OVERVIEW
In early 2004, Mars received two new visitors. Both are explorers,
geologists, chemists, meteorologists, and photographers. They
wander the Martian surface trying to discover whether water was
once present and what role it may have played in the formation of
local geology.
From our experiences here on Earth, we believe that water is essential
to the formation of life. Today, there does not appear to be enough
surface water on Mars to sustain life as we know it. The Mars Exploration Rovers, or MERs, are trying to answer questions about the past suitability of Mars for
the evolution of life.
The MER is the most ambitious mission yet sent to the red planet.
The two MERs, named Spirit and Opportunity, landed in different
places on the planet. Designed to operate for a minimum of
90 Martian days, they have lasted much longer. In one day, each MER is able to cover more distance than the 1997 Pathfinder mission covered in its entire 85-day life.


The Mars Exploration Rover |
THE
ROVERS
The MERs are very different from the Vikings or Pathfinder before
it. The two Viking landers (1976) were fixed in place. They set
down on the surface of Mars and performed their experiments right
where they landed. The 1997 Pathfinder mission consisted of a lander
(Sagan Station) and a small, 23-pound mobile rover (Sojourner) that
had to stay within radio communication of its base station.
By
contrast, the two MERs landed on Mars in January 2004, weigh 380 pounds each. Unlike Sojourner,
they are not dependent on a home base. They can wander as far as
scientists on Earth want them to—up to about 100 meters per
day. Powered by a bank of solar cells on its upper surface, each
MER has advanced communication capabilities that will allow it to
keep in touch with orbiting probes and directly with Earth. In addition,
each rover carries an array of seven tools it will use to explore
the surface of Mars.

MER
Scientists |
THE
TOOLS
Cameras
Each rover is equipped with a Pancam (short for Panoramic
Camera), and each Pancam (contains
two digital cameras. Set 30 cm (11.8") apart, the cameras function
like left and right "eyes," so we’re getting back breathtaking, 360-degree stereo color panoramas from each MER.
Each
camera in the Pancam has a CCD (charged-coupled device) sensor with
a 1024 x 1024 pixel array. That's a total of one megapixel—low
resolution compared to today's consumer camera specs! These CCDs
only detect the presence or absence of light; in other words, they’re
black-and-white cameras. To create those beautiful full-color images
we’ve come to expect from our space missions, each camera
has a wheel with eight positions for colored filters. By taking
multiple pictures through different filters, scientists back on
Earth will be able to construct color images.

The
Pancam |
There
are a few specialized filters, too. The Pancam’s "left
eye" specializes mostly in visible colors, while its "right
eye" specializes mostly in infrared wavelengths invisible to
the naked eye. The left eye has a clear filter (without color),
but both eyes have dark solar filters (for short-wavelength violet
light on the left, and long-wavelength, near-infrared light on the
right) for solar observations. These solar observations can be used
to help determine the rover's position and orientation, as well
as to image the Sun.
To
get a bird’s-eye view of the terrain, the Pancams are mounted
on Pancam Mast Assemblies, or PMAs—vertical poles that raise
the MERs’ eyes 1.3 meters (4'3") above the Martian surface.
(OK, it's a low-flying bird. . . .) The cameras are motorized and
can pivot up and down 90 degrees, and around 360 degrees; the field
of view of the camera is 16.8 degrees wide and high. As they work,
each Pancam returns its data to the computers inside the body of
the rover. There, the data undergo preliminary processing and compression
before being sent to Earth.
The Pancams aren’t the only eyes on the rovers. There are
actually nine cameras on each. Most are pairs of black-and-white
cameras making up stereo pairs. Besides the two in the Pancam, there
are two pairs (four total) under the solar panels, one pair in the
front and one in the rear of the rover. Used for navigation, these
very-wide-angle Hazard Cameras, or Hazcams, have 120-degree fields
of view. They map out surface features within
3 meters (10') of the rovers. Although the rovers are designed to
drive over small obstacles, the scientists want to avoid larger
rocks. The Hazcams help them do this.
There’s
one more pair of cameras up on the PMA that is used for navigation.
The pair is called (you guessed it) the Navcam. With its elevated
45-degree field of view, the Navcam is designed to look at the area
ahead of the rover and help plan future routes for the MER. The
last and ninth camera is a scientific instrument we'll discuss later,
the Microscopic Imager.

The
Sundial |
Calibration
Target and Sundial
Have
you ever noticed that pictures taken outdoors in sunlight can often
look different from pictures taken indoors under incandescent or
fluorescent light? Cameras only report what they see. They cannot
compensate for lighting conditions the way your eyes and brain can.
On the surface of Mars, the same thing happens. The light in the
morning is different from the light at noon. Sometimes there’s
lots of dust in the air, and that can change the lighting, too.
Because
lighting conditions vary widely on the surface of Mars, it's important
to be able to calibrate the cameras we send there. To do this, a
calibration target marked with different values of gray and four
colored patches is placed on the rover. When the Pancam looks at
these colors, scientists back on Earth—who know the exact
values of the colored patches and targets—can compare the
light reflected and received from them. Then they can use these
data to adjust the images received back on Earth so the pictures
we see truly represent the conditions on the Martian surface.
To
further calibrate the images, a black target ball on a metal post
protruding from the device acts as a sundial, casting shadows that
can also be analyzed. The artwork on the instrument was created
by students; the word for Mars appears on the dial in seventeen
different languages.

