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Mysterious Pyramids on Mars

Monday, October 8, 2012 18:01
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(Before It's News)

  • Football sized rock will be the first test for Curiosity’s robot arm
  • Instruments will touch the rock with a spectrometer to determine its elemental composition and use an arm-mounted camera to take close-up photographs

By Mark Prigg

PUBLISHED: 03:56 EST, 20 September 2012 | UPDATED: 09:20 EST, 20 September 2012

Looking uncannily like an Egyptian pyramid, it is not something you would expect to see on the surface of Mars.

Nasa engineers were so intrigued by the unique, football sized rock, they have driven the Curiosity rover up to it for a closer rock.

The football-size rock will be the first on Mars to be examined by rover’s robotic arm .

Pyramids on Mars? Nasa engineers drive Curiosity to investigate mysterious rock on the red planet

The mysterious ‘pyramid’ rock on Mars Nasa engineers want to take a closer at. It will be the first test for Curiosity’s robot arm which contains several analysis instruments.

THE MAN BEHIND THE ROCK

Nasa has named the rock after the late engineer Jacob Matijevic, who was the surface operations systems chief engineer for Mars Science Laboratory and the project’s Curiosity rover. image001.jpg

He passed away on August 20th, at age 64.

Matijevic also was a leading engineer for all of the previous NASA Mars rovers: Sojourner, Spirit and Opportunity.

Curiosity is about 8 feet (2.5 meters) from the rock.

It lies about halfway from the rover’s landing site, Bradbury Landing, to a location called Glenelg.

The team plans to touch the rock with a spectrometer to determine its elemental composition and use an arm-mounted camera to take close-up photographs.

Both the arm-mounted Alpha Particle X-Ray Spectrometer and the mast-mounted, laser-zapping Chemistry and Camera Instrument will be used for identifying elements in the rock.

Nasa hopes this will give them a new insight into the structure of the red planet, and also allow cross-checking of the two instruments.

The rock has been named ‘Jake Matijevic’ after a Nasa employee who recently passed away.

It has previously renamed the rover’s landing site as ‘Bradbury Landing’ after the late sci-fi author ray Bradbury

Curiosity now has driven for six days in a row.

Daily distances range from 72 feet to 121 feet (22 meters to 37 meters).

‘This robot was built to rove, and the team is really getting a good rhythm of driving day after day when that’s the priority,” said Mars Science Laboratory Project Manager Richard Cook of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.

The team plans to choose a rock in the Glenelg area for the rover’s first use of its capability to analyze powder drilled from interiors of rocks.

Three types of terrain intersect in the Glenelg area — one lighter-toned and another more cratered than the terrain Curiosity currently is crossing.

The light-toned area is of special interest because it retains daytime heat long into the night, suggesting an unusual composition.

‘As we’re getting closer to the light-toned area, we see thin, dark bands of unknown origin,’ said Mars Science Laboratory Project Scientist John Grotzinger of the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.

Pyramids on Mars? Nasa engineers drive Curiosity to investigate mysterious rock on the red planet

The route driven by NASA’s Mars rover Curiosity since it landed on the Red Planet. The Glenelg area farther east is the mission’s first major science destination.

‘The smaller-scale diversity is becoming more evident as we get closer, providing more potential targets for investigation.’

Researchers are using Curiosity’s Mast Camera (Mastcam) to find potential targets on the ground.

Recent new images from the rover’s camera reveal dark streaks on rocks in the Glenelg area that have increased researchers’ interest in the area.

In addition to taking ground images, the camera also has been busy looking upward.

On two recent days, Curiosity pointed the Mastcam at the sun and recorded images of Mars’ two moons, Phobos and Deimos, passing in front of the sun from the rover’s point of view.

Results of these transit observations are part of a long-term study of changes in the moons’ orbits. NASA’s twin Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, which arrived at Mars in 2004, also have observed solar transits by Mars’ moons.

Opportunity is doing so again this week.

Pyramids on Mars? Nasa engineers drive Curiosity to investigate mysterious rock on the red planet

This mosaic from the Mast Camera on NASA’s Curiosity rover shows a close-up view looking toward the “Glenelg” area, where three different terrain types come together, and where Curiosity is headed.

‘Phobos is in an orbit very slowly getting closer to Mars, and Deimos is in an orbit very slowly getting farther from Mars,’ said Curiosity’s science team co-investigator Mark Lemmon of Texas A&M University, College Station.

‘These observations help us reduce uncertainty in calculations of the changes.’

In Curiosity’s observations of Phobos this week, the time when the edge of the moon began overlapping the disc of the sun was predictable to within a few seconds.

Uncertainty in timing is because Mars’ interior structure isn’t fully understood.

Phobos causes small changes to the shape of Mars in the same way Earth’s moon raises tides.

The changes to Mars’ shape depend on the Martian interior which, in turn, cause Phobos’ orbit to decay.

Timing the orbital change more precisely provides information about Mars’ interior structure.

During Curiosity’s two-year prime mission, researchers will use the rover’s 10 science instruments to assess whether the selected field site inside Gale Crater ever has offered environmental conditions favorable for microbial life.

Pyramids on Mars? Nasa engineers drive Curiosity to investigate mysterious rock on the red planet

The Curiosity rover observes the moon Phobos grazing the sun’s disk on Martian day, or sol, 37 (September 13, 2012)

 

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The comments below have not been moderated.

It is quite obviously a cap stone from a gate post, surely you can all see that.

- DAT , Ipswich, 20/9/2012 17:20

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Just above and left looks like an ammonite.

- cedric wildblood , le pouldu, France, 20/9/2012 17:10

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Unbelievably misleading headline, in fact, it’s a barefaced lie.

- Will , London, 20/9/2012 16:48

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So the Pharaohs came from Mars. What more proof is needed ?

- Bob Worth , Amityville, 20/9/2012 16:26

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Yes…it’s a rock. Sorry, DM, no green fields and mountain streams just yet. When that happens perhaps you’ll have a story .

- Robin of Sherwood , London, 20/9/2012 15:58

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It is very beautiful, I have seen it ,its in Egypt !

- Jane , Doncaster, United Kingdom, 20/9/2012 15:58

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Here’s the thing. It’s the top piece of a buried pyramid. How do I know? A relative of mine in Canada was out in the winter snow, up a mountain, and saw a nice little fir tree that would look good in their living room for Christmas. So, there he was, pulling away at this tree trying to uproot it. The people with him were laughing, and when he asked why, they said, “It’s covered in about 40 foot of snow!” He went back to the spot when the snow had gone, and lo and behold, a huge fir tree stood there. Just saying, similar thing could be happening here.

- bob809 , Shrewsbury, 20/9/2012 15:53

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is it just me or does there seem to lots of little pyramid shaped rocks lying around all over the place in these pics

- shay , derry, United Kingdom, 20/9/2012 15:52

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is it just me or does there seem to lots of little pyramid shaped rocks lying around all over the place in these pics

- shay , derry, United Kingdom, 20/9/2012 15:47

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I don’t care if it isn’t the size of a real pyramid. This is MARS – another world to ours and I am amazed at the pictures coming back from it – Wow Wow WOW !!!!

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