Engineers lost contact with the solar-powered vehicle on June 10
during a dust storm that encircled Mars. Since then, NASA
officials made numerous attempts to reach the six-wheeled rover,
which is about the size of a golf cart.
Opportunity's equipment may have been compromised by the storm,
which struck while the rover was at a site called Perseverance
Valley and blotted out sunlight needed by the robot's solar
panels, officials said.
The vehicle was built to drive six-tenths of a mile (1 km), but
ended up covering 28 miles (45 km) and lasting longer on Mars
than any other robot sent to the surface of the Red Planet.
On Tuesday, engineers sent a transmission in a last attempt to
revive the rover, but heard nothing back, said Thomas Zurbuchen,
associate administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate.
"It is, therefore, that I am standing here with a sense of deep
appreciation and gratitude that I declare the Opportunity
mission as complete," Zurbuchen said during an online video
presentation at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
California.
WET AND WARM MARS
As Opportunity explored craters on Mars, it gathered evidence to
demonstrate the planet in the ancient past was wet and warm
enough to possibly sustain life, NASA said. That included the
discovery of white veins of the mineral gypsum, an indication of
water moving through underground fractures.
Opportunity landed on Mars in January 2004, a few weeks after
its rover twin, Spirit.
Spirit ended its mission in 2010 after becoming stuck in soft
soil.
The Opportunity mission cost more than $1 billion, with about
300 JPL staff members dedicated to the project soon after it
landed, John Callas, project manager for Mars Exploration
Rovers, said by phone.
The team had dwindled to 30 by the time Opportunity went silent,
he said. Its members are going to other projects.
Another NASA rover called Curiosity, which arrived on Mars in
2012, continues its work on the Martian surface, collecting soil
samples to analyze them for signs of organic compounds.
And NASA's InSight spacecraft, the first robotic lander designed
to study the deep interior of a distant world, touched down
safely on the surface of Mars in November, with instruments to
detect planetary seismic rumblings never measured anywhere but
Earth.
InSight and the next Mars rover mission, scheduled for 2020, are
both seen as precursors for eventual human exploration of Mars,
an objective NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has said might
be achieved as early as the mid-2030s.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Will Dunham, Bill
Tarrant and Rosalba O'Brien)
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