NASA's Perseverance rover almost had to let go of a precious drill bit on Tina Tyler ArchivesMarsafter an attempt to collect a rock sample went awry.
For the past week, the car-sized lab on wheels seemed to remain in its location on the rim of Jezero crater. Meanwhile, a team of scientists and engineers on Earth focused on how to free the tool from the rock.
Anyone who has used a power drill around the house knows the frustration of getting one stuck in a board or wall, without being able to yank it back out. Well, sometimes the U.S. spaceagency has to retrieve a stuck drill, too — but from roughly 132 million miles away.
Fortunately, Perseverancedidn't have to sacrifice the coring bit. A NASA spokesperson provided an update on the status of the rover on Wednesday.
"The team was working to extract a drill bit from the most recent sample collection attempt, which was successfully accomplished as of late Tuesday night," NASA told Mashable. "This type of situation was planned for in the rover's design, and there are other drill bits onboard if needed."
SEE ALSO: Scientists found huge beaches on Mars likely from a long gone oceanJezero Crater is a site on the Red Planet where scientists believe a river once emptied into a delta. The reason scientists now want to explore the rim is to look for ancient Martian bedrockrubble. Jezero formed when something substantial smacked into the planet close to 4 billion years ago. The impact could have churned up and tossed deep materials to the surface.
Recently, Perseverance has been studying the makeup of layered rocks in an area NASA dubbed Witch Hazel Hill. Scientists want to understand the relationship between the alternating light and dark bands, as each likely formed under different conditions. Based on how layers are stacked, experts may be able to piece together a timeline for the Martian region.
Earlier this month, the rover sampled one of the light-toned layers, which consisted of tiny rock pieces. In the latest coring attempt, the team was grabbing a sample of the darker grains. Raw images beamed back from the rover's cameras to Earth indicated the drill may have been stuck since April 22.
Before Perseverance was launched, NASA equipped it with nine bits: one for Martian soil, two for removing the dust-covered outer layer of a rock, and six for drilling rock cores. It's unclear how many the rover still has in its arsenal and how many have succumbed to the rugged conditionsof the Red Planet.
Since landing on Mars in 2021, Perseverance has filled sample tubeswith rocks and dirt. NASA's goal has been to retrieve at least some of them and get them to Earth in the 2030s.
Exceptional rock discoveries have only mounted pressure on NASA to solve the problems facing its Mars Sample Return mission, its plan to fly bits of rock, dust, and air collected by the rover back to Earth. Last summer, Perseverance discovered a spotted rock with the most compelling signs of ancient Martian lifeyet, though a sample would need to be shipped back home for confirmation.
But that mission has been in limbo since a reviewfound it would cost upward of $11 billion and take nearly two decades to achieve. NASA engaged the greater aerospace industry for input on how to wrangle in spending.
The agency is now investigating two new approachesthat could bring costs under $8 billion, involving either a commercial lander or the tried-and-true sky crane, the landing system that brought the Perseverance and Curiosity roversto the Martian surface in the first place. The options could potentially shorten the timeframe to get the samples home.
NASA will spend the next year working on engineering plans for the revised mission.
Topics NASA
La Mode Retrouvée: Looking for Proust’s Muse in ParisThis $169 device can put your iPhone in a reboot loop. Here's what you can do.Sam Lipsyte on Mary Robison’s “Likely Lake”Let’s Talk About Skin: An ExchangeOpenAI's Sam Altman breaks silence on AI executive orderWhat Was the Princess Diana Beanie Baby?eBay has banned Jeffrey Dahmer costumesFrom the Archive: Dabney Stuart’s “Santa Claus in the Desert”How to stream 'Indiana Jones and The Dial of Destiny'Perfect movie to kick off the Christmas season: 'Anna and the Apocalypse'A Quiet, Meditative Place—Joe Gibbons’s Drawings from RikersHow to watch Tennessee vs. UConn football without cable: kickoff time, streaming deals, and moreHow to stream 'Indiana Jones and The Dial of Destiny'Monsters for Grownups: Learning About Our Reptilian Overlords‘Chasing Amy’ and the Toxic “Nerd Masculinity” of the 90sApple pulls the plug on its cheapest Apple Music plan'Sly' review: A Stallone documentary that plays like a 'Rocky' sequel`Why is Michelle Williams narrating Britney Spears's audiobook?Windows 11 23H2 update: 3 new features coming to your PCM3 iMac vs. M1: What are the differences? Cardinals vs. Seahawks 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL online Best Black Friday Beats deal: Get $70 off Powerbeats Pro Best Black Friday Nintendo Switch deal: Get $75 off Mario Kart 8 Deluxe bundle NYT Connections hints and answers for November 25: Tips to solve 'Connections' #533. Best Black Friday TV deal: $450 off 85 Patriots vs. Dolphins 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL online Best Black Friday PS5 headset deal: Save $20 on Pulse Elite wireless headset Best Black Friday PS5 deal: Save $75 on PS5 Slim Digital Edition Best PS5 deal: Save over $70 on PS5 Slim Nintendo Switch Joy Ravens vs. Chargers 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL online Best Black Friday Steam Deck deal: Save $32 on the Elgato Stream Deck+ Colorado vs. Kansas football livestreams: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more 'Dune: Prophecy' fixes one of my biggest beefs with 'Dune: Part Two' Decompose for less: Lomi home composters now up to 40% off for Black Friday GoPro Hero13 Bundle Black Friday deal: Save $100 and get a $25 gift card Best early Black Friday deals: My picks as a tech editor Buccaneers vs. Giants 2024 livestream: How to watch NFL online Andrew Tate 'online university’ suffers breach: 800,000 users' data exposed 'Dune: Prophecy' episode 2: Sister Lila's prophecy, explained
2.0779s , 10134.0390625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Tina Tyler Archives】,Defense Information Network