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  • Sols 3471-3472: Up The Mountain We Go!

Sols 3471-3472: Up The Mountain We Go!

Written by  Saturday, 14 May 2022 12:51
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Pasadena CA (JPL) May 13, 2022
After a successful 47m drive with ~5 m of elevation gain by Curiosity yestersol, we arrived at more new and interesting terrain to investigate! I was on shift as Science Operations Coordinator (SOC), and my role is to keep the pulse on both the science priorities and the rover resources and constraints. It involves a lot of interdisciplinary communication between both the international science t

After a successful 47m drive with ~5 m of elevation gain by Curiosity yestersol, we arrived at more new and interesting terrain to investigate! I was on shift as Science Operations Coordinator (SOC), and my role is to keep the pulse on both the science priorities and the rover resources and constraints. It involves a lot of interdisciplinary communication between both the international science team and the JPL-based engineering team.

In today's 2-sol plan we continued our systematic chemical characterization of the bedrock using APXS and ChemCam as we make our through the clay/sulfate transition. Our two contact science targets, "Pastora" and "Tama Tama," are nodular bedrock, and we'll also use the MAHLI imager to take a close look at their fine-texture.

Together the imaging and compositional information will provide clues for how these rocks formed and how they have been subsequently altered. We'll also image some distant buttes and layered stratigraphy using Mastcam and ChemCam RMI to learn about the depositional environments they formed in.

Our environmental team continues to monitor the atmosphere as we are approaching our dustiest season by taking tau measurements and line-of-sight observations across the crater, in addition to other weather monitoring observations.

The most fun part of my day as SOC was brokering the discussion between the science team and the Rover Planners for our drive and most importantly our end-of-drive location - which sets us up for the work we'll do in Friday's plan.

The science team typically provides me with several science targets that they are interested in landing on, and I work with the Rover Planners to understand if those targets work with the resources we have for the drive (for example, power and proper imaging), if accessing those targets is safe (for example, are they on a steep hill where the rover may slip?), and if the targets are generally along our high-level strategic path.

After lots of fun back and forth, the team decided to drive 30 m towards some unique dark layered blocks that you can see on the top left-hand corner of the above image. If our drive is successful, we'll get to do some contact science this weekend before continuing our journey up the mountain!


Related Links
Curiosity Mars Science Laboratory
Mars News and Information at MarsDaily.com
Lunar Dreams and more

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MARSDAILY
Sliding Into the Weekend Like - Sols 3466-3468
Pasadena CA (JPL) May 10, 2022
It's been a challenging week in Gale crater, but Curiosity and the rover team are ready to put those challenges behind us as we head into a busy weekend plan. I've been on shift as LTP and SOWG Chair this week, and we've had a handful of issues related to difficult terrain, being in a good orientation for communication, and having small downlink volumes available for planning. Today was a "late slide sol" because the downlinked data that we needed for planning didn't arrive on Earth until around 9 ... read more


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