The
RAT |
RAT
When
you picture a geologist out in the field doing research, the one
tool that always comes to mind is the trusty hammer. Geologists
need to study rocks that have not been exposed to the changing forces
of weather. By comparing the internal, untouched rock with its weathered
surface, a geologist can often determine the processes the rock
has undergone. Appropriately, geologists wanted a tool onboard the
MER that could expose fresh, unspoiled rock below the weathered
surfaces of samples. A hammer was not accurate or practical for
a machine to use, so they invented a better tool: the RAT. No, this
is not a rodent. RAT stands for Rock Abrasion Tool.
Mounted
on a marvelously flexible robotic arm called the Instrument Deployment
Device, or IDD, the RAT grinds away the surface of a rock with two
rotating diamond-tipped grinders. The RAT can create holes 45 mm
(about 2") in diameter and 5 mm (1/5") deep. It takes
about two hours if the rock is tough volcanic basalt, less if the
rock is softer. Once fresh rock is exposed, other instruments mounted
on the robotic arm can examine and contrast fresh versus weathered
material.
Microscopic
Imager
You'd
never think of sending a geologist out without a hammer. But the
other tool the geologist needs is a magnifying glass for examining
the detailed structure of the freshly cleaved stone. The MER is
no different. It, too, has a magnifying glass. It’s called
the Microscopic Imager, or MI, and each rover has one.
Like
the RAT, the MI is mounted on the robotic arm, which places the
MI in contact with the rock surface to take pictures. And like the
Pancam, the MI has a one-megapixel sensor. When placed against a
rock surface, this sensor can detect details slightly larger than
the diameter of a human hair (30 microns). The MI does not have
its own light source to illuminate its samples. Instead, it uses
available skylight and sunlight to take pictures. It takes stereoscopic
images by moving the camera for a second shot of the surface from
a different angle.

X-Ray
Spectrometer |
Alpha-Particle
X-Ray Spectrometer
Now
that our robotic geologist has chipped away at the rock and examined
it microscopically, it's time to do a little chemical analysis.
Unfortunately, it's difficult to break out the flasks, beakers,
and Bunsen burners on Mars, so the rover has to be clever about
its chemistry.
One of the instruments available is the Alpha-Particle X-Ray Spectrometer,
or APXS. The APXS can determine what elements are in the rock and
in what proportion. The instrument is mounted on the robotic arm
and must be placed in contact with the rock surface for its analysis.

APSX
Diagram |
The
APXS contains six small radioactive sources that pelt a rock with
alpha particles (helium nuclei) and X rays. By looking at the energy
of the alphas and X rays that bounce back from the surface, the
APXS can determine the elemental composition of the rock. It takes
quite a while to do this—up to ten hours—so these observations
are made during the Martian night, when the rover is not moving.
An additional advantage of nocturnal observation is that the temperature
is much lower, which helps increase the accuracy of the APXS’s
observations.
Mössbauer
Spectrometer
The
red planet is red for a reason. Scientists believe that Mars is
an iron-rich world, and the familiar reddish color comes from iron
rust. Because the surface of Mars may contain many iron compounds,
it makes sense to send along an instrument to analyze and characterize
the iron in the rocks. This is the job of the Mössbauer Spectrometer.

Mössbauer Spectrometer |
Like
the APXS (see above), the Mössbauer Spectrometer is mounted
on the robotic arm. When it comes in contact with a rock’s
surface, it illuminates the rock with a radioactive source. The
APXS does this too, but the Mössbauer Spectrometer gives off
gamma rays instead of the alpha particles generated by the APXS.
The Mössbauer Spectrometer then uses the energies of the returning
gamma rays to determine the composition and abundance of iron-bearing
minerals in the surface rocks.
It takes the Mössbauer Spectrometer about twelve hours
to do one observation. Iron's magnetic properties depend highly
on temperature. Because the observation is so temperature dependent,
comparative observations are made day and night while trying
to hold the temperature during a given observation at plus or minus
10 degrees Celsius.
Mini-Thermal
Emission Spectrometer
A
third spectrometer, the Mini-Thermal Emission Spectrometer, or Mini-TES,
looks at the infrared light given off by the surface materials
of Mars and is able to tell scientists the composition and abundance
of minerals. This instrument is located inside the body of the rover.
It uses the Pancam Mast Assembly (PMA) as a periscope. Light entering
the elevated position of the PMA is reflected down the inside of
the mast into the Mini-TES telescope and spectrometer. The Mini-TES
looks at right angles to the Pancam and has its own scanning mirror
to reflect light down the mast.
The Mini-TES also looks up through the Martian atmosphere to
take temperature profiles of the atmospheric layers. By looking
at the heat given off by the rocks at night, Mini-TES learns
about heat retention in the surface materials of the planet. The
Mini-TES tells geologists about carbonates, silicates,
organic molecules, and minerals formed in water by past processes.
Magnet
Arrays
Not
technically a tool, another simple experiment on the rover was designed
to look for iron. Both rovers carry three sets of strong magnets
to collect magnetic particles of dust. One pair of magnets is mounted
on the RAT and can collect dust generated from the grinding operations
on specific rocks. Another set of magnets is mounted on the front
of the rover to collect airborne dust. These are placed at an angle
so that nonmagnetic dust will fall away. Both the APXS and the Mössbauer
Spectrometer will be able to observe the material caught by these
magnets.
The last magnet is very strong. It's mounted on top of the rover so the Pancam can observe the deflection of wind-blown magnetic dust over the surface of the magnet. We also see what kind of dust gets stuck there.
Altogether, the MERs have an amazing array of tools to explore the Martian surface. In the many days they wander the Martian wilderness, we increase our knowledge of the red planet many times over what we know now. It's not quite like having human explorers, geologists, chemists, meteorologists, and photographers up there, but it’s close.
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