Люди во время встречи первого восхода солнца Нового 2023 года в Сеуле  - Sputnik International, 1920, 21.04.2023
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NASA’s Curiosity Rover Hits Milestone After Driving 4,000 Days on Mars

© Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSSA selfie taken by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover on Sol 2291 (January 15) at the "Rock Hall" drill site, located on Vera Rubin Ridge.
A selfie taken by NASA's Curiosity Mars rover on Sol 2291 (January 15) at the Rock Hall drill site, located on Vera Rubin Ridge. - Sputnik International, 1920, 08.11.2023
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According to NASA, the car-size rover is about the height of a basketball player and uses its 7 foot-long arm, a kit of 10 science instruments, 17 cameras, and a laser to collect its rock samples.
After 11 years roaming the dry, desolate planet of Mars, NASA’s Curiosity rover has reached the milestone of 4,000 Martian days since it first landed on the planet in August of 2012. The rover also recently collected its 39th sample of the planet's surface.
According to NASA, Curiosity is studying whether or not Mars has ever had the capabilities to support microbial life. To do so, the rover is making its way up the base of the 3-mile-tall Mount Sharp, where the layers of the planet can tell scientists how its climate has changed over time.
Scientists are hoping the latest sample collected by Curiosity will reveal more about the climate and habitability of Mars. The region which the sample was collected from - named “Sequoia” - changed over time as the area became more rich in sulfates, which are minerals likely formed from evaporated salt water. The sample may help scientists discover how the planet’s climate changed as it dried up.
“The types of sulfate and carbonate minerals that Curiosity’s instruments have identified in the last year help us understand what Mars was like so long ago. We’ve been anticipating these results for decades, and now Sequoia will tell us even more,” said Ashwin Vasavada, Curiosity’s project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California, which leads the mission.
NASA has indicated that Curiosity “remains strong” even after having to drive 20 miles (32 kilometers) through the cold, dust and radiation of the red planet. Curiosity’s energy source - nuclear power - has been monitored by engineers, and is reported to be at a capacity in which the rover can perform for many more years.
One of the rover’s “eyes," a 34-millimeter focal length camera on its left side, will have to be repaired by engineers before Curiosity is back in pristine condition.
For now, the team that manages Curiosity is planning to take a break for several weeks in November, as Mars is about to disappear behind the sun during a phenomenon known as “solar conjunction.” The plasma, according to NASA, can “interact with radio waves, potentially interfering with commands.”
As such, engineers are leaving the rover with a “to-do list” for their break this month. Hopefully, the rover will complete its homework by the time the scientists get back to work.
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