clearvision Posted April 2, 2016 Share Posted April 2, 2016 Space: On March 10, Opportunity — which has been exploring the Red Planet since January 2004 — drove on a 32-degree slope, the steepest ever tackled on Mars. The goal of this mountaineering expedition was to get Opportunity close enough to study a rock target near the crest of a Red Planet landform dubbed Knudsen Ridge, which is part of a larger feature called Marathon Valley (because it's where Opportunity's odometer passed 26.2 miles, or 42.2 kilometers — the distance of a marathon here on Earth). Advertisement But Opportunity didn't quite reach the rock, even though the rover's handlers commanded a healthy number of wheel rotations to compensate for anticipated slippage on the slope. "The wheels did turn enough to have carried the rover about 66 feet (20 meters) if there had been no slippage, but slippage was so great, the vehicle progressed only about 3.5 inches (9 centimeters)," NASA officials wrote in a statement Thursday (March 31). "This was the third attempt to reach the target and came up a few inches short," they added. "The rover team reached a tough decision to skip that target and move on." Opportunity landed on the Red Planet in January 2004, a few weeks after its twin, Spirit, touched down. Both rovers were tasked with three-month missions to search for evidence that liquid water once flowed on Mars. ---------------- Just what I needed with all the down news lately. US technology designed for a 3 month mission still going.... 12 years later! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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