Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • Space.com

    Perseverance Mars rover digs into intriguing 'Bright Angel' rock formation (photo)

    By Rahul Rao,

    7 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=20rnn8_0u0nVVIt00

    Last week, after braving a field of sand dunes and traversing the desiccated remnants of an ancient river, NASA's Perseverance rover reached the shining rock outcropping on the Martian horizon that the rover's operators have named "Bright Angel."

    Perseverance has now begun its scientific investigation of a very unique place in its surroundings. Its first action: digging into the ground, scanning and imaging the Mars soil with X-rays. Over the coming months, scientists will parse the data that Perseverance sends back.

    Bright Angel got its name for being an unusually light-colored patch of rock in images taken from orbit. Against the Martian landscape, the outcropping's dramatic appearance caught scientists' eyes.

    The patch's site at the edge of Neretva Vallis, a dried river channel that feeds into Perseverance's Jezero Crater landing site — and a channel that Perseverance had trailed for weeks — suggested that Bright Angel might harbor interesting details about Mars' wetter past .

    As Perseverance approached Bright Angel, the rover's operators and mission scientists on Earth got their first close-up looks at the place. Some scientists think that Bright Angel's rocks represent older material that was exposed by now-vanished water eroding the ground.

    Related: Perseverance rover's Mars rock sample may contain best evidence of possible ancient life

    RELATED STORIES:

    If life exists on Mars, don't count on sample-return missions to find it, scientists say

    Handle Mars with care: Guidelines needed for responsible Red Planet exploration, experts say

    How NASA's Ingenuity helicopter opened the Mars skies to exploration

    After several days of sightseeing and photo-taking, Perseverance began to dig, lowering its high-speed drill into the ground. The rover then cleared the dust away by blasting it with nitrogen gas. Performing such a shallow dig, which scientists call an abrasion , allows the rover to clear a circle of the Martian surface's weathered outer layer and get at the pristine rock below.

    On this spot, Perseverance deployed its PIXL instrument, a device that lights up the Martian surface with an X-ray beam and measures the light that bounces back. It's too soon for scientists to have processed the data, but over the coming months, they will analyze it to learn more about how Bright Angel formed and how it relates to Neretva Vallis' former river.

    Now, Perseverance's science team will determine if the rover should take an even more drastic step — determining whether samples from Bright Angel will make fine additions to its collection . If so, a planned return campaign may deliver Bright Angel rocks back to Earth.

    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Most Popular newsMost Popular
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment16 days ago
    Total Apex Sports & Entertainment8 hours ago

    Comments / 0