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Mars Curiosity sets one-day driving distance record
by Staff Writers
Pasadena, Calif. (UPI) Jul 23, 2013


Mars Curiosity rover's progress to date captured in dramatic photo
Pasadena, Calif. (UPI) Jul 24, 2013 - NASA says an image from its Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter released Wednesday shows the Curiosity rover and the wheel tracks it's made in the first half of 2013.

The orbiter's High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment camera captured evidence of the rover's journey from its landing site to the "Glenelg" area where the rover worked for the first half of this year, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said.

The HiRISE camera captured the scene on June 27, as the rover was examining an outcrop called "Shaler," its final science target in the Glenelg area before commencing a many-month trek southwestward to an entry point for the lower layers of Mount Sharp.

The rover appears as a bright blue spot in the lower right of the color-enhanced image, clearly visible at the end of its track marks across the martian surface, JPL said.

Also visible in the image are two bright, relatively blue spots surrounded by darker patches where the Mars Science Laboratory spacecraft's landing jets cleared away reddish surface dust at the landing site.

NASA says its Curiosity rover on Mars has set a personal best, driving twice as far on Sunday as on any other day of the mission so far.

Starting from a location with an unusually good view for rover engineers to plan a safe path, Curiosity traveled 109.7 yards, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., reported Tuesday.

"What enabled us to drive so far on [martian 'day'] Sol 340 was starting at a high point and also having Mastcam images giving us the size of rocks so we could be sure they were not hazards," rover JPL rover planner Paolo Bellutta said. "We could see for quite a distance, but there was an area straight ahead that was not clearly visible, so we had to find a path around that area."

Such long drives could become more frequent, the rover team said, with plans to begin using "autonav" capability for the rover to autonomously navigate a path for itself.

The autonomous navigation capability will enable rover planners to command drives that go beyond the route they can confirm as safe from previous images, they said, allowing the rover to use the autonomous capability to choose a safe path for itself beyond that distance.

Curiosity is about three weeks into a multi-month trek from the "Glenelg" area where it worked for the first half of 2013 to an entry point for the mission's major destination, the lower layers of Mount Sharp, JPL said.

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MARSDAILY
How Mars' atmosphere got so thin: New insights from Curiosity
Ann Arbor MI (SPX) Jul 19, 2013
New findings from NASA's Curiosity rover provide clues to how Mars lost its original atmosphere, which scientists believe was much thicker than the one left today. "The beauty of these measurements lies in the fact that these are the first really high-precision measurements of the composition of Mars' atmosphere," said Sushil Atreya, professor of atmospheric, oceanic and space sciences at ... read more


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