[meteorite-list] Curiosity Update - August 9, 2012

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Fri Aug 10 01:35:01 EDT 2012


http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/news/whatsnew/index.cfm?FuseAction=ShowNews&NewsID=1301

Curiosity Reveals its First 'Living Color' Mars Surface Panorama
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
August 9, 2012

Curiosity awoke from her "beauty sleep" today to the toe-tapping tune "Good 
Morning" from the musical "Singing in the Rain," feeling healthy and refreshed 
and ready for a busy day of continued health checks and imagery. The rover 
continues to perform very well. Today's Sol 3 morning and afternoon passes by 
NASA's Mars Odyssey and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft provided a plethora 
of new data, including more high-resolution black-and-white 360-degree 
and deck panorama images from her Navigation Camera, or Navcam, which 
revealed some small pebbles deposited on the deck during landing, which 
should pose no problems for mission operations. Curiosity also returned 
130 low-resolution thumbnail images from the color Mast Camera, or Mastcam, 
providing scientists and engineers with their first color panorama glimpse 
of Gale Crater.

Curiosity's day began with a "beep" from its low-gain 
antenna, telling the flight team that their master sequence of activities 
for that sol was successfully activated from the ground. The flight team 
then uploaded files to the rover's remote electronics unit memory in preparation 
for the upcoming Sol 5 upgrade of Curiosity's software to optimize Curiosity 
for surface operations. Curiosity's backup computer was then powered on 
and successfully checked out. The Radiation Assessment Detector instrument 
is operating as planned and collected additional data on surface radiation. 
The Mastcam is operating as planned and successfully executed its 360-degree 
and calibration target observations. In addition, early checkouts of the 
Alpha Particle X-ray Spectrometer (APXS), Chemistry & Mineralogy Analyzer 
(CheMin), Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM), and Dynamic Albedo Neutrons (DAN) 
instruments were all successful. The mission's science team began creating 
a geological map of about 150 square miles (about 390 square kilometers) 
within Gale Crater, including the landing area.

Curiosity is "go" for its planned Sol 4 activities.




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