NASA rover Perseverance collects first Martian rock sample
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[September 11, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - NASA's Mars science
rover Perseverance has collected and stashed away the first of numerous
mineral samples that the U.S. space agency hopes to retrieve from the
surface of the Red Planet for analysis on Earth.
Tools attached to Perseverance and operated by mission specialists from
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) near Los Angeles drilled a rock
core slightly thicker than a pencil from an ancient Martian lake bed,
then hermetically sealed it in a titanium specimen tube inside the
rover.
The feat, accomplished on Sept. 1 and publicly confirmed by NASA late on
Monday, marked the first such mineral sample obtained from the surface
of another planet, according to the space agency.
NASA chief and former astronaut Bill Nelson hailed it as "a momentous
achievement."
The space agency plans to collect as many as 43 mineral samples over the
next few months from the floor of Jerezo Crater, a wide basin where
scientists think water flowed and microbial life may have flourished
billions of years ago.
The six-wheeled, SUV-sized vehicle is also expected to explore walls of
sediment deposited at the foot of a remnant river delta once etched into
a corner of the crater and considered a prime spot for study.
Mineral collection is the heart of the $2.7 billion Perseverance
project.
Two future missions to Mars, to be jointly conducted by NASA and the
European Space Agency, are planned to retrieve those specimens in the
next decade and return them to Earth, where astrobiologists will examine
them for signs of tiny fossilized organisms.
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Wheel tread marks are left in the soil of Jezero Crater on Mars, as
NASA's Mars rover Perseverance drives on Martian surface for the
first time, in this March 4, 2021 image supplied to Reuters. Image
taken March 4, 2021. NASA/JPL-Caltech/Handout via REUTERS
Such fossils would represent the first conclusive
proof that life has ever existed beyond Earth.
Perseverance, the fifth and by far most sophisticated rover NASA has
sent to Mars since its first, Sojourner, arrived in 1997, landed in
Jerezo Crater in February after a 293 million-mile flight from
Earth.
Success of the first sample collection, taken from a flat,
briefcase-sized rock using the rotary-percussive drill at the end of
Perseverance's robotic arm, was verified through imagery taken by
the rover's cameras as the sample was measured, cataloged and
stored, NASA said.
The rover's sampling and caching system, consisting of more than
3,000 parts, was described by JPL's interim director, Larry James,
as "the most complex mechanism ever sent into space."
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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