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PIA05344: Breaking Martian Ground
Breaking Martian Ground
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Target Name: Mars
Is a satellite of: Sol (our sun)
Mission: Mars Exploration Rover (MER)
Spacecraft: Spirit
Instrument: Hazard Avoidance Camera
Product Size: 1024 samples x 624 lines
Produced By: JPL

Original Caption Released with Image:
This animation shows the Mars Exploration Rover Spirit digging a trench in the fine-grained soil lining the bottom of the shallow depression dubbed "Laguna Hollow." The trench is 7 centimeters (3 inches) deep and was created after the rover dragged one of its wheels back and forth across the surface 11 times. The whole operation lasted about two hours. A similar trench dug on the other side of Mars by Spirit's twin, Opportunity, is 10 centimeters deep (4 inches) and took only six sweeps to complete, indicating that the soil there is more loosely packed.

Spirit excavated its trench by repeating two basic steps: first, it spun its left front wheel in reverse to dig; second, it turned left and spun the same wheel in the forward direction. To widen the trench, each pass back and forth began a little farther to the right. By the end, the rover had swiveled 40 degrees.

Spirit is traveling toward a large crater nicknamed "Bonneville." It has stopped along the way at "Laguna Hollow" to take a closer look at the fine sediments contained there. The movie consists of images taken by Spirit's front hazard-avoidance camera.

Image Credit:
NASA/JPL


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