|
NASA's Mars Exploration
Rover Spirit is a Stationary Science Platform
January 27, 2010
After six years of unprecedented
exploration of the Red Planet, NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit is
no longer a fully mobile robot. NASA has designated Spirit a stationary
science platform after efforts during the past several months to free it
from a sand trap have been unsuccessful.
The venerable robot's primary task in the next few weeks will be to
position itself to combat the severe Martian winter. If Spirit survives,
it will continue conducting significant new science from its final
location. The rover's mission could continue for several months to
years.
"Spirit is not dead; it has just entered another phase of its long
life," said Doug McCuistion, director of the Mars Exploration Program at
NASA Headquarters in Washington.
Spirit's last tracks.
This view from Spirit's navigation camera shows tracks left by the rover
as it drove backward, dragging its inoperable right-front wheel, to the
location where the rover became trapped in soft sand in April 2009.
"We told the world last year that attempts to set the beloved robot free
may not be successful," adds McCuistion. "It looks like Spirit's current
location on Mars will be its final resting place."
Ten months ago, as Spirit was driving south beside the western edge of a
low plateau called Home Plate, its wheels broke through a crusty surface
and churned into soft sand hidden underneath.
After Spirit became embedded, the rover team crafted plans for trying to
get the six-wheeled vehicle free using its five functioning wheels – the
sixth wheel quit working in 2006, limiting Spirit's mobility. The
planning included experiments with a test rover in a sandbox at NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., plus analysis, modeling
and reviews. In November, another wheel quit working, making a difficult
situation even worse.
Recent drives have yielded the best results since Spirit became
embedded. However, the coming winter mandates a change in strategy. It
is mid-autumn at the solar-powered robot's home on Mars. Winter will
begin in May. Solar energy is declining and expected to become
insufficient to power further driving by mid-February. The rover team
plans to use those remaining potential drives for improving the rover's
tilt. Spirit currently tilts slightly toward the south. The winter sun
stays in the northern sky, so decreasing the southward tilt would boost
the amount of sunshine on the rover's solar panels.
"We need to lift the rear of the rover, or the left side of the rover,
or both," said Ashley Stroupe, a rover driver at JPL. "Lifting the rear
wheels out of their ruts by driving backward and slightly uphill will
help. If necessary, we can try to lower the front right of the rover by
attempting to drop the right-front wheel into a rut or dig it into a
hole."
At its current angle, Spirit probably would not have enough power to
keep communicating with Earth through the Martian winter. Even a few
degrees of improvement in tilt might make enough difference to enable
communication every few days.
"Getting through the winter will all come down to temperature and how
cold the rover electronics will get," said John Callas, project manager
at JPL for Spirit and its twin rover, Opportunity. "Every bit of energy
produced by Spirit's solar arrays will go into keeping the rover's
critical electronics warm, either by having the electronics on or by
turning on essential heaters."
Even in a stationary state, Spirit continues scientific research.
"There's a class of science we can do only with a stationary vehicle
that we had put off during the years of driving," said Steve Squyres, a
researcher at Cornell University and principal investigator for Spirit
and Opportunity. "Degraded mobility does not mean the mission ends
abruptly. Instead, it lets us transition to stationary science."
One
stationary experiment Spirit has begun studies tiny wobbles in the
rotation of Mars to gain insight about the planet's core. This requires
months of radio-tracking the motion of a point on the surface of Mars to
calculate long-term motion with an accuracy of a few inches.
"If the final scientific feather in Spirit's cap is determining whether
the core of Mars is liquid or solid, that would be wonderful -- it's so
different from the other knowledge we've gained from Spirit," said
Squyres.
Tools on Spirit's robotic arm can study variations in the composition of
nearby soil, which has been affected by water. Stationary science also
includes watching how wind moves soil particles and monitoring the
Martian atmosphere.
Spirit may have been stopped, but it hasn't stopped discovering the
secrets of Mars. |