That search was initially supposed to last just three months, but both Spirit and Opportunity kept chugging along for years. Spirit finally got bogged down in soft Martian sand in April 2009; as a result, the rover wasn't able to re-orient its solar panels to track the sun through the harsh Red Planet winter, and Spirit essentially froze to death. Spirit made many important discoveries during its six years of work on Mars. Perhaps the most exciting came when the rover's crippled right-front wheel dug a trench in the dirt of Gusev Crater, revealing bright-white silica. On Earth, such deposits are created by hot water reacting with rock, so Spirit likely uncovered an ancient Martian hydrothermal system, NASA officials have said. The find strongly suggested that, long ago, at least some parts of Mars harbored liquid water and an energy source — two key ingredients necessary for life as we know it.
Spirit found other evidence that liquid water flowed across Mars in the past (as did Opportunity). The rover also photographed dust devils and Martian clouds, and it captured the first image of Earth ever taken from the surface of another planet. Spirit's death didn't mark the end of the $800 million MER mission. Opportunity remains active to this day, and, an arthritic robotic arm and some issues with its flash memory notwithstanding, it's quite healthy, MER team members have said. In fact, Opportunity had logged over 27 miles on Mars, a rover record that continues to be expanded.
Credits:
http://www.space.com/35168-spirit-mars-rover-13th-anniversary.html
No comments:
Post a Comment