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This spectrum captured by the Moessbauer spectrometer onboard Spirit shows the presence of three
different iron-bearing minerals in the soil. One of these minerals has been identified as olivine,
a shiny green rock commonly found in lava on Earth. The other two have yet to be pinned down.
Scientists were puzzled by the discovery of olivine because it implies the soil consists at least
partially of ground up rocks that have not been weathered or chemically altered.
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This spectrum taken by the alpha particle X-ray spectrometer onboard
Spirit shows the variety of elements present in
the soil at the rover's landing site. In agreement with past missions to Mars,
iron and silicon make up the majority of the martian soil. Sulfur and chlorine
were also observed as expected. Trace elements detected for the first time
include zinc and nickel.
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This image shows the region containing the patch of soil scientists examined
at Gusev Crater.
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NASA Mars Rover's First Soil Analysis Yields Surprises
(January 20, 2004)
The first use of the tools on the arm of NASA's Mars Exploration Rover
Spirit reveals puzzles about the soil it examined and raises
anticipation about what the tool will find during its studies of a
martian rock.
Today and overnight tonight, Spirit is using its microscope and two
up-close spectrometers on a football-sized rock called Adirondack, said
Jennifer Trosper, mission manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, Calif.
"We're really happy with the way the spacecraft continues to work for
us," Trosper said. The large amount of data -- nearly 100 megabits --
transmitted from Spirit in a single relay session through NASA's Mars
Odyssey spacecraft today "is like getting an upgrade to our Internet
connection."
Scientists today reported initial impressions from using Spirit's alpha
particle X-ray spectrometer, Moessbauer spectrometer and microscopic
imager on a patch of soil that was directly in front of the rover after
Spirit drove off its lander January 15.
"We're starting to put together a picture of what the soil at this
particular place in Gusev Crater is like. There are some puzzles and
there are surprises," said Dr. Steve Squyres of Cornell University,
Ithaca, N.Y., principal investigator for the suite of instruments on
Spirit and on Spirit's twin, Opportunity.
One unexpected finding was the Moessbauer spectrometer's detection of a
mineral called olivine, which does not survive weathering well. This
spectrometer identifies different types of iron-containing minerals;
scientists believe many of the minerals on Mars contain iron. "This
soil contains a mixture of minerals, and each mineral has its own
distinctive Moessbauer pattern, like a fingerprint," said Dr. Goestar
Klingelhoefer of Johannes Gutenberg University, Mainz, Germany, lead
scientist for this instrument.
The lack of weathering suggested by the presence of olivine might be
evidence that the soil particles are finely ground volcanic material,
Squyres said. Another possible explanation is that the soil layer where
the measurements were taken is extremely thin, and the olivine is
actually in a rock under the soil.
Scientists were also surprised by how little the soil was disturbed
when Spirit's robotic arm pressed the Moessbauer spectrometer's contact
plate directly onto the patch being examined. Microscopic images from
before and after that pressing showed almost no change. "I thought it
would scrunch down the soil particles," Squyres said. "Nothing collapsed.
What is holding these grains together?"
Information from another instrument on the arm, an alpha particle X-ray
spectrometer, may point to an answer. This instrument "measures X-ray
radiation emitted by Mars samples, and from this data we can derive the
elemental composition of martian soils and rocks," said Dr. Johannes
Brueckner, rover science team member from the Max Planck Institute for
Chemistry, Mainz, Germany. The instrument found the most prevalent
elements in the soil patch were silicon and iron. It also found
significant levels of chlorine and sulfur, characteristic of soils at
previous martian landing sites but unlike soil composition on Earth.
Squyres said, "There may be sulfates and chlorides binding the little
particles together." Those types of salts could be left behind by
evaporating water, or could come from volcanic eruptions, he said. The
soil may not have even originated anywhere near Spirit's landing site,
because Mars has dust storms that redistribute fine particles around the
planet. The next target for use of the rover's full set of instruments
is a rock, which is more likely to have originated nearby.
Spirit landed in the Connecticut-sized Gusev Crater on January 3 (EST and
PST; January 4 Universal Time). In coming weeks and months, according to
plans, it will examine rocks and soil for clues about whether the past
environment there was ever watery and possibly suitable to sustaining
life. Spirit's twin Mars Exploration Rover, Opportunity, will reach Mars
on January 25 (EST and Universal Time; 9:05 p.m., January 24, PST) to begin a
similar examination of a site on the opposite side of the planet.
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