Images from the latest Mars rover’s
navigation cameras reveal a remarkably familiar landscape -- one that looks
like the California desert.
Black-and-white photos stitched together
from the Curiosity rover’s Navcams show gravelly terrain with what looks like
well-cut, pyramidal mountains in the background – the kind of terrain found in
the Mojave, said John Grotzinger, lead scientist for the Mars Science
Laboratory mission.
The familiar ground “kind of makes you feel
at home,” Grotzinger said at a Wednesday news conference.
Curiosity’s ultimate goal is Mt. Sharp, a
mountain several miles away in the middle of Gale Crater. But the rover's landing spot near the edge of
the crater has proved to be interesting in its own right. Scientists have
picked up evidence of an alluvial fan – a water-caused feature found on hill
slopes on Earth.
“You would really be forgiven for thinking that NASA was trying to
pull a fast one on you, and we actually put a rover out in the Mojave Desert
and took a picture – a little L.A. smog coming in there,” Grotzinger joked.
Recent discoveries were filled with other
pleasant surprises. Mike Malin, lead scientist for the rover's MARDI descent
imager, revealed a new, higher-resolution shot of the heat shield in midflight
– in shining detail showcasing the stitching in the shield’s thermal
blanket and drawing gasps from Wednesday's audience.
“You’ve been hearing us saying, ‘Just wait till you see the good
stuff.’ Well, this is the good stuff,” Malin said.
Malin, who also works on the Mars
Reconnaissance Orbiter, pointed out a colleague’s find from the satellite: Six
dark spots showing the final resting place of the rover spacecraft’s
half-dozen, 55-pound tungsten slugs jettisoned before its supersonic parachute
deployed.
Finding the slugs will help scientists
better understand how inert objects fall, Malin said.
The rover won’t be taking off for Mt. Sharp
for a few days yet; in the meantime, scientists are keeping an open mind about
the landing spot.
When Grotzinger was asked if there was
possibly gypsum in the shown image – a sign that water had been present – the
Caltech geologist said, “Sure, why not? ... That’s an entirely reasonable
suggestion.”
The scientists hope to release color images
from the Mast Camera over the coming days.
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