Whereas it has enabled many thrilling discoveries, the Curiosity Rover has additionally encountered its share of setbacks. The newest left NASA engineers speechless.
On April 25, Curiosity drilled right into a rock nicknamed “Atacama” to gather a pattern. When the rover retracted the robotic arm after drilling, the whole rock unexpectedly lifted off the Martian floor—all 28.6 kilos of it. Whereas different Curiosity drilling operations have induced cracks or breaks within the higher layers of Martian rocks through the rover’s practically 14-year mission, that is the primary time one has remained caught to the sleeve that surrounds the drill’s rotating tip.
Because the house company itself recounts, it was the black-and-white obstacle-detection cameras mounted on the entrance of the rover’s chassis that captured this peculiar “accident” in a sequence of pictures that allowed engineers to get to work instantly to free it, transferring its robotic arm and working the drill repeatedly over a number of days.
Engineers initially tried to take away the rock by vibrating the drill, to no avail. On April 29, they adjusted the place of the robotic arm and tried vibration once more, however solely managed to knock some sand off the rock. On Could 1, the group gave it one other attempt by tilting the drill extra, rotating and vibrating it, and spinning the drill bit. The group anticipated to must repeat these operations a number of occasions, however as an alternative the rock broke unfastened on the primary try, shattering into a large number of items when it hit the Martian soil.
NASA’s Curiosity rover was developed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and landed on Mars in August 2012 with the aim of searching for proof that the Pink Planet may need as soon as had circumstances that would assist microbial life. In 2020, it performed an experiment within the Glen Torridon area inside Gale Crater, an space wealthy in clay minerals that strongly point out the presence of water previously and that it collected utilizing onboard devices often called Pattern Evaluation on Mars.
This story initially appeared in WIRED Italia and has been translated from Italian.
