098/99 (Tyrone tracks) and Sol1100 (Eldorado):
Nice pics Dilo ![]()
My owns :
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Spirit/Panoramas_couleur/Tyrone-Sol1099.jpg
http://www.astrosurf.com/merimages/Spirit/Panoramas_couleur/HusbandHill-Sol1101.jpg
Here is the complete 360 degree panoramic view taken on Sol 1103
with the L0 Navcam. ( included Dust Devil )
jvandriel
The bright material dug up by Spirit at Tyrone reminds me of the bright deposits left at the ends of the recent gullies spotted by Mars Global Surveyor.
This is my scenario for the formation of the bright material and the nearby popcorn sulfides: When Homeplate and the other nearby features on McCool Hill formed they melted salt rich permafrost below the surface. The groundwater produced spread from these hotspots eventually approaching or reaching the surface in low lying areas. When the ground water appoached the surface slowly it would evaporate as the pressure decreased leaving behind the dissolved salts as deposits in the soil. If liquid water was formed fast enough for it to reach the surfuce and form pools the water would flash evaporate leaving behind clumps of material leaving popcorn sulfides.
Any of the geologists think this sounds like a realistic scenario?
I'm no geologist, but it does sound similar to what some team members are speculating, http://www.unmannedspaceflight.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=3446&view=findpost&p=82400
Indeed.
Again, I think that studying mine tailings in the western US would prove quite illuminating for understanding Gusev. Clearly, there is some metal-enrichment of various sorts that led to salt production after exposure to moisture; what seems strange to me is how it's been sorted out into near-surface layers instead of mixed back into the substrate via wind action, small impacts, etc. Are the mixing processes that slow, or, dare I say it, are these precipitates the result of atmospheric moisture interacting with the near surface?
The rocks of HP and the hills were formed so very long ago that it is difficult to speculate on the temperature and atmospheric pressure that existed at the time. We don't know if these salts were formed early, or much later. My gut feeling is that when the rocks were formed it was too warm for permafrost at this latitude, and that atmospheric pressure might have been significantly higher. It sounds as if the water bump seen in the mini-TES spectra is thought to be caused by bound water in the sulphates, and that the sulfates are seen in the regolith. Since the regolith came after the original rocks were formed, the salts had to move in later.
It does seem that one current hypothesis is that acid solutions moving down through the hills leached the salts from the rocks and deposited them where the water exited layers down here in the basin. I think others had previously hypothesized leaching of rocks in a hot, steamy scenario related to the postulated volcanic origin of Home Plate and related rocks.
Hmmm... "along fractures"? Can anyone indicate where such fractures might be in the Columbia Hills? Are the known salty deposits anywhere near such fractures? I'm wondering if this issue of the origin of the salts hasn't already been decided. Groundwater seeps I can grok, but "gas vents" will require some startling new observations.
I still wouldn't rule out a role for hydrothermal factors in the emplacement of Home Plate layers and in the deposition of salt-rich soils.
-the other Doug
Is there any long range (as in distance) goal for Spirit? Or is it fated to die in the Columbia Hills?
The geological promised land to the south of Home Plate was always suggested as a later target, but with the limited mobility of 5 wheel drive, it would be a very tough call.
Doug
I doubt Spirit will drive to the 'promised land' this year, maybe next Mars year. They have already spent over 100 sols thoroughly examining just this side of Home Plate. There is still the south west side of Home Plate to investigate. Then there are Von Braun, Goddard, Oberth, Koralev, and Faget. Hopefully we will be able to see all of those before Spirit needs to find a new winter quarters around sol 1475, only 245 sols from now.
Can Spirit survive another winter on Mars?
Last winter was a close call. The recent cleaning event assures the survival of Spirit to at least winter, but continued dust deposition could end Spirit tour of duty. I'm glad that the cleaning event occurred, but images suggest it was only in spots. The swirling around of the dust may have buried some solar cells deeper in dust, while uncovering others. Further deposition will be much worse than it has been in the past because of this. Further depostion will bury all of the cells deeper in dust than the past because it appears the rover is in an area of dust deposition and will be in this area for a long time to come. IMHO We need another cleaning event to get better assurance that the rover will survive the upcoming winter.
How much does it cost per day to keep each rover running? Is there any point at which NASA might just shut the program down even if they can still move because they can't justify the costs science-wise?
