Mars rover struggles to dig itself out of sand dune
Opportunity is facing its biggest challenge since it landed on Mars: how to get out of a sand dune where it's been stuck for 2 weeks.
The Mars rover Opportunity is facing its biggest challenge since it landed on the Red Planet last year: how to get out of a sand dune where it's been stuck for two weeks.
Engineers spent this week simulating the Martian terrain at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena to try to figure out why the robot got bogged down and how to get it moving again. Engineers performed several tests driving a dummy rover over a man-made sand dune.
Scientists sent the first new driving directions to Opportunity yesterday, commanding it to start inching down from the dune in a series of "mini-drives."
The six-wheeled Opportunity had driven about 130 feet of a planned 295-foot trip when its wheels started to slip April 26. The rover, going backward at the time, eventually stopped moving - its wheels stuck hub deep in fine soil while trying to drive over a foot high sand dune.
"Mars gives us surprises on a regular basis — some major, some minor," said project manager Jim Erickson. "This is something we consider a major one."
In the meantime, the rover has been taking pictures of its surroundings at the edge of an area known as the "etched terrain," where scientists believe they will uncover rocks exposed by the gentle erosion of wind.
Opportunity and its twin, Spirit, have been exploring opposite sides of Mars since landing in January 2004 and have uncovered geologic evidence of past water activity on the planet.
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