The return to Earth years from now of the rocks and soil it
retrieves "will give scientists the Holy Grail of planetary
exploration," Jean-Yves le Gall, president of France's National Centre for
Space Studies (CNES), which mostly built the mobile observatory, commented via
a YouTube broadcast.
These "pieces of Mars", he said, may "finally
answer this fascinating and fundamental question: was there ever life elsewhere
than Earth?"
After seven months in space, NASA's Perseverance rover
gently set down on Martian soil last month and sent back black-and-white images
revealing the rocky fields of Jezero Crater, just north of the Mars equator.
"The critical component of this astrobiology mission is
SuperCam," said Thomas Zurbuchen, deputy head of NASA's Science Mission
Directorate.
Mounted on the rover's mast, the shoebox-sized gizmo is
packed with spectrometers, a laser, and an audio recording device to analyse
the chemistry, mineralogy and molecular composition of Mars' famously red
surface.
SuperCam's laser can zap objects smaller than a pencil point
from as far away as seven metres (20 feet), and enables the observation of
spots beyond the reach of the rover's robotic arm.
"The laser is uniquely capable of remotely clearing
away surface dust, giving all of its instruments a clear view of the
targets," said Roger Wiens, an engineer at the Los Alamos National
Laboratory (LANL) and SuperCam principal investigator.
The mission suffered a serious mishap before liftoff,
revealed LANL's Scott Robinson, who said more than 500 engineers and scientists
contributed to the project.
"The mast unit optics were destroyed in a freak
accident just four months before delivery," he explained. "The team
scambled to pull together spare parts to rebuild the telescope from scratch."
The accident turned out to be a blessing in disguise.
A 'freak accident'
In reassembling the unit, engineers discovered what Robinson
described as a "Hubble-like" flaw in the original mirror.
Shortly after the Hubble Space Telescope's launch in 1990,
operators realised that the observatory's primary mirror had an aberration --
later corrected -- that affected the clarity of images.
Scientists believe that around 3.5 billion years ago the
crater in which Perseverance landed was home to a river that flowed into a deep
lake, depositing sediment in a fan-shaped delta.
The rover is tasked with collecting more than two dozen rock
and soil samples in sealed tubes, to be sent back to Earth sometime in the
2030s for analysis.
About the size and weight of an SUV, Perseverance is
equipped with a two-meter (seven-foot) robotic arm, 19 cameras, two microphones
as well as other cutting-edge instruments.
A small helicopter drone tucked under its belly will attempt
the first powered flight on another planet in a few weeks' time.
One instrument on board is designed to make oxygen from
Mars' primarily carbon dioxide atmosphere, something that would greatly
facilitate human habitation.
Perseverance is the fifth rover to set wheels down on Mars,
all of them from NASA. The feat was first accomplished in 1997.
Its core mission lasts just over two years, but the rover
could remain operational well beyond that.
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