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Group Photos: Splendours of
Mars
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| This image was taken by Mars Exploration
Rover Opportunity's front hazard-avoidance camera, providing a circular
sign of the success of the rover's first grinding of a rock. The round,
shallow hole seen in this image is on a rock dubbed 'McKittrick,' located
in the 'El Capitan' area of the larger outcrop near Opportunity's landing
site.(NASA photo) |
BEIJING, Mar. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- Speculation was rife
on Monday that space scientists were on the verge of announcing they had
discovered evidence that Mars was once a wet and warm planet, possibly capable
of sustaining microscopic life forms.
Officials with the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration announced that Mars scientists from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena, California, were flying to Washington for a "significant"
announcement, but shied away from saying what it would be.
"I can't confirm what they are going to say ... just
that it's a significant ... finding," by the rover Opportunity, JPL spokesman
Guy Webster said.
But in recent days, scientists have openly spoken of
their excitement over finding coarse gray hematite at the Opportunity site, and
predicted it would lead to an understanding of how the bedrock the rover is
studying was formed and whether water was involved.
The scientists and engineers working with Opportunity
and its twin, Spirit, have held all their briefings in Pasadena since the
robotic geologists landed on Mars in January.
But major developments in NASA programs "are
typically announced out of (Washington) headquarters," Webster said.
Scheduled to attend the Tuesday briefing were lead
rover scientist Steve Squyres, geologist John Grotzinger, chief space
exploration scientist Benton Clark, project scientist Joy Crisp, and Jim Garvin,
NASA's lead scientist for Mars and the Moon.
Opportunity landed on Jan. 24 in a small crater on
the vast flat Meridiani Planum near the planet's equator. It has spent most of
its 36 martian days, or sols, studying finely layered bedrock in the crater's
wall.
Scientists have been puzzling over whether the layers
were formed by wind, volcanic lava flows or water, and if spherical
"blueberries" discovered in the rocks were water-related.
In a briefing last week, the Opportunity team said
data gathered by the rover's spectrometers and microscopic imager in a flat area
of bedrock nicknamed Charlie Flats suggested the presence of gray hematite,
which on Earth can form in oxygenated water.
Opportunity's spectrometers also have detected a
large deposit of hematite in the surrounding plains.
The science team had planned to compare the spectral
signatures of the martian rocks with Earth samples to confirm that the
composition was the same.
Evidence of rocks or soil that formed in water would
help validate scientists' theories that for the first half of its 4.6
billion-year existence, Mars had plentiful surface water -- even rain and snow
-- and possibly, life.
Opportunity and Spirit, now in sol 57 on the other
side of the planet, were designed to search for signs of water for at least 90
days, or as long as their solar-powered batteries last.
(China Daily-Agencies) |