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  • 10 hours ago
NASA highlights some of the discoveries it has made on the Red Planet.

Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Transcript
00:00The Curiosity rover set out to answer a big question.
00:04Could Mars have supported ancient life?
00:06Now we know the answer, but there's still so much more to learn.
00:15To help NASA's Curiosity rover safely explore the surface of Mars,
00:20engineers here on Earth use a nearly identical sibling named Maggie.
00:24This full-scale engineering model helps the team practice operations in the Mars Yard
00:31at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
00:34I'm Raquel Villanueva, here with Curiosity Deputy Project Scientist Abigail Freeman.
00:40Her team is celebrating their 10th year on the Red Planet.
00:44Where has the rover traveled to in the past decade?
00:47Well, we've spent the last basically 10 years Martian mountain climbing.
00:51Curiosity landed at the base of a big mountain named Mount Sharp that is made of layers of rocks.
00:59So we're climbing the mountain to give us a snapshot of Martian history.
01:03We've driven about 17 and a half miles, and more impressively,
01:07we've climbed over 2,000 feet in elevation up the mountain.
01:12We're all the way up in these hills now. It's pretty spectacular.
01:15With all that climbing, how is Curiosity doing?
01:18Pretty good, actually.
01:20You know, all of our science instruments are working just about as good as they did when we landed.
01:25We have nearly our full capabilities.
01:27The arm and the drill and the rover, they're a little bit arthritic,
01:31so we have to be a little bit gentle when we use them.
01:33And our wheels are a little bit beat up.
01:36The wheels on Maggie look great, but we have some test wheels that we've really destroyed.
01:40The wheels on the rover are somewhere between these two.
01:43You know, we just drilled our 35th sample the other week, so we're still doing amazing science.
01:50And how do you decide where the rover is going to go? Do you work with other NASA missions?
01:54You know, the data from the Mars orbiters have been really helpful.
01:58The spectrometers, that's the kind of instrument on Odyssey and Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter,
02:02have told us where the interesting minerals are and where the best places to go to look at changing environments are.
02:09And then, in particular, the cameras on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, they're so good,
02:14and they're so helpful at allowing us to find the safest way that we can climb this mountain.
02:20What would you say is the biggest discovery your team has made?
02:24You know, Curiosity was sent to Mars in order to answer a really big question.
02:28Did Mars have all of the ingredients that we know life needed?
02:32And 10 years later, not only have we given that answer a definitive yes,
02:37but we've also seen that those ingredients were around for tens of millions of years.
02:43And what's next for Curiosity?
02:45We can see from orbit that we're getting to a place in the mountain
02:48that likely records a pretty dramatic change in the sorts of environments that we're around.
02:53You know, the lakes that once filled Gale started to dry out,
02:57and we're getting to that period in time.
02:59So we're really interested in answering how long did these habitable environments persist
03:04as Mars and Gale Crater went through these pretty big climate changes.
03:10I just can't wait to see what's next.
03:12We've seen hints that the rocks are going to be very different very soon.
03:16And so I'm really curious what we're going to find.
03:19Well, that is an exciting new chapter for you.
03:21And congratulations on 10 years.
03:23Thanks, Abigail.
03:24Thanks so much.
03:25To get the latest updates, follow at NASA JPL and at NASA Mars on social media,
03:31or take a deeper dive on the mission websites at mars.nasa.gov.
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