File:PIA18388-MarsCuriosityRover-NovaRock-ChemCam-20140712.jpg

頁面內容不支援其他語言。
這個檔案來自維基共享資源
維基百科,自由的百科全書

原始檔案(1,590 × 1,060 像素,檔案大小:327 KB,MIME 類型:image/jpeg


摘要

描述
English: 07.16.2014

Curiosity's ChemCam Examines Mars Rock Target 'Nova'

http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/multimedia/images/?ImageID=6443

A Martian target rock called "Nova," shown here, displayed an increasing concentration of aluminum as a series of laser shots from NASA's Curiosity Mars rover penetrated through dust on the rock's surface. This pattern is typical of many rocks examined with the rover's laser-firing Chemistry and Camera (ChemCam) instrument.

In the first two years since Curiosity landed in Mars' Gale Crater in August 2012, researchers have used ChemCam's laser and spectrometers to examine more than 600 rock or soil targets. The process, called laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, hits a target with pulses from a laser to generate sparks, whose spectra provide information about which chemical elements are in the target. Multiple laser shots are fired in sequence, each blasting away a thin layer of material so that the following shot examines a slightly deeper layer.

The photograph at left is from ChemCam's Remote Micro-Imager camera, taken during the 687th Martian day, or sol, of Curiosity's work on Mars (July 12, 2014). It shows a portion of the surface of Nova about 1.6 inches (4 centimeters) wide, centered at the spot where laser shots hit the baseball-size rock that same sol.

The graph at right show the brightness of the resulting spark at a range of wavelengths detected from each of the first 10 laser shots out of 100 total shots fired at the same point on the rock. The initial shots generated less brightness at a wavelength that is diagnostic for aluminum content, compared to shots after the dust coating on the rock had been cleared away by those first few shots.

ChemCam's laser zapping of this rock was the first ever during which Curiosity's arm-mounted Mars Hand Lens Imager (MAHLI) camera took images that caught the spark generated by a laser hitting a rock on Mars (see PIA18401).

ChemCam is one of 10 instruments in Curiosity's science payload. The U.S. Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory, in Los Alamos, New Mexico, developed ChemCam in partnership with scientists and engineers funded by the French national space agency (CNES), the University of Toulouse and the French national research agency (CNRS). More information about ChemCam is available at http://www.msl-chemcam.com
日期
來源 http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/images/PIA18388_ChemCam-Nova-full.jpg
作者 NASA/JPL-Caltech/LANL/CNES/IRAP/LPGNantes/CNRS/IAS

授權條款

Public domain 本作品由NASA創作,屬於公有領域。根據NASA的版權政策:“NASA的創作除非另有聲明否則不受版權保護。”(參見:Template:PD-USGov/zhNASA版權政策JPL圖像使用政策
警告:

說明

添加單行說明來描述出檔案所代表的內容

在此檔案描寫的項目

描繪內容

檔案歷史

點選日期/時間以檢視該時間的檔案版本。

日期/時間縮⁠圖尺寸用戶備⁠註
目前2014年8月7日 (四) 12:23於 2014年8月7日 (四) 12:23 版本的縮圖1,590 × 1,060(327 KB)DrbogdanUser created page with UploadWizard

下列2個頁面有用到此檔案:

全域檔案使用狀況

以下其他 wiki 使用了這個檔案:

詮釋資料