It's unlikely they'd ever shut them down if one was still mobile. Exact costs are not particularly well published - but taking the total mission cost to date and dividing it by the total number of sols, it runs at something like $360k/sol The actual cost of an extension is a lot less than that.
Doug
I absolutely agree. I can't imagine anyone pulling the funding from a productive rover, unless one survives too long. That's an interesting question. Which future explorers on Mars would threaten the funding of the MERs in their retirement years?
The cost of the extended missions should be way less than that. It's probably not an easy number to estimate accurately, but wouldn't it mostly be related to the number of people on the payroll that it takes to keep the rovers active?
There are several costs in keeping the MERs active and operating. The largest cost is probably the staff of engineers, controllers and scientists who determine what the rovers do on a day-to-day basis, but there are other, not-insignificant costs, such as:
DSN time -- probably the largest non-payroll cost, using the DSN to communicate with the rovers (or, more specifically, to communicate with Odyssey as it relays to and from the rovers) costs somewhere in the thousands of dollars per hour, IIRC.
engineering support equipment -- specifically, there are the ground models of the MERs that are used to simulate various previously-untried activities. They used these ground models (one of which is nothing but the drive system, I know) to figure out how to safely drive on steep slopes, and how to get unstuck from killer rover-trap dunes. The equipment has to be maintained, and people who are only tangentially involved in MER operations have to be retained to operate this equipment.
Mars yard -- JPL, as far as I know, still maintains a Mars yard in which various MER operations are rehearsed. That also takes resources and manpower to configure and use. Yes, they at JPL have created a new, larger Mars yard for MSL rehearsals and study, but I believe the old one is still being used for MER operations.
While the per-sol costs of the MERs drops steadily as time goes on, because by far the greatest costs of the mission were in spacecraft design & assembly and booster procurement and we're now simply amortizing the costs over a longer and longer time frame, there are still real costs that will continue as long as the MERs keep operating.
All of that said, the incremental costs of keeping the MERs running are worth it, I think, as long as at least one of them remains mobile. The fate of mission extensions after a major failure really depends on what type of failure occurs. For example, if Oppy loses the ability to deploy its IDD but is otherwise in good shape, I imagine there will be mission extensions until something else fails. But if both rovers become immobile, you *may* see them shut down after they examine their near fields as thoroughly as possible.
-the other Doug
Surely, though, as low as the costs are to keep the rovers running now, it would be far cheaper to keep in contact with them after both have stopped moving (shudder). They'd become long term weather stations of sorts, and Spirit could keep monitoring dust devils if the cameras work and it has a decent view.
Thanks dvandorn. I've noticed the mission managers have changed throughout the years, I presume the engineers have as well. Might the engineers be needed for another mission (MSL)?
Mini-TES does good atmospheric science, and indeed so does the APXS w.r.t. Argon loading.
Doug
Bringing up the question, how many MERs can dance on the head of a pin? ![]()
The real issue of extension costs, in my mind, is the cost of DSN time. If you can cut down your support staff here on Earth to minimum levels and just be taking repetitive images and passive data, you do cut your costs down some. But at several thousand dollars per hour of DSN time, the cost of just getting your data back to Earth runs into the millions of dollars a year, even with passive, nearly dead rovers.
There is a lot of focus on reducing the cost per pound to get spacecraft into LEO and beyond. I think there needs to be a similar effort to reduce the cost of communicating with your spacecraft once they leave LEO, or else you'll continue to see probes which have a lot of life left in them abandoned due to the costs of keeping in regular contact with them.
-the other Doug
Well - of course - all the MER downlink is via Odyssey, and thus they don't pay a direct DSN cost for that. (But they do, I think, pay Odyssey for it)
The uplink via DFE X-band to the HGA is from the DSN, but that's not a long period. Maybe, between the two of them, 1hr per day. There was some discovery mission documentation that outlined the maths to figure out how much DSN time costs...I'll have to dig it up again.
Doug
Been neglecting Spirit recently, what with Oppy's Victoria adventure, but here's an interesting rock I spotted today...
My first try with"Autostitch"... interesting little rock peered at by Spirit's microscope yesterday...
"By God, it's the head of the Smiling Crocodile! He's lying on his right side..."
Does anybody hear a clock ticking?
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