Curiosity ready to roll despite sensor damage

Curiosity ready to roll despite sensor damage
Updated 23 August 2012
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Curiosity ready to roll despite sensor damage

Curiosity ready to roll despite sensor damage

LOS ANGELES: Scientists were preparing to send Curiosity on its first test drive yesterday over the billion-year-old rocks of Mars and said a busted wind sensor wouldn’t jeopardize its mission of determining whether life could exist there.
Engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory turned four of the rover’s six wheels in place this week in a successful “wheel wiggle” to test the steering for the trek, mission manager Mike Watkins said.
The rover will move forward about 3 meters, turn right, then back up and park slightly to the left of its old spot, Watkins said. “You will definitely see tracks,” he said.
The test drive is part of a health checkup the rover has been undergoing since arriving on Aug. 5. Eventually, the rover could roam hundreds of meters a day over the ancient crater where it landed.
Meanwhile, researchers discovered the damaged wind sensor while checking out instruments that Curiosity will use to check the Martian weather and soil.
The cause of the damage wasn’t known, but one possibility is that pebbles thrown up by Curiosity’s descent fell onto the sensor’s delicate, exposed circuit boards and broke some wires, said Ashwin Vasavada, deputy project scientist for Curiosity.
A second sensor is operating and should do the job, but Vasavada said scientists may “have to work a little harder” to determine wind speed and direction, which are important factors that can determine when the rover is allowed to move.
“But we think we can work around that,” he added.