It's been a watershed year
of science for the NASA Mars rover Spirit, a
six-wheeled automaton that continues to probe the red planet's
secrets as it clambers up the Columbia Hills.
The first of NASA's two
Mars Exploration Rovers (MER) to reach the red
planet - the second, Opportunity, landed three weeks later - Spirit
has overcome early hurdles in a
somewhat run-of-the-mill landing zone to find utterly new terrain.
"The remarkable story of
the day is that these rovers are still making scientific discoveries," said
Steve Squyres, the mission's principal investigator from Cornell University,
during a Jan. 3 press briefing that marked the anniversary.
"Spirit has moved into something totally different...a completely different
geological territory."
After 2.4 miles (4
kilometers) of driving across its Gusev Crater landing site, Spirit is now
gradually reaching higher into the region's Columbia Hills
in search of more strange rocks like its recent science target
"Wishstone." The rock's mineralogy is much different than that of its
surrounding rocks and those of the Gusev plains.
Another recent
target, a rock called Clovis, also intrigued researchers since it
contained goethite, a
mineral that only occurs in the presence of water on
Earth.
"I
think clearly the identification of [the mineral] goethite in the
Columbia Hills and the indication that they have had significant water involved
in their formation is the news [from Spirit]," said rover science team member
Matt Golombek in a telephone interview. "We have found something that has
clearly been wet."
An unexpected
Mars
Both Spirit and its robotic twin Opportunity were sent to Mars to unravel
the planet's history of water, but while Opportunity hit paydirt early a
t
its Meridiani Planum landing site - thanks to orbital measurements and a
hole-in-one landing - tracking the wet stuff's history at Gusev has
been much harder for Spirit.
"We
targeted landing sites that were specifically chosen to address the aqueous
history on Mars," said Golombek, who spent three years working to pin down the
two rover landing sites. "And what we found on the plains of Gusev Crater,
throughout the first two kilometers, was virtually no water
evidence."
Rover
team members said Spirit's landing site was chosen
because of its appearance, which suggested that Gusev Crater was once lake. But
Spirit's science instruments recorded primarily basalt rocks, most likely
pulverized in the impact that carved Gusev, strewn about the area, they added.
"Basically, the surface
there was not what we would have hoped for," Golombek said. "It was difficult to
come to terms with the fact that we were on this basalt plain."
But lucky for Golombek and
other Mars researchers, Spirit has wheels.
Hitting
the road
The
ability for Spirit and Opportunity to escape the immediate area around their
landing site may be one of the MER mission's most attractive attributes.
While
Opportunity has hopped from Eagle Crater to Endurance Crater and on to its heat
shield, Spirit steady drove toward the distant Columbia Hills where it is
climbing ever higher.
"[This
mission] has revealed Mars as a place that one can truly get down on the surface
and explore in a sense that you and I would do," Squyres told SPACE.com. "You can make a prediction of
and than go over and find out if it's right."
Without
their wheels, the twin robots wouldn't be rovers, and though Spirit has already
felt some age pangs with one of
its six wheels the robot has been keep its freedom of mobility, which
researchers believe is key to its scientific success.
"That's
what's so marvelous," Golombek said. "If you don't like what you landed on, you
go to something that you do like."
Scaling the
hills
Researchers
do like the Columbia Hills at Gusev Crater.
The
region has revealed older rocks with geology unlike anything seen at Gusev so
far, with Squyres and his team anxious to determine how the chemistry of rocks
may have changed in different areas of hills.
Researchers
aren't sure what formed the hills, or whether some of their more interesting
rock targets - like "Wishstone" - were formed by through an impact, volcano or
other method.
"We
want to identify these rock types based on their minerals," Golombek said. "We
don't have a good view right now, and I want to nail it."