Nasa's
ageing Opportunity rover on Mars has just made what may be one of its most
significant discoveries to date.
The nine-year-old robot has identified rock laden with what
scientists believe to be clay minerals.
Their presence is an indication that the rock, dubbed Esperance,
has been altered at some point in the past through prolonged contact with
water.
Opportunity has seen a clay-bearing outcrop before but
scientists say this is by far the best example to date.
"It's very rich," said Steve Squyres, the rover's
principal investigator.
"We've been discovering evidence for water on Mars since we
first landed back in 2004. What's different here?
"If
you look at all of the water-related discoveries that have been made by
Opportunity, the vast majority of them point to water that was a very low pH -
it was acid.
"We run around talking about water on Mars. In fact, what
Opportunity has mostly discovered, or found evidence for, was sulphuric acid.
"Clay minerals only tend to form at a more neutral pH. This
is water you could drink. This is water that was much more favourable for
things like pre-biotic chemistry - the kind of chemistry that could lead to the
origin of life."
Prof Squyres, who is affiliated to Cornell University, Ithaca,
New York, said he was inclined to put Esperance in his personal top five
discoveries made on the Red Planet by Opportunity and her twin rover, Spirit,
which stopped working in 2011.
Esperance is the most clay-laden rock seen by
Opportunity in its nine and a half years on Mars
The clays are
aluminium-rich, possibly of the type montmorillonite. However, because
Opportunity's X-ray spectrometer can only discern the atomic elements in a
rock, and not their mineralogical arrangement, no-one can say for sure.
Nonetheless, the mere
occurrence of clays is further proof that Mars was much warmer and wetter
billions of years ago; a very different place to the cold, desiccated world it
has become.
And these results
complement nicely those of Nasa's newer rover Curiosit which has also identified clays y, at its landing site almost
half-way around the planet's equator.
The old robot made its
find at a location called Cape York, which is sited on the rim of a 22km-wide
crater known as Endurance.
Mission managers have
now commanded it to start moving along the ridge to a destination dubbed
Solander Point.
There is an
expectation that Opportunity will find a deeper stack of rocks at the new location
to follow up the Esperance water story.
"Maybe [we can]
try to reconstruct the actual depositional environment of these materials and
whether they were lacustrine - that is, formed by a lake - or fluvial (river)
or an alluvial fan (network of streams), or whatever," said deputy
principal investigator Ray Arvidson, of Washington University, St Louis.
'Daily gift'
Opportunity is now
operating well beyond its expected lifetime.
When it landed at
Eagle Crater in January 2004, Nasa hoped to get at least 90 working Martian
days (sols) from the machine. Remarkably, it continues to roll beyond 3,300
sols.
It has an
"arthritic" robotic arm, its solar panels are losing efficiency, and
it drives backwards to save wear on its locomotion system.
It is also now having
to contend with glitchy flash memory. But the US space agency is determined to
keep pushing the vehicle for as long as possible.
"Remember, the
rover continues in a very hostile environment on Mars," said John Callas,
Nasa's Opportunity project manager.
"The rover could
have a catastrophic failure at any moment. So, each day is a gift."



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