While stationary for two weeks during Mars solar
conjunction in November 2023, NASA’s Curiosity rover used its front and rear
black-and-white Hazcams to capture 12 hours of a Martian day. The rover’s
shadow is visible on the surface in these images taken by the front Hazcam.
Videos from the rover show its shadow moving across the Martian surface
during a 12-hour sequence while Curiosity remained parked.
When NASA’s Curiosity Mars rover
isn’t on the move, it works pretty well as a sundial, as seen in two
black-and-white videos recorded on Nov. 8, the 4,002nd Martian day, or sol, of
the mission. The rover captured its own shadow shifting across the surface of
Mars using its black-and-white Hazard-Avoidance Cameras, or Hazcams.
Instructions to record the videos
were part of the last set of commands beamed up to Curiosity just before the
start of Mars solar conjunction, a period when the Sun is between Earth and Mars.
Because plasma from the Sun can interfere with radio communications, missions
hold off on sending commands to Mars spacecraft for several weeks during this
time. (The missions weren’t totally out of contact: They still radioed back
regular health check-ins throughout conjunction.)
Rover drivers normally rely on
Curiosity’s Hazcams to spot rocks, slopes, and other hazards that may be risky
to traverse. But because the rover’s other activities were intentionally scaled
back just prior to conjunction, the team decided to use the Hazcams to record
12 hours of snapshots for the first time, hoping to capture clouds or dust
devils that could reveal more about the Red Planet’s weather.
When the images came down to Earth
after conjunction, scientists didn’t see any weather of note, but the pair of
25-frame videos they put together do capture the passage of time. Extending
from 5:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. local time, the videos show Curiosity’s silhouette
shifting as the day moves from morning to afternoon to evening.
The first video, featuring images
from the front Hazcam, looks southeast along Gediz Vallis, a valley found on
Mount Sharp. Curiosity has been ascending the base of the 3-mile-tall
(5-kilometer-tall) mountain, which sits in Gale Crater, since 2014.
As the sky brightens during
sunrise, the shadow of the rover’s 7-foot (2-meter) robotic arm moves to the
left, and Curiosity’s front wheels emerge from the darkness on either side of
the frame. Also becoming visible at left is a circular calibration target
mounted on the shoulder of the robotic arm. Engineers use the target to test
the accuracy of the Alpha
Particle X-ray Spectrometer, an instrument that detects chemical elements on the Martian surface.
In the middle of the day, the front Hazcam’s autoexposure algorithm settles on exposure times of around one-third of a second. By nightfall, that exposure time grows to more than a minute, causing the typical sensor noise known as “hot pixels” that appears as white snow across the final image.
Curiosity’s rear Hazcam captured the shadow of the back of the rover in this 12-hour view looking toward the floor of Gale Crater. A variety of factors caused several image artifacts, including a black speck, the distorted appearance of the Sun, and the rows of white pixels that streak out from the Sun. NASA/JPL-Caltech
The second video shows the view of the rear Hazcam as it looks northwest
down the slopes of Mount Sharp to the floor of Gale Crater. The rover’s right
rear wheel is visible, along with the shadow of Curiosity’s power system. A small black artifact that appears at the left midway through the video,
during the 17th frame, resulted from a cosmic ray hitting the camera sensor. Likewise, the bright flashing and other
noise at the end of the video are the result of heat from the spacecraft’s
power system affecting the Hazcam’s image sensor.
These images have been re-projected
to correct the wide-angle lenses of the Hazcams. The speckled appearance of the
images, especially prominent in the rear-camera video, is due to 11 years of
Martian dust settling on the lenses.
More About the
Mission
Curiosity was built by NASA’s Jet
Propulsion Laboratory, which is managed by Caltech in Pasadena, California. JPL
leads the mission on behalf of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in
Washington.
For more about Curiosity, visit: http://mars.nasa.gov/msl
Source: NASA’s Curiosity Rover Captures a Martian Day, From Dawn to Dusk - NASA
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