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This image shows Spirit's "hand," or the tip of the instrument deployment device,
poised in front of the rock nicknamed Adirondack.
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In preparation for grinding into the rock, Spirit wiped off a fine coat of dust with
a stainless steel brush located on its rock abrasion tool.
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The round, shallow depression in this image resulted from history's first grinding of a rock on Mars.
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Healthy Spirit Cleans a Mars Rock; Opportunity Rolls
(February 6, 2004)
NASA's Spirit has returned to full health and resumed
doing things never attempted on Mars before.
"Our patient is healed, and we're very excited about that," said Jennifer Trosper
of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., mission manager for Spirit.
Spirit temporarily stopped communicating Jan. 22; the problem was later diagnosed as
a memory-management issue. Engineers regained partial control of the spacecraf
t within days and reformatted Spirit's flash memory Wednesday to prevent recurrence
of the problem.
JPL's Glenn Reeves, flight software architect for the Mars Exploration Rovers, said
Friday, "We're confident we know what the problem is, and we have a procedure in
place we believe can work around this problem indefinitely."
Spirit's first day of science operations after the memory reformatting featured the
first brushing of a rock on a foreign planet to remove dust and allow inspection of
the rock's cleaned surface. Steel bristles on the rover's rock abrasion tool
cleaned a circular patch on the rock unofficially named Adirondack. The tool's main
function is to grind off the weathered surface of rocks with diamond teeth, but the
brush for removing the grinder's cuttings can also be used to sweep dust off the
intact surface.
The brushing on Thursday was the first use of a rock abrasion tool by either Spirit
or its twin rover, Opportunity. The brush swirled for
five minutes, said Stephen
Gorevan of Honeybee Robotics, New York, lead scientist for the rock abrasion tools
on both rovers.
"I didn't expect much of a difference. This is a big surprise," Gorevan said about
a picture showing the brushed area is much darker than the rest of the rock's
surface. "Ladies and gentlemen, I present you the greatest interplanetary brushing
of all time."
One reason scientists first selected Adirondack for close inspection is because it
appeared relatively dust free compared to some other rocks nearby. "To our
surprise, there was quite a bit of dust on the surface," said Dr. Ken Herkenhoff
of the U.S. Geological Survey's Astrogeology Team, Flagstaff, Ariz., lead scientist
for the rovers' microscopic imagers.
Spirit was instructed Friday afternoon to grind the surface of Adirondack with the
rock abrasion tool. After the grinding, the turret of tools at the end of the
rover's robotic arm will be rotated to inspect the freshly exposed interior of the
rock. Controllers plan to tell Spirit tomorrow to begin driving again.
Meanwhile, halfway around Mars, NASA's Opportunity drove early Friday for the
second day in a row. It arrived within about a half a meter (20 inches) of the
northeastern end of a rock outcrop scientists are eager for the rover to examine.
"We expect to complete that approach tomorrow," said JPL's Matt Wallace, mission
manager for Opportunity.
During Friday's drive, Opportunity did not travel as far as planned. The rover is
climbing a slope of about 13 degrees, and the shortage in distance traveled is
probably due to slippage in the soil, Wallace said.
The main task for both rovers is to explore the areas around their landing sites
for evidence in rocks and soils about whether those areas ever had environments
that were watery and possibly suitable for sustaining life.
Each martian day, or "sol," lasts about 40 minutes longer than an Earth day.
Spirit begins its 35th sol on Mars at 4:02 a.m. Saturday, Pacific Standard Time.
Opportunity begins its 15th sol on Mars at 4:23 p.m. Saturday, PST.
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