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    Home»Space»NASA’s Mars Perseverance Rover: Next Stop, Hawksbill Gap
    Space

    NASA’s Mars Perseverance Rover: Next Stop, Hawksbill Gap

    By NASAMay 19, 20221 Comment2 Mins Read
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    Mars Perseverance Sol 428
    An afternoon on Mars: NASA’s Perseverance Mars rover used its Right Navigation Camera (Navcam) to acquire this image after driving on sol 428. The view is behind the rover towards the south, and the edge of the Kodiak mound is visible on the left side of the image. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech

    Perseverance Rover’s Journey Towards Hawksbill Gap

    NASA’s Mars Perseverance Rover was on the move this past week after finishing up remote science activities at Enchanted Lake, an exposure of finely layered rocks that may represent some of the lowest deposits of the delta. The rover threaded its way east around large sandy dune ripples before heading north en route to Hawksbill Gap, where the team hopes to collect our first set of delta samples and eventually ascend the delta front.

    Planning this past week at Jezero crater has mostly focused on making drive progress with additional reconnaissance imaging to scout our upcoming walkabout and support future planning for Mars Sample Return. The team was able to reestablish communications with Ingenuity after the recent anomaly and is continuing to gather and analyze the data.

    Mars Perseverance Sol 424 Rocks at Enchanted Lake
    Mars Perseverance Sol 424 – Right Mastcam-Z Camera: Mastcam-Z image of rocks at Enchanted Lake. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ASU

    Perseverance is expected to arrive at our first planned location, named Devils Tanyard, within the next few sols. There, we plan on abrading a fresh surface and getting our eyes and instruments up close to investigate the rocks and identify potential sampling sites. This will be the first of likely five proximity science stops as we ascend Hawksbill Gap up the delta stratigraphy towards a location named Rocky Top.

    After completing this first half of our walkabout, we plan on descending to sample at three of our favorite sites. With these three sample pairs, the team hopes to add to our Martian collectibles a set of fine-grained clay-bearing mudstones that are good candidates for preserving organics and potential ancient microbes, as well as coarser-grained sandstones to investigate material washed down from beyond Jezero and to constrain the timing of past lake activity.

    With each rover drive and sample, the team continues to learn more about this once watery crater and piece together the story written in the Martian rocks.

    Written by Brad Garczynski, Student Collaborator at Purdue University.

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    1 Comment

    1. The 10th Man on May 19, 2022 7:01 am

      That is so cool. BTW, are you ever going to do any science? Still waiting for those point of life papers.

      Reply
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