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Mars rover finds iron meteorite
24/01/05
 

On 21 December 2004, the Mars Exploration Rover Opportunity arrived at its own discarded heat shield, enabling engineers to study the effects of atmospheric entry up close so they can design better landing systems for future missions. However, rover images of the shield revealed something else interesting just a few meters away: a pitted, metallic-looking rock the size of a basketball.

Opportunity's handlers immediately speculated that the rock was a meteorite. Tests conducted earlier this week with Opportunity's spectrometers prove that this hunch was correct. The so-called "Heat Shield Rock" is indeed a meteorite composed mostly of iron and nickel. It is the first meteorite discovered on another planet.

"This is a huge surprise, though maybe it shouldn't have been," says mission principal investigator Steve Squyres from Cornell University. "I never thought we would get to use our instruments on a rock from someplace other than Mars. Think about where an iron meteorite comes from: a destroyed planet or planetesimal that was big enough to differentiate into a metallic core and a rocky mantle."

Heat Shield Rock is unlikely to tell scientists much that they don't already know about meteorites. But project scientist Joy A. Crisp from JPL notes, "There are some other things we might learn about Mars from this meteorite. Any changes in the rock's outer surface might be the result of weathering in the Martian environment. We can also make inferences about the atmospheric conditions that allowed a meteorite of this size and type to make it to the surface."

If Opportunity stumbles across other meteorites, the numbers will tell scientists about the deposition or erosion rate of Meridiani Planum. If the rover fails to encounter additional meteorites, this will indicate that dust is accumulating in the region, burying meteorites. But if more meteorites are found, it will suggest that dust particles are being blown away by winds, exposing previously buried objects.


More info: Sky and Telescope

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