NASA's Mars 2020 rover set to hunt Martian fossils, scout for manned
missions
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[December 28, 2019]
By Rollo Ross
PASADENA, Calif. (Reuters) - A NASA robotic
rover is nearing completion ahead of a journey next year to search for
evidence of past life on Mars and lay the groundwork for the space
agency's mission to send humans into deep space.
The U.S. space agency on Friday showed off its Mars 2020 rover, whose
official name will be chosen early next year. NASA will in February ship
the rover to Florida's Kennedy Space Center where its three sections
will be fully assembled. A July launch will send the rover to a dry lake
bed on Mars that is bigger than the island of Manhattan.
The four-wheeled, car-sized rover will scour the base of Mars' Jezero
Crater, an 820-foot-deep (250-meter-deep) crater thought to have been a
lake the size of Lake Tahoe, once the craft lands in February 2021. The
crater is believed to have an abundance of pristine sediments some 3.5
billion years old that scientists hope will hold fossils of Martian
life.
"The trick, though, is that we're looking for trace levels of chemicals
from billions of years ago on Mars," Mars 2020 deputy project manager
Matt Wallace told Reuters. The rover will collect up to 30 soil samples
to be picked up and returned to Earth by a future spacecraft planned by
NASA.
"Once we have a sufficient set, we'll put them down on the ground, and
another mission, which we hope to launch in 2026, will come, land on the
surface, collect those samples and put them into a rocket, basically,"
Wallace said. Humans have never before returned sediment samples from
Mars.
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Engineers and technicians install the remote sensing mast to the
Mars 2020 rover in the Spacecraft Assembly Facility at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California, U.S., June 5, 2019.
Photo taken June 5, 2019. NASA-JPL-Caltech/Handout via REUTERS
The findings of the Mars 2020 research will be crucial to future
human missions to the red planet, including the ability to make
oxygen on the surface of Mars, Wallace said. The Mars 2020 Rover is
carrying equipment that can turn carbon dioxide, which is pervasive
on Mars, into oxygen for breathing and as a propellant.
LESSONS FROM CURIOSITY
If successful, Mars 2020 will mark NASA's fifth Martian rover to
carry out a soft landing, having learned crucial lessons from the
most recent Curiosity rover that landed on the planet's surface in
2012 and continues to traverse a Martian plain southeast of the
Jezero Crater.
The Soviet Union is the only other country to successfully land a
rover on Mars. China and Japan have attempted unsuccessfully to send
orbiters around Mars, while India and Europe's space agency have
successfully lofted an orbiter to the planet.
(Writing by Joey Roulette; editing by Bill Tarrant and Cynthia
Osterman)
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