Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published February 2006 | Published
Journal Article Open

Overview of the Spirit Mars Exploration Rover Mission to Gusev Crater: Landing site to Backstay Rock in the Columbia Hills

Abstract

Spirit landed on the floor of Gusev Crater and conducted initial operations on soil-covered, rock-strewn cratered plains underlain by olivine-bearing basalts. Plains surface rocks are covered by wind-blown dust and show evidence for surface enrichment of soluble species as vein and void-filling materials and coatings. The surface enrichment is the result of a minor amount of transport and deposition by aqueous processes. Layered granular deposits were discovered in the Columbia Hills, with outcrops that tend to dip conformably with the topography. The granular rocks are interpreted to be volcanic ash and/or impact ejecta deposits that have been modified by aqueous fluids during and/or after emplacement. Soils consist of basaltic deposits that are weakly cohesive, relatively poorly sorted, and covered by a veneer of wind-blown dust. The soils have been homogenized by wind transport over at least the several kilometer length scale traversed by the rover. Mobilization of soluble species has occurred within at least two soil deposits examined. The presence of monolayers of coarse sand on wind-blown bedforms, together with even spacing of granule-sized surface clasts, suggests that some of the soil surfaces encountered by Spirit have not been modified by wind for some time. On the other hand, dust deposits on the surface and rover deck have changed during the course of the mission. Detection of dust devils, monitoring of the dust opacity and lower boundary layer, and coordinated experiments with orbiters provided new insights into atmosphere-surface dynamics.

Additional Information

© 2006 by the American Geophysical Union. Received 20 May 2005; accepted 14 July 2005; published 6 January 2006. We thank the superb group of engineers and payload personnel who have made the Spirit mission a success. We thank Bonnie L. Redding, Donna M. Galuszka, Elpitha Howington Kraus, Mark R. Rosiek, and Trent Hare, United States Geological Survey, Flagstaff, Arizona, for the generation of the elevation map and projected MOC NA data used in the perspective view of Spirit's traverses onto the Columbia Hills. We thank Kristopher Larsen, University of Colorado, for the correspondence analysis software used to generate results presented in Figures 12a–12c. Work supported by NASA grants and contracts for participation in the Mars Exploration Rover Mission.

Attached Files

Published - jgre2029.pdf

Files

jgre2029.pdf
Files (1.7 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:80e19c980e1b2aed56a573df449ef626
1.7 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023