Mars Pathfinder

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A mission patch for the Mars Pathfinder mission in 1996.

Overview

This NASA mission was launched on a Delta II rocket on December 4, 1996. The Mars Pathfinder mission was used to demonstrate that NASA could send an exploratory mission to Mars for 1/15th of the cost of the Viking budget in the 1970's. The mission was developed at a cost of under $150 million in 3 years.

One of the major mission objectives was to deliver a microrover safely to the surface in order to study the surface composition. The microrover onboard was known as Sojourner.


The Mars Pathfinder Mission lasted from December 1996 to March 1998. It greatly surpassed its expectations by returning 2.3 billion bits of information, including over 17,000 images. pathfinder carried out more than 15 chemical analyses of rocks and soil, besides collecting data on the weather. Information learned through the mission suggest that, in its past, Mars was warm and wet, with liquid water on its surface and a thicker atmosphere. Depletion of the spacecraft's battery along with a drop in the spacecraft's operating temperature were believed to be why we lost communications with Pathfinder in October 1997. The mission far surpassed its expected 30-day lifetime.[1]

Pathfinder was surrounded by giant air bags for its landing. It bounced several times before it came to rest.


NASA listed its main findings as:


Running water during a warmer past in which liquid water was stable was suggested because rounded pebbles and cobbles at the landing site, along with other observations. Rounded rocks are usually formed in running water which wears off sharp edges.

An improved determination of the Red Planets' metallic core resulted from radio tracking of Mars Pathfinder. The core of Mars is now thought to be between 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) and 1,250 miles (2,000 kilometers).

Long a mystery, airborne dust was found to be magnetic, and maybe composed of the mineral maghemite, a highly magnetic form of iron oxide. It may be freeze-dried on the particles as a stain or cement. This finding is consistent with a water cycle that may have dissolved the iron from the crust.

Dust devils were imaged and measured with temperature, wind and pressure sensors. These tiny wind swirls may serve as a way of mixing dust in the air..

Early morning water ice clouds were observed.[2]


Annotated panorama of the Ares Vallis landing site of the Mars Pathfinder lander. Annotations of surrounding features and rocks identified by the Pathfinder mission team.

References

External Links