Mars rover fires laser
August 20, 2012The robotic exploration vehicle fired a laser at a rock so that its mineral content could be analyzed.
Curiosity aimed its beam at a fist-sized piece of rock, NASA said in a statement, firing the laser 30 times over a 10-second period.
Each pulse delivered more than a million Watts of power for about one-five billionth of a second to vaporize a small piece of the rock. The light signature produced by the blast was then relayed by a small telescope for analysis using a system known as ChemCam.
Although the initial use of the laser was for "target practice," scientists say they will use the data to examine the composition of the rock, which they dubbed "Coronation."
"We got a great spectrum of Coronation - lots of signal," said ChemCam principal investigator Roger Wien
"After eight years of building the instrument, it's payoff time."
Curiosity is a six-wheeled vehicle, about the size of a compact car. It landed inside a larger impact crater close to the equator of Mars on August 6 after an eight-month, 354-million-mile (570 million kilometer) journey from Earth.
The vehicle's two-year mission is to find out more about whether or not the planet could have harbored microbial life. The vehicle is being tested ahead of its first drive to the target area for the mission, which it will drill for rock samples.
The $2.5-billion (2 billion euro) project is NASA's first astrobiology mission since the Viking probes to Mars in the 1970s. Curiosity is described as the most advanced robotic science lab to be sent to another planet.
rc/av (AFP, dpa, Reuters)