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A look back: The drilling campaign of the Curiosity rover during the Mars Science Laboratory's Prime Mission.

Authors :
Abbey, William
Anderson, Robert
Beegle, Luther
Hurowitz, Joel
Williford, Kenneth
Peters, Gregory
Morookian, John Michael
Collins, Curtis
Feldman, Jason
Kinnett, Ryan
Jandura, Louise
Limonadi, Daniel
Logan, Cambria
McCloskey, Scott
Melko, Joseph
Okon, Avi
Robinson, Matt
Roumeliotis, Chris
Seybold, Calina
Singer, Jaime
Source :
ICARUS. Feb2019, Vol. 319, p1-13. 13p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Highlights • Curiosity is first robotic drill deployed to another planet since Venera missions. • During first Martian year successfully drilled three full depth drill holes. • Discovered Gale Crater may have once been amenable to Earth-like organisms. • Determined first absolute age date of Martian surface. • Made possible first definitive detection of organic matter on Mars. Abstract The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) rover, Curiosity, completed its first Martian year, 669 sols (687 Earth days), of operation on June 24, 2014. During that time the rover successfully drilled three full depth drill holes into the Martian surface and analyzed the recovered material using onboard instruments, giving us new insights into the potential habitability of ancient Mars. These drill targets are known as 'John Klein' (Sol 182) and 'Cumberland' (Sol 279), which lie in the mudstones of the Yellowknife Bay formation, and 'Windjana' (Sol 621), which lies in the sandstones of the Kimberley formation. In this paper we will discuss what was necessary to procure these samples, including: 1) an overview of the sampling hardware; 2) the steps taken to ensure sampling hardware is safe when drilling into a target (i.e., evaluation of rock type, rover stability, prior testbed experience, etc.); and 3) the drilling parameters used to acquire these samples. We will also describe each target individually and discuss why each sample was desired, the triage steps taken to ensure it could be safely acquired, and the telemetry obtained for each. Finally, we will present scientific highlights obtained from each site utilizing MSL's onboard instrumentation (SAM & CheMin), results enabled by the drills ability to excavate sample at depth and transfer it to these instruments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00191035
Volume :
319
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
ICARUS
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133580403
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.icarus.2018.09.004