News Analysis August 6, 2013 06:14 AM ET Computerworld - After just a year working on Mars, the NASA rover Curiosity is changing the way we look at our solar system. Scientists say it may change how we look at ourselves, too. "This work changes the picture of the solar system that we've had," Jennifer Trosper, NASA's deputy project manager for the Mars Science Lab Mission, told Computerworld. "In terms of the picture of the solar system that we all grew up learning, what if you draw a picture of it millions or billions of years ago and Mars was blue and looked more like Earth? "This is a stepping stone," she said. "If we can learn about the past of Mars, we might someday be able to learn about these Earth-like planets that we're seeing very far away. And that could change our whole thinking about the solar system." One year ago today, Curiosity, a plutonium-powered robotic rover the size of a small SUV, landed on the Martian surface. In those 12 months, it has been driving across Mars' rocky and sandy surface, taking 36,700 full-size images and 35,000 thumbnail images, firing more than 75,000 laser shots, measuring the atmosphere, and scooping and analyzing Mars soil. It also became the first rover to drill into a rock on a planet other than Earth. Curiosity has already made significant findings even though it's only half-way through its primary two-year mission. In fact, Curiosity, which joined its robotic predecessors Opportunity and Spirit on Mars early on Aug. 6, 2012, quickly achieved its main science goal: finding that ancient Mars could have supported life. Last September, NASA scientists reported that Curiosity had uncovered evidence of a "vigorous" thousand-year water flow on the surface of Mars. That was important since Curiosity's primary mission was to discover whether Mars has -- or ever had -- the ability to support life, even in microbial form. In March, Curiosity reported another key finding, when analysis of the dust from its first drilled Martian rock showed the presence of sulfur, nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus and carbon - all key chemical ingredients for life. The evidence that Mars once held long-standing water as well as these key chemicals meant the Red Planet could have supported life in the distant past. "We've not found any smoking gun for life yet, but it's exiting to find a place that could have supported it," said Bethany Ehlmann, an assistant professor of planetary science at CalTech and a participating scientist on NASA's Curiosity team. "One of the biggest questions is how unique is our planet? Is Earth rare or common? Is there life elsewhere? If there's life on a neighboring planet, maybe it tells us something about the distribution of life in the rest of the universe." For a machine that is working anywhere from about 34 million to 250 million miles away (depending on where both Earth and Mars are in their orbits), Curiosity is conducting some impressive science. "It's the most powerful research tool that we have on another planet that has gone through an evolutionary process that's very similar to Earth," said Kerri Cahoy, a professor in aeronautics and astronautics at MIT and a NASA scientist working on projects at Goddard Space Flight Center. "It's about understanding what can happen to a planet, what conditions are ripe for life to form and if life never existed there, then why not? What's so special about where we are and how can we protect that?" ![]() via Science - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHBf3R2mnmNeZWlkOH12NG_4SW0Yw&url=http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9241372/After_a_year_on_Mars_NASA_s_Curiosity_rover_changes_our_view_of_the_solar_system | |||
| |||
| |||
|
Home »Unlabelled » After a year on Mars, NASA's Curiosity rover changes our view of the solar system - Computerworld
Tuesday, 6 August 2013
After a year on Mars, NASA's Curiosity rover changes our view of the solar system - Computerworld
Debarjun Saha | 03:47 |
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
#
Popular Posts
-
The same day that Amazon announced a trial run of its delivery by drone service in India , a couple of MIT...
-
Scientists have successfully simulated the radiation creat...
-
PTI | London | Updated: Apr 28 2014, 18:13 IST A key component of the research entails presen...
-
London : Why humans are far more intelligent than their closest living relatives like monkeys and apes may...
-
A Chinese man who tried to give a goodbye kiss to a snapping turtle landed in a hospital after the creatur...
-
Hello! I am a professional coder, and I hacked your device's OS when you were visiting an adult website. I have been watching your act...
-
403 Forbidden You don't have permission to access /129295/get-ready-for-a-total-lunar-eclipse-on-a...
-
Hi! Sadly, there are some bad news that you are about to hear. About few months ago I have gained a full access to all devices used by y...
-
Hello there! Unfortunately, there are some bad news for you. Around several months ago I have obtained access to your devices that you w...
-
The "faint young sun paradox" has been stumping sc...
No comments:
Post a Comment