News & Analysis
Mars Curiosity gets down to science
George Leopold
11/21/2012 10:15 AM EST
First X-ray

The results of the first analysis of Martian soil by the Chemistry and Mineralogy experiment on the Curiosity rover. The image reveals the presence of crystalline feldspar, pyroxenes and olivine mixed with some amorphous (non-crystalline) material. The soil sample, taken from a wind-blown deposit within Gale Crater, where the rover landed, is similar to volcanic soils in Hawaii.
(Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Ames)
Next: Mars imager

The results of the first analysis of Martian soil by the Chemistry and Mineralogy experiment on the Curiosity rover. The image reveals the presence of crystalline feldspar, pyroxenes and olivine mixed with some amorphous (non-crystalline) material. The soil sample, taken from a wind-blown deposit within Gale Crater, where the rover landed, is similar to volcanic soils in Hawaii.
(Source: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Ames)
Next: Mars imager
Navigate to related information


reanimator
11/22/2012 4:00 AM EST
I find this pictures really fascinating.
But there is one question, which leaves me no calm:
How such "Self portrait" could be physically when only single one (to my knowledge) robot exists on Mars?!
Sign in to Reply
reanimator
11/22/2012 4:03 AM EST
I find these pictures really fascinating.
But there is one question, which leaves me no calm:
How such "Self portrait" could be physically taken when only single one (to my knowledge) robot exists on Mars?!
It looks like that photo made by standalone observer - no physical contact between camera and robot is visible on this picture.
Sign in to Reply
jdesbonnet
11/22/2012 6:42 PM EST
From what I recall: that's taken from a camera on the robot arm. So it's like taking a photo of yourself at arms length.
Sign in to Reply
Francois R
11/23/2012 12:10 PM EST
Right, but when you do a self portrait, you always see the arm that holds the camera. I can't see any arm on the photo, like if the camera was floating about or standing on a tripod.
Sign in to Reply
Francois R
11/23/2012 12:14 PM EST
Ok, now I understand: this is a mosaic: the arm is not on the final picture, but must be on each single pictures. Cool!
Sign in to Reply
jdesbonnet
11/22/2012 6:44 PM EST
Here are the details of the MSL self portrait photo: http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/multimedia/pia16239.html
Sign in to Reply
Duane Benson
11/24/2012 12:44 AM EST
I take it that this is more or less like taking two self-portraits; one with the right hand and one from the left, then cutting it apart and stitching together the two sides when each was not holding the camera.
It makes for a pretty interesting self-portrait and at first glance doesn't seem possible.
Sign in to Reply
rick.merritt
11/25/2012 5:07 PM EST
This is sooo coool. Science and human endeavor at its best.
Thanks for the coverage, George,
BTW, two lead engineers from Curiosity were on the NPR comedy program "Wait, Wait Don't Tell Me." Not only are they smart, they are funny!
http://www.npr.org/programs/wait-wait-dont-tell-me/
Sign in to Reply