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TOPIC: The Opportunity rover


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RE: The Opportunity rover
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OPPORTUNITY UPDATE:  Departing Block Island - sols 2001-2008, September 09-17, 2009:

Opportunity completed the circumnavigation and full-circle imaging of the large meteorite "Block Island" and has resumed the long drive to Endeavour crater.

On Sol 2001: (Sept. 9, 2009), the rover moved 9 metres around the meteorite to the fourth and fifth out of six planned positions. On the next sol Opportunity reached the sixth and final position around Block Island with a 3-metre bump.

On Sol 2004: (Sept. 12, 2009), Opportunity departed Block Island and headed away with a 70-metre drive to the west. The westward direction is to head around a region of large dunes before turning south and east toward Endeavour. Two additional 70-metre westward drives were accomplished on sols 2006 and 2007 (Sept. 14 and 16, 2009).

As of Sol 2008: (Sept. 17, 2009), Opportunity's solar-array energy production is 499 watt-hours, with an atmospheric opacity (tau) of 0.565 and a dust factor improved to 0.582. Total odometry is 17,462.20 metres.

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Seven Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity team members at NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., took a moment Monday to pose with the Aug. 15 edition of the Block Island Times.
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OPPORTUNITY UPDATE:  Circling the Meteorite - sols 1995-2000, September 03-08, 2009:
Opportunity has commenced circumnavigation and full-circle imaging of the large meteorite "Block Island".

On Sol 1995: (Sept. 3, 2009), a solar-array dust-cleaning event occurred.
As of Sol 2000 (Sept. 8, 2009), Opportunity's solar-array energy production is 527 watt-hours, with an atmospheric opacity (tau) of 0.475 and a dust factor improved to 0.6145. The rover's total odometry is 17,238.97 metres.
On Sol 1997: (Sept. 5, 2009), the rover moved 5.7 metres to the second of six stand-off positions around the meteorite (the first position being the initial rover location). At each location Opportunity collects a set of images with the panoramic camera (Pancam).
On Sol 1999: (Sept. 7, 2009), Opportunity drove about 4 metres to the third position. The plan is to complete the circumnavigation of the meteorite before departing this location.

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Block Island Meteorite
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Composition measurements by the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity has confirmed that the rock on the Martian surface is an iron-nickel meteorite.

BlockIslandb.jpg
Expand (181kb, 1024 x 768)
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell University


This stereo image was taken by the rover's panoramic camera on the 31st July, 2009, (Sol 1,961).
The Opportunity rover had found a smaller iron-nickel meteorite, called "Heat Shield Rock" in late 2004.

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RE: The Opportunity rover
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'Crazy quilt' of moves may free stuck Mars rover
After a month of spinning their wheels in a sandbox, NASA engineers have settled on a strategy to free the rover Spirit from a sand trap on Mars: just wing it.
The geriatric rover slid into soft terrain in early May, burying its wheels halfway into the flour-like soil. To test strategies for getting out without risking a catastrophic misstep, engineers rolled a duplicate rover into a sandbox at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, California, that mimics the Martian morass.


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Martian Meteorite
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The Mars rover Opportunity, an interloper on the Martian soil, has discovered another piece of metal that isnt native to the planet: a boulder-sized iron meteorite that spun out of the sky and crashed into the planet sometime in the distant past. While the rock isnt the first iron meteorite spotted on Mars (the two Mars rovers previous discoveries make this the fourth), it is the largest, measuring about 2 feet wide and 1 foot high. Researchers hope that studying the mega-meteorite will provide clues to the atmosphere and landscape that it encountered when it arrived on Mars.

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RE: The Opportunity rover
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NASA's Opportunity rover has discovered what appears to be the largest meteorite ever found on Mars. Dubbed 'Block Island' the rock measures 60 cm across.
Opportunity first stumbled across the rock on 18 July, before snapping pictures to send to Earth and motoring calmly on.

"The images came down after we had already passed" - planetary scientist Albert Yen of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.


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The Opportunity rover has eyed an odd-shaped, dark rock, about 0.6 metres across on the surface of Mars, which may be a meteorite.
The team spotted the rock called "Block Island," on July 18, 2009, in the opposite direction from which it was driving. The rover then backtracked some 250 metres to study it closer.

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Victoria Crater
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From views of spectacularly layered cliff walls and sulphate-rich rock to the detection of tiny hematite "blueberries" and probable meteor debris, the Mars rover Opportunity's two-year exploration of Victoria Crater has yielded a wealth of information about the planet's geologic history -- and supported previous findings indicating that water once flowed on the planet's surface.
As Opportunity heads south toward Endeavor Crater, 13.5 kilometres away, a paper in the May 22 issue of the journal Science reports on the major findings from Victoria. The giant impact crater -- 750 metres wide and 75 metres deep -- gave scientists an unparalleled view into the planet's evolution, revealing evidence of a windy, wet and dynamic past.
The paper is a broad summary of observations that were released incrementally as they were made over the last two years, said Steve Squyres, principal investigator for NASA's Mars Exploration Rover mission and Cornell's Goldwin Smith Professor of Astronomy.
Many of those observations -- of hematite spheres (the blueberries), sulphate-rich sandstone and small chunks of rock containing kamacite, troilite and other minerals commonly found in meteorites -- are consistent with Opportunity's findings across Meridiani Planum, the rocky plateau the size of Oklahoma where the rover landed Jan. 24, 2004.

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Resolution Crater
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This black-and-white image of a five-meter-wide crater shows rocky debris surrounding its rim and spilling onto the plains around it.  Light-colored bedrock is in the foreground of the image, while dark sandy ripples stretch out behind the crater.
Credit NASA/JPL

Opportunity has seen many sights during her nearly 2000 sols on Mars, but recently came face-to-face (or wheel-to-rock) with the youngest crater ever seen by either Mars Exploration Rover!
Scientists say this small crater called "Resolution" formed sometime in the past 100,000 years. Most features studied by Opportunity are much older, including rocks over 3 billion years old! In contrast to these seniors, Resolution is just a baby.

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