| Jake - the red dots are where the ChemCam instrument zapped it with laser |
A rock analysed by NASA's Mars rover Curiosity has a surprising and more varied composition that resembles rare rocks from the bowels of our planet, the US space agency said.
"This rock is a close match in chemical
composition to an unusual but well-known type of igneous rock found in many
volcanic provinces on Earth," Curiosity co-investigator Edward Stolper of
the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena said in a statement.
"With only one Martian rock of this type, it is
difficult to know whether the same processes were involved, but it is a
reasonable place to start thinking about its origin."
On Earth, rocks with similar compositions usually come
from "processes in the planet's mantle beneath the crust, from the
crystallisation of relatively water-rich magma at elevated pressure,"
according to the NASA statement.
Curiosity, which has been on the Red Planet since
August 6, used two instruments to study the football-sized rock, which is
dubbed Jake Matijevic, or Jake for short.
One was the arm-mounted Alpha Particle X-Ray
Spectrometer — known as APXS — and the other was the Chemistry and
Camera (ChemCam) instrument.
"Jake is kind of an odd Martian rock," said
APXS principal investigator Ralf Gellert of the University of Guelph in
Ontario, Canada. "It's high in elements consistent with the mineral
feldspar, and low in magnesium and iron."
NASA said the initial results were just a preview,
noting that Curiosity also carries analytical laboratories inside the rover.
Soon, it plans to analyse its first Martian soil
sample.
"We used Curiosity's first perfectly scooped
sample for cleaning the interior surfaces of our 150-micron sample-processing
chambers," said Chris Roumeliotis, lead turret rover planner at NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory. "It's our version of a Martian car wash."
NASA has also determined that a bright object observed
on the ground near the robot several days ago was just a bit of plastic that
does not jeopardise the rover's operations.
Curiosity is on a two-year, $US2.5 billion mission to
investigate whether it is possible to live on Mars and to learn whether
conditions there might have been able to support life in the past.
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