This image was taken by Left Navigation Camera onboard
NASA's Mars rover Curiosity on Sol 4282 (2024-08-22 23:39:35 UTC).
NASA/JPL-Caltech
Earth planning date: Friday, Aug. 23,
2024
One of the many challenges of operating a rover on another planet is
that we don't always know where we're going to be located before planning
starts each day. Although we do plan our drives in advance, Curiosity doesn't
blindly follow the orders that we deliver. If an unsafe situation is detected,
such as if the wheels slip too much in the sand or if the rover tries to drive
along too steep of a slope, it will end the drive early and wait for us back on
Earth to assess the situation. Although we prefer for the rover to end up
parked exactly where we told it to, safety is always the first priority.
Coming into planning today, it looked like it was going to be smooth
riding. Before planning began, we received an email from our localization team
informing us that Monday's short drive away from Kings Canyon appeared to have
completed successfully, so everyone was ready to start poking around in our new
workspace. It wasn't long before we realized that we were facing a bit of an
unusual situation. Although the drive completed, we were missing almost all of
our post-drive imaging. When a drive completes, we take a set of Navcam,
Mastcam, and Hazcam images of our new location that we then use to determine
the targets that we want to perform contact science and remote sensing on and
to plan our drives. Without those images, there are very few activities that we
can plan. Fortunately, we did receive one Navcam image near our new workspace
(which you can see in the cover image above), so the geology and mineralogy
(GEO) team had something to work with, though their ability to select targets
was still severely limited.
For me, on the environmental science (ENV) team, this was great news.
Almost all of our observations are completely untargeted, so we don't really
care where exactly the rover is located. As such, we were given an opportunity
to make lemonade out of the lemons that the mission was handed today. In a
reversal from our usual roles, GEO planned out their limited set of activities
then passed the rest of the science time over to ENV. This was particularly
exciting given that, as was noted
on Wednesday, we've initiated a dust storm watch.
The dust
storm developing on the other side of Mars is
likely the annual "C" storm. The last time a dust storm went global
this late in the year was during the Viking era, so we expect that this storm
will stay regional rather than becoming global. Still, because global dust
storms happen so infrequently, we've initiated a storm watch so that we're
ready just in case the unexpected happens.
Although GEO's activities are limited in this plan, the team did the
best with what little data they had available. These activities include ChemCam
LIBS and Mastcam observations of "Lembert Dome" (some nodular
light-toned bedrock), "Wilts
Col" (a dark-toned float block that we
got ChemCam passive spectra of back on sol 4259), and "Return Creek"
(another float block). We're also taking ChemCam passive spectra and Mastcam
images of a dark-toned float block "Matlock Lake." In preparation for
planning on Monday, we're also taking a Mastcam survey of the workspace.
Because we had to pull our arm activities and the drive we had planned, the
CheMin team was also able to fit in an empty cell analysis activity that they had
been looking for time to execute.
ENV's activities are nothing unusual, but they are numerous. We were
able to fit in about three-and-a-half hours of dust devil movies over these
three sols, as well as about an hour-and-a-half of cloud movies, including some
shortly before sunset when we rarely are able to take movies. In addition, we
have a handful of Navcam line-of-sight and Mastcam tau observations to monitor
the developing dust storm.
In classic just-too-late form, the missing data finally appeared right
as we were finalizing the plan. Not of any use to us today (though the views
from our new location are as stunning as ever), but we're set up for a return
to normal operations on Monday.
Written by Conor Hayes, Graduate Student at York University
Mars Science Laboratory Mission Team Members
Source: Sols 4284–4286: Environmental Science Extravaganza - NASA Science
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