WASHINGTON, DC (BNS): NASA's aging Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has safely managed to climb out of the large Victoria Crater, which it had been examining from the inside since September last.
"The Rover is back on flat ground," Paolo Bellutta of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, announced to the mission's international team of scientists and engineers.
Opportunity used its own entry tracks from nearly a year ago as the path for a drive of 6.8 meters (22 feet) bringing the Rover out over the top of the inner slope and through a sand ripple at the lip of Victoria Crater. The exit drive, conducted late Thursday, completed a series of drives covering 50 meters (164 feet) since the Rover team decided about a month ago that it had completed its scientific investigations inside the crater.
"We're headed to the next adventure out on the plains of Meridiani," said JPL's John Callas, project manager for Opportunity and its twin Mars Rover, Spirit. "We safely got into the crater, we completed our exploration there, and we safely got out. We were concerned that any wheel failure on our aging Rover could have left us trapped inside the crater."
The Opportunity mission has focused on Victoria Crater for more than half of the 55 months since the Rover landed in the Meridiani Planum region of equatorial Mars. The crater spans about 800 meters (half a mile) in diameter and reveals rock layers that hold clues to environmental conditions of the area through an extended period when the rocks were formed and altered.
The team selected Victoria as the next major destination after Opportunity exited smaller Endurance Crater in late 2004. The ensuing 22-month traverse to Victoria included stopping for studies along the route and escaping from a sand trap. The Rover first reached the rim of Victoria in September 2007. For nearly a year, it then explored partway around the rim, checking for the best entry route and examining from above the rock layers exposed in a series of promontories that punctuate the crater perimeter.
Now that Opportunity has finished exploring Victoria Crater and returned to the surrounding plain, the Rover team plans to use tools on the robotic arm in coming months to examine an assortment of cobbles, rocks about fist-size and larger, that may have been thrown from impacts that dug craters too distant for Opportunity to reach.
Rover Opportunity safely back on Martian plains
Article Posted on : - Aug 30, 2008
Other Related News
Indian Light Tank successfully completes high-altitude firing trials
India's indigenous light tank has achieved a "major milestone" by firing a number of rounds at different ranges at an altitude of more than 4,200 metres with consistent accuracy, the defence ministry said on Thursday.
The Indian Air Force, in its flight trials evaluation report submitted before the Defence Ministry l..
view articleAn insight into the Medium Multi-Role Combat Aircraft competition...
view articleSky enthusiasts can now spot the International Space Station (ISS) commanded by Indian-American astr..
